Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0
Gilbert Jordan Thompson
Doris
Madame Granville
Marian Edwards
Judge Joseph M. Williams
Janette
Granville Girl
Madamoiselle Cynthia Cliche
Marcia
Mrs. Mason the Landlady
Granville Girl
Eleanor
Lois
Betty
'Chum'
Teacher
Carlos
Job Seeker
Professor Lange
Lawyer
Alumni Dinner Guest
Hiring Boss
Miss Porter
Harry - Judge's Secretary
Gym Teacher
Miss Higgins
Bailiff
Missing Persons Detective
Teenager
Bailiff
Joe Billings
Job Seeker
Old Lady
Waiter
Teacher
Janitor at Train Station
Bubbles
Mama Lupini
Miss Fairwell
Alumni Dinner Guest
Andrew Blair
Boy
Counterman at Diner
Written by waltzma on 2017-12-14
Eddie Cantor goes from pop-eyed to gooey eyed. A bunch of bratty college age girls are forced to look at themselves in this overly sentimental comedy drama (with a few songs added), raising the sugar count in my system to diabetic coma level. Finding an abandoned baby in a train station, impoverished professor Eddie Cantor must hide him when he gets a job at an all-girls college. Wrongly blaming him for the firing of a teacher they all had a crush on, these girls (which includes a young Veronica Lake) attempt all sorts of schemes to expose him to school head Judith Anderson. But when they realize the truth, they change their tune and apologize. One girl proclaims, "We didn't mean to hurt you", to which the obvious response is, "Ah, yes you did." If the screeching young females (including one with an extremely annoyingly cheery southern accent) don't sound like nails down a chalkboard to you, try the coo's and laughs from Baby Quintinella as the oh so cute toddler. Cantor sings a nursery rhyme to him that won't ever be a threat to "If You Knew Susie". A far cry from his earlier Goldwyn films, this has its share of amusing moments, most notably Anderson's overly dramatic reading of a love letter and assistant Nydia Westman's fluttery reaction to its "intenseness". It's an odd film in the career of much of its cast and director Busby Berkeley, but for me, it will remain interesting for Anderson's lighter take (still wearing Mrs. Danvers long severe black dresses), one of the rare times she was able to "let loose" on film.