Film Review
The Mad Miss Manton typifies
the boisterous madcap comedies that were immensely popular in America
in the late 1930s, lively blues-chasers that still have considerable
appeal on account of their nonsensical plots, quickfire dialogue and
spirited comic performances. An odd conflation of screwball
comedy, murder mystery and social satire, the film brings Barbara
Stanwyck and Henry Fonda together for the first time, in what feels
like a glorious send-up of the
Thin
Man films that had enjoyed considerable success recently.
Stanwyck and Fonda are a natural comedy double act and would appear
together in two further films,
The Lady Eve (1941) and
You Belong to Me (1941), on each
occasion sparking off each other so effortlessly that it's a wonder the
celluloid doesn't catch fire.
The Mad Miss Manton is
admittedly lowbrow stuff, an insanely convoluted romp in which
cardboard-thin characters chase each other around like slightly
inebriated participants in a murder mystery weekend. What the
film lacks in sophistication it amply makes up for with its unflagging
sense of fun. Nicholas Musuraca's exaggerated noir cinematography
adds to the film's appeal and even contributes a few far-from-subtle
visual jokes. It's not quite as daft and infantile as an Abbott
and Costello comedy, but it's in the same league. Sam Levene's
dim-witted police inspector (sorry, lieutenant) soon manages to get
under your skin, but thankfully there's some sterling support from the
likes of Hattie McDaniel to keep us amused. Barbara Stanwyck was
one of Hollywood's most versatile actresses but here she is absolutely
in her element, dodging knives and bullets with hilarious sang froid
and reminding us that girl power is most definitely not a new
phenomenon.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Early one morning, Manhattan debutante Melsa Manton is out walking her
dogs when she sees a playboy acquaintance, Ronnie Belden, run out of a
house belonging to the wealthy financier George Lane. Her
curiosity aroused, Melsa enters the house and is shocked to discover a
dead body: Lane has been murdered! Dutifully, she calls the
police, but when they arrive the body has gone. A class-conscious
young journalist Peter Ames seizes the opportunity and prints an
article attacking the frivolous antics of Melsa and her social
crowd. When Melsa threatens to sue him for libel, Ames
discovers that he is in love with her and soon finds himself working
with her to solve the mystery of the murdered banker. Belden is
the obvious suspect, but when his corpse is discovered in a freezer
Melsa realises that the case may be more difficult than she had
imagined. There is certainly no shortage of suspects...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.