6/10
Star quality
31 January 2019
A rather run-of-the-mill Twentieth Century Fox film from 1942 directed with his usual competence by Fox staff director Walter Lang, worth watching if only to be reminded that young Henry Fonda was as excellent a comic actor as he was a dramatic one. Here, he plays the country bumpkin, a fall guy from Vermont who gets taken by city slickers: slick Don Ameche in the Donald Trump role and his cynical sidekick Edward Everett Horton. This was Lynn Bari's big chance, and although she is extremely attractive and thoroughly professional in everything she does, she isn't very convincing as the cold-hearted femme fatale who falls for the good guy with a heart of gold, a role that Barbara Stanwyck did so believably with Fonda a year earlier in Preston Sturges' classic, The Lady Eve, and Jean Arthur played twice for Frank Capra. Lynn Bari, thoroughly reliable, went on working for another twenty five years in less demanding roles. Only goes to prove that some actors, good as they were, just didn't have that rare undefinable something called star quality. As this film shows, Fonda had it from the beginning.
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