Based on the stage play, "The Awful Truth"
is a hilarious comedy, that holds up extremely well. One can see
why this screenplay won an Oscar, and many of it's actors/actresses
nominated as well.
Cary Grant and Irene Dunne portray a well-to-do
New York couple, Jerry & Lucy Warriner,who divorce because
they have lost their trust in each other. Cary becomes upset when
Dunne gets stranded when her car breaks down, and gets a ride
with her flirty French voice teacher, Armand Duvalle. When they
see the judge about who gets their Asta: look-a-like dog, Mr.
Smith, Dunne by sneakily using a squeaky toy, gets the dog to
come to her, but Cary still gets visitation!
On his visitation days, Jerry (Cary) manages to
slyly put seeds of doubt in a humorous way about Lucy's new beau,
Daniel 'Dan' Leeson (Ralph Bellamy), who is the simple, country
Texan oilman, whose lifestyle in Texas is radically different
from what Lucy is accustomed to. He seems to be a bit of a mama's
boy as well, who travels with his protective mother, Mrs. Leeson
(Esther Dale). Ultimately, Jerry inadvertently helps to finish
off her impending mismatched marriage to this country boy, while
taking care of personal business with the music teacher, in a
rather funny sequence of events.
Lucy (Dunne), however, realized before this disastrous
chain of events mentioned above, that she really does love Jerry
(Cary), and couldn't possibly marry the Texan, and wants to mend
things with Jerry. However, her music teacher gets in the way
in her apartment, after she asks him to tell Jerry that nothing
romantic had happened between them. He hides in her bedroom when
Cary arrives suddenly, but his black hat remains. She tries to
hide it, but the dog keeps retrieving it. Dunne tries to convince
Cary that this too big hat was really his, which he momentarily
believes. When it looks like they both want to try to work things
out, the Texan and his mom are at the door, so Cary hides - in
the same bedroom that the music teacher is in. Fireworks happen
that dash this near make up, as well as end the prospect of Lucy's
unwanted marriage to the Texan.
However, when Jerry (Cary) starts dating and proposes to a snooty
society girl Barbara Vance (Molly Lamont), Lucy (Dunne) does him
a favor and breaks up his impending marriage. Dunne shows up as
Cary's sister at the new fiancee's family mansion, acting in an
obnoxious manner to offend everyone, by her crazy dress style,
her lack of social manners and class, and the performance of her
song that she copied from a night club routine, seen earlier in
the movie, where a wind blows up the dress during part of the
song. She refuses the offer of sherry, and asks for something
a lot stronger. She runs after the butler, and secretly has him
put gingerale in her glass. Her coup d'etat is that she chug a
lugs what they think is hard booze, and then pretends to be drunk,
thoroughly convincing Cary, who insists on driving her up to her
dad's cabin. They, of course have a few hilarious mishaps along
the way, with the police and the car. How they finally come back
together makes for an amusing ending to this sparkling screenplay.
This hilarious screenplay was written by Arthur
Richman, who also wrote the original stage play, that was a huge
hit on Broadway. Vina Delmar also helped on the screenplay. Sidney
Buchman was also an uncredited writer, who later wrote the screenplays
to "Here Comes Mr. Jordan," and "Mr. Smith Goes
to Washington."
The stellar direction was by the immensely talented,
multi-Oscar winner, Leo McCarey, who won a Best Director Oscar
for this film. Throughout his long and successful career, he worked
with such people as Laurel and Hardy, The Marx Brothers, Eddie
Cantor, May West, W.C. Fields and Harold Lloyd. He had a marvelous
gift for story telling, from crazy comedies to sentimental tales.
This movie is so well directed, well written,
well paced and well acted that it is a timeless screwball classic
comedy. I recently saw this film in an intergenerational audience,
from teenagers - to people in their 70's and everyone just roared.
Everything comes together to give us a priceless jewel of a comedy.
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