The Grand Dame (1931) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
8 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
This dame's for me
JohnSeal6 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Whilst I'm never going to claim that The Grand Dame is some long lost classic of one reel comedy--far from it--I must rush to the defense of comedienne Patsy Kelly. I have long wondered why Ms. Kelly never became a comedy star--I guess the closest she came was late in the day, in Topper Returns, where she's absolutely brilliant. This was her first film appearance, and she establishes her screen persona from the first frame--that of the brassy, confident dame entirely lacking in the social graces. She also looks remarkably young and--dare I say it?--sexy here, with an appealing flapper blunt cut and a revealing bath tub scene. Yes, the film is absurd and rushes to a ridiculous conclusion--but Kelly is eminently watchable. Three cheers for Brooklyn!
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
We Would If We Could
boblipton11 September 2021
Gangster's moll Patsy Kelly tries to break into society when she attends a tea run by some English swells.

Miss Kelly, in her first certain movie appearance -- she may have been in a feature a couple of years earlier, but it's unconfirmed -- displays the comic personna she would throughout her career in the 1930s and 1940s: brash and crass. The humor consists of her not noticing how much a fish out of water she is, and how they seem to be mocking her..... but wait for the joke that ends the short.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
rooting interest
SnoopyStyle11 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Peggy O'Rourke (Patsy Kelly) is an uncivilized gun moll obsessed with notoriety and acceptance by high society. She is pampered in her grand lifestyle. A group tries to sell her a $25k membership to their club. The party gets robbed and the robbers notice the group to be fellow criminals. The con gets revealed.

Rooting interest is a little tough in this one. Peggy starts off unlikeable which makes it hard to root for her. Patsy Kelly does have good broad comedic skills. It's funny that she keeps licking that monocle. It's her way of licking that makes it funny. It would help if her character is more likeable.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
The Start of Kelly
Michael_Elliott31 August 2010
Grand Dame, The (1931)

** (out of 4)

Weak one-reeler has Patsy Kelly playing a rich woman who is constantly laughed at in the press because she doesn't have any class. She's invited to a party where she's going to learn some but it turns out it's just a bunch of con artists trying to take advantage of her. As other reviewers have pointed out, this film pretty much starts and ends without much notion of what it was trying to do. I'm going to guess that the studio just wanted to introduce Kelly, in her film debut, to people but it looks like they would have selected some better material. I was really shocked to see how little actually happens in this film. We meet Kelly, she goes to the party and then it's over. The screenplay really doesn't set up any jokes except for a couple silly ones like Kelly accidentally squirting lemon juice in one of the crook's eye. Those expecting the loud Kelly that you'd see in later years will probably be disappointed because she's pretty low-key here and rather quiet. The film just doesn't have enough laughs to make it worth viewing unless you're a fan of Kelly and want to see where she started.
2 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
It's amazing how short this film was and how quickly it all ends
planktonrules24 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
As I said above, it's amazing how short this Patsy Kelly film is. While it was intended as a short, at only nine minutes, the movie doesn't last nearly as long as other similar films--that usually range from 12 to 20 minutes. While generally this would be a serious problem, for me it was a blessing! I have only seen a few Patsy Kelly films but have hated her so much for her lousy over-acting that I was thrilled this movie didn't last so long. It's hard to describe her, but she looked and sounded a lot like an obnoxious version of Rosie O'Donnell. Physically they looked pretty similar, but Kelly nearly always spoke louder than a Concord in flight!! Screaming your lines in a Brooklyn accent just isn't comedy---it's the recipe for a migraine. But as I said, the film is blessedly short and Patsy actually under-acts compared to her usual assault on your senses! The film is about a rich dame (Kelly) who is trying to buy some class but has no idea what class and sophistication really are. So, some con artists try to take advantage of the situation.

The movie is imminently forgettable but at least it is watchable and not bad. This is a definite time-passer or a film for someone wanting to see what Kelly looked like in a more cerebral role (sort of like for those who wanted to see Curly Howard doing Shakespeare).
1 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
EARLY patsy kelly.
ksf-229 October 2021
One of the first things that Patsy Kelly ever did... she's Peggy, some big gangster's moll. Meeting the society ladies for the first time. She is introduced to Lady WItherspoon, and Lord Beaverbottom. Some slapstick humor, but the funniest parts of this short are the names! She tries so hard to be fancy fancy, but she is the gangster's moll. Thank goodness she will go on to bigger and better roles. Can she save the day? It's all over in a couple minutes (thank goodness.) directed by Arthur Hurley. Looks like he was stuck doing all short films. Written by Stanley Rauh. Wrote mostly shorts. It's okay, but fun to see Kelly in such an early role, just as talkies were starting.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Warner Bros. lives up to its name despite . . .
oscaralbert28 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
. . . going pretty far afield with THE GRAND DAME. America's always eponymous film studio is warning We World Citizens of (The Then) Far Future of that waffling, wheeling-dealing "Let's Make a Bargain!" fraudster, Brit PM "T. May," of course. As the title character of this cautionary live-action short, the morally bankrupt wench is first pictured listening to Radio Station WXYZ (which has broadcast from the Detroit area since the 1920s) while sitting in the buff in the middle of a large, ornate room, with "Maria" and two other ladies-in-waiting sponging off her. As a national anthem starts to play over the radio, THE GRAND DAME rises, showing all of England that their "Empress has no clothes!" Next, THE GRAND DAME's shown (fully dressed) traveling to a meeting of European leaders with a fellow swindler. The bumbling May (aka, "Peggy" here) is totally gauche with her peers, in a scene which could be entitled MY TWO LEFT FEET. This Brexit Party breaks up when a rival gang of thieves barge in, and everyone realizes that there's NO hope for Prosperity amid the entire room. Leave it to Warner Bros. always prophetic prognosticators to blow the whistle on THE GRAND DAME of the so-called "United Kingdom's" scheme to rip off the World.
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Patsy Kelly Makes A Splash In Her First Film
reader46 September 2010
Patsy Kelly burst on the scene at 21 loaded with talent and presence. This is amply evidenced by her debut film, in which she is already a star. She demonstrates both her physical comedy abilities, with numerous prat falls and other mishaps, as well as a bit of her talent for delivering sarcastic one-liners. She has a naturalness and sense of timing surprising in one so young and inexperienced.

The short film is packed with laughs from start to finish. Miss Kelly plays a low-life of the worst kind, a gangster moll who has become rich and now has servants, fine clothes and highfalutin ideas.

Her manners, though, remain those of the most uncultured boor. Similar to Jethro on the Beverly Hillbillies, who thinks he is now a worldly millionaire playboy, Kelly demonstrates even less sophistication as she tries to enter "legitimate" high society, with hilarious results. She wipes her nose on the back of her hand, drinks coffee from the saucer, and licks off her monocle as she tries to act snooty and impress her hosts.

There is even a plot twist stuffed into these laugh-packed nine minutes. Not to mention a pre-Code scene of Miss Kelly nude in the bathtub. You don't see much, but she has never been more attractive.

The directing is surprisingly good for just a little short. Things move rapidly, the camera angles are interesting, it is well lit, and everything fits into place perfectly with no loose edges or flaws of any kind. The timing and delivery of the lines is of the first caliber from all the actors without exception.

No wonder Patsy Kelly went on to become so popular, with a start like this!
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed