Too Many Women (1942) Poster

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5/10
Confusing
legion-of-angels6 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Alright I hit possible spoilers but the plot summary itself gives the entire story away. I found the movie confusing being in black and white it's hard to tell who is who. Aside from noticing the difference between a blonde and a brunette its hard to figure out who is who in the movie.

The main point behind the movie is "a small lie can snowball into a big problem". Usually too many women isn't a bad thing for men in our current society but things were different back then for sure.

The movie isn't terrible but it isn't good either. It all leads up to a classic crescendo, and it has a typical ending. There is just too much lying throughout the movie that it's hard to follow and even if you follow it, your annoyed by it. Thinking that continued deception will help the problem is ridiculous. I suppose it teaches a good moral but no young children will watch this and pick up on it.
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3/10
Eight Arms to Hold Neil Hamilton
wes-connors6 July 2010
Neil Hamilton (as Richard "Dick" Sutton) wants to marry fiancée Barbara Reed (as Linda Pearson) right away, but she thinks they should wait until he has more money. Meanwhile, Mr. Hamilton is being pursued by June Lang (as Gwendolyn "Gwenny" Miller) and Joyce Compton (as Barbara Cartwright), who also consider themselves engaged to Hamilton; they want a quick wedding. Then, a fourth woman turns up, and her gangster brother insists Hamilton marry Marlo Dwyer (as Lorraine O'Reilly). As a subplot, Hamilton may or may not be a millionaire. This all may sound exciting, but it's not. Debuting character actor Fred Sherman (as Charlie Blakewell) does a all right in the buddy role. Hamilton is seen here between his 1920s silent stardom and 1960s "Batman" role.

*** Too Many Women (2/27/42) Bernard B. Ray ~ Neil Hamilton, Joyce Compton, Fred Sherman, June Lang
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2/10
Wow is this film stupid...even for PRC!
planktonrules23 January 2016
Back in the 1940s, PRC might just have been the worst studio in Hollywood. Like many of the so-called 'Poverty Row' studios, they rented space in a big studio at night and quickly shot ultra-low budgeted B-movies. Any good films PRC made were strictly mistakes!! In this case, the studio hired the ex-matinée idol, Neil Hamilton, to star in the movie--and ex-stars and nearly stars usually appeared in the leads in their pictures.

The story in "Too Many Women" is one of those PRC monstrosities that only an ultra-crappy studio could make. Richard (Hamilton) is in love with Linda and they are secretly engaged. Soon Richard tells a lie to get someone to leave him alone...that a rich uncle in Brazil has left him $3,000,000(????). Soon, everyone had heard Richard is rich...including his grandmother. Here's where it gets dumber...the doctor tells Richard he MUST continue with the ruse, as telling Granny that he's NOT a millionaire will kill her! Soon, lots of women are chasing after Richard and he inexplicably finds himself engaged to three women!! Does this make ANY sense? Nope.

The bottom line is that the writing for this one is terrible and the story just doesn't make the least bit of sense. As for Hamlilton, he's no longer the handsome and patrician actor he'd been in the 30s and soon he'd all but disappear from view and return as Commissioner Gordon on the "Batman" TV show. I think, in hindsight, he wished he'd disappeared BEFORE having made this dopey film.
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2/10
Too few working brain cells.
mark.waltz9 January 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Truly a pretty rotten comedy from PRC, this programmer has absolutely nothing going for it except one dimensional characterizations, a horrible screenplay, veteran stars who shouldn't be playing romantic leads and an absurd situation that if it had been at least stupid would have been fun to laugh at. Neil Hamilton, once a matinee Idol of silent movies and early talkies, is cast as a bon vivant who discovers that he may be a multimillionaire and finds himself in a situation with two different women of different temperaments, one whom he loves and one whom he abhors.

June Lang, Joyce Compton and Barbara Read are just three of the women in Hamilton's life, and in trying to figure out which one fits where, I realized I just didn't care. Somehow, on a extremely low budget, PRC managed to make some of their films look sophisticated, what's the editing and action makes this move at a snail's pace, so any attempt at comedy completely fails. Hamilton also is very dull as a comic, and while he later was able to do that as a character actor, he fails miserably here. Hard to believe that he once appeared opposite some of the great early screen greats like Crawford and Garbo. A slapstick ending comes too late with the cast trying too hard to make up for lost time for the previous boring hour the audience had just suffered through.
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