7/10
The man with the big felt hat.
18 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
After watching some eps from the Death In Paradise box set I gave him as a Father's Day present,my dad started checking what films were on BBC iPlayer. Both of us being fans of his movies since seeing the Flubber flicks,we were pleased to find a rare Fred MacMurray that had just screened,which would hopefully not have a dull moment.

The plot:

Taking care of his daughters after the death of their mum/his wife, Chris Heyward raises cash by being a rodeo who travels across states. During a visit to New York,Heyward crosses paths with singer Kay Kingsley,and falls in love for the first time since he became a widow. Catching each other up in a whirlwind romance,the couple get married,and Kingsley leaves the songs,to join Heyward and his kids on the farm. Despite getting a warm welcome,Kingsley is unable to shake the feeling that she is suited to the limelight,rather than the farm life.

View on the film:

Getting knee-deep into all the farmyard chores,the very pretty Irene Dunne (who replaced Myrna Loy) gives a wonderful performance as Kingsley,whose singing glitters with gold that Dunne melts down into a Southern belle. Joined by a very young Natalie Wood (and future Rebel Without a Cause co-star Ann Doran) Fred MacMurray gives a great performance as Heyward,with MacMurray throwing Screwball Comedy haystacks in exchanges with Andy Devine's very funny Orvie.

Keeping the Comedy and Melodrama lassos spinning, MacMurray gives a warm sincerity to Heyward's attempts to support Kingsley getting used to a different lifestyle. Bringing Frank Capra's cinematographer Joseph Walker down on the farm,director George Marshall impressively finds ultra-stylised barns for the daily grind of the family,via rustic tracking shots going over the muddy boots and family dog leaping for joy,to elegant overlapping shots listening in on local gossip,in a town that never has a dull moment.
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