Film Review
With its superlative, very witty screenplay and George Cukor's
light-handed but effective direction,
Adam's
Rib is one of the most enjoyable of the Hollywood comedies
featuring the legendary double act of Spencer Tracy and Katharine
Hepburn. What could have been a run-of-the-mill battle of the
sexes comedy is lifted to the status of a cinema classic by Ruth Gordon
and Garson Kanin's sparkling dialogue and the extraordinary on-screen
rapport of the two lead actors.
Both Tracy and Hepburn excel in this film, each showing perfect comic
timing and a natural flair for combining slick comedy with a truthful
performance. Once again, Hepburn plays the staunch advocate of
female rights, brandishing the shield of feminism for all it is worth,
yet still managing to appear vulnerable and irresistibly
feminine. She is well matched by Tracy who is perfectly cast as
the ordinary man trying (and failing) to accustom himself to the
phenomenon of the modern woman, with hilarious results.
The film also features another notable acting talent, Judy
Holliday. This was effectively her audition piece for the lead
role in
Born Yesterday (1950), the
next film that Cukor directed for Columbia Pictures, and the part that
earned the actress her Oscar.
© James Travers 2009
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Next George Cukor film:
Born Yesterday (1950)
Film Synopsis
District Attorney Adam Bonner is far from pleased when he is called
upon to prosecute Doris Attinger, a young woman who shot and wounded
her husband when she found him in the arms of his mistress. The
reason Adam is not pleased is because his wife, Amanda, who is also a
lawyer, is convinced that Doris is the victim in the affair.
Amanda, a staunch supporter of women's rights, argues that were Doris
to be a man the case would never have been brought to trial.
Imagine then how overjoyed Adam is when he learns that his wife has
decided to defend Doris in her impending trial. The battle lines
are drawn, and neither side is prepared to back down. With an
arsenal packed with feminine guile, Amanda stands a good chance of
winning the case, but will she lose her husband along the way?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.