When Jean Harrington meets Charles Pike on a ship, a misunderstanding leaves them parting on bad terms. In order to win back his love, Jean disguises herself as an English lady and sets off to pursue him... Read more
| Starring | Barbara Stanwyck, Henry Fonda |
|---|---|
| Director | Preston Sturges |
| Genres | Comedy |
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When Jean Harrington meets Charles Pike on a ship, a misunderstanding leaves them parting on bad terms. In order to win back his love, Jean disguises herself as an English lady and sets off to pursue him...
| Starring | Barbara Stanwyck, Henry Fonda |
|---|---|
| Director | Preston Sturges |
| Studio | UNIVERSAL PICTURES UK |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Comedy |
| Language | English |
| Released | DVD: 02 Oct 2006 Production year: 1941 |
| Format | DVD |
A wonderfully witty masterpiece, written and directed by the inimitable Preston Sturges. The plot gives a couple of near career-best roles to two of Hollywood's finest players, who are perfectly cast here. Henry Fonda, a wealthy young man obsessed by snakes, lays himself wide open to the schemes of professional con artist Charles Coburn and his daughter, Barbara Stanwyck. Fonda's buddy William Demarest intervenes, but Stanwyck, undeterred, later reappears in disguise at his palatial manse and tries again. Naturally, the slick, assured sexual opportunist falls for the gauche brewer's son who has spent a year up the Amazon, resulting in a witty, sparkling combination of romance and screwball comedy that is still unequalled. There was a 1956 remake with Mitzi Gaynor called The Birds and the Bees, but it didn't come within spitting distance of this great original.
Hectic romantic farce, the first to show its director's penchant for mixing up sexual innuendo, funny men and pratfalls. There are moments when the pace drops, but in general it's scintillating entertainment, especially after viewing its weak remake Th
I'm really not sure if there is a better Hollywood comedy extant than The Lady Eve. Unencumbered by all the low level businness that usually clutters up Sturges' films, The Lady Eve provides Barbara Stanwyck's finest moment. Her routine of a card sharp masquerading as an English duchess is textbook screwball comedy. Rent this and only give it back under duress.
This starts off really well...whilst they remain on the ship, but once they come ashore, the plot runs aground too. The second half is based on Henry Fonda's deception, but it's so ludicrous as to become a bit tiresome.