By Your Leave (1934)
A bored couple facing middle-age succumbs to wandering eyes.
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Truly Dreadful Film
Best movie of this year hands down!
Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.
If you took Bob Newhart's stammering, befuddled style and turned it up to 10, you'd have Frank Morgan. I guess some find it a bit grating, but I've always found it endearing. Morgan stars in this familiar story of a man in the throes of a midlife crises.Margaret Hamilton has a small role in this as well, and while this film did not go on to distinction, a few years later Morgan and Hamilton would forever be remembered as the Wizard and Wicked Witch in The Wizard of Oz. No flying monkeys here though, and nothing to really make this movie stand out. The whole thing pretty much centers on Morgan, and if you like him, you'll find this a pleasant enough way to pass 80 minutes.Look fast for some early Betty Grable. She only gets about two minutes of screen time. There are a number of other familiar faces for fans of movies from the 1930's.
Mid-life crisis movie about a guy (Frank Morgan) who proposes the idea to his wife (Genevieve Tobin) that they take separate "no questions asked" vacations. Subject matter could have lent itself to one of those melodramatic weepers from the period but it all stays fairly light. The plot is contrived and not ever as interesting as it sounds on paper. Morgan's stammering performance wears thin pretty fast. Genevieve Tobin plays the wife and looks quite a bit younger than Morgan. They were nine years apart in real life. She was a lovely actress whose face reminds me a little of Joan Blondell. Neil Hamilton (always Commissioner Gordon to me) plays the guy Tobin becomes interested in. Worth a gander for a very young and very adorable Betty Grable. She's almost unrecognizable and had I not been tipped off by another review pointing her out, I doubt I would have realized it was her.
The basic idea for this film is a bit hard to believe. Frank Morgan plays a man who has become aware that he's middle-aged and no longer attractive to women other than his lovely wife. He has a yen to prove his virility--not by bedding other women but by seeing if he can at least get them interested! So, he discusses the idea of having separate vacations with his wife on the condition they be "no questions asked" trips--just like a variation on the Las Vegas motto, "what happens in New York, stays in New York". She is naturally hurt, but oddly she agrees to do this.As far as Morgan goes, he isn't very successful with women but when he later has a chance at a conquest, he runs back to his wife at top speed--realizing he does NOT want anyone but her. Unfortunately, the reluctant wife IS very successful without even trying--getting handsome and rich Neil Hamilton to propose to her after spending just two days together! How all this works out in the end is something you'll have to see for yourself. I liked this slight film despite the silly plot, as the film actually evolved into a sweet little romance. Not a great film by any means, but a bit more than just a simple time-passer.Oh, and by the way. At the beginning of the film look for a young and soon to be famous Betty Grable as a neighbor.
One of the pleasures of my movie-going life is to watch FRANK MORGAN in just about anything. His well established mannerisms gave many an MGM film a lift, particularly in the '30s and '40s, but here he's doing a job for RKO under Pandro S. Berman's auspices and his lovable presence is somewhat ill served by a less than original script.But even a mild programmer like this has some compensations. MARGARET HAMILTON plays a nosy maid influenced by astrology and a platinum-haired BETTY GRABLE makes a brief appearance in one of her early starlet roles. But the story revolves around the "seven year itch" aspect of Frank Morgan's marriage and his own inability to accept the fact that he's middle-aged. GENEVIEVE TOBIN makes no particular impression as his understanding wife who reluctantly accepts the idea that they take a vacation from marriage. NEIL HAMILTON has virtually little to do as her romantic interest.It's Morgan's restless, blustery performance that carries the film, but there's not much plot to carry. Based on a play, it's a theme better handled years later in THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH.