D: H.C. Potter
RKO (Norman Panama & Melvin Frank)
US 🇺🇸 1948
93 mins
Comedy
W: Norman Panama & Melvin Frank
DP: James Wong Howe
Ed: Harry Marker
Mus: Leigh Harline
Cary Grant (Jim Blandings), Myrna Loy (Muriel Blandings), Melvyn Douglas (Bill Cole), Reginald Denny (Henry Simms), Sharyn Moffett (Joan Blandings), Connie Marshall (Betsy Blandings)
Growing up during the 1980s, I watched the Tom Hanks-Shelley Long comedy vehicle “The Money Pit” many times, unknowing that it was a loose remake of this 1948 screwball comedy starring Cary Grant & Muriel Blandings.
Grant does his usual act as Jim Blandings, an advertising executive whose family has become too big for their cramped New York City apartment & looks to purchase a 200-year-old farmhouse in rural Connecticut, but the fixer-upper opportunity turns out to put a strain on both his finances & his marriage as the costs to be bring the new home up to standard spiral out of control.
The humour here is far more astute and grounded, rather than the slapstick approach of the 1986 remake & it’s carried well by the two leads of Grant & Loy, with Melvyn Douglas also providing solid support as Jim’s lawyer friend, Bill Cole, of whom Jim becomes increasingly paranoid that he is having an affair with his wife.
Perhaps it doesn’t deliver many belly laughs, but it does have a number of amusing moments and it makes for a pleasant, light-hearted viewing experience.
7/10