Film Review
Spencer Tracy is perfectly
suited to play the sympathetic lead in this gentle comedy, directed
with by Vincente Minnelli with his customary aplomb. Skilfully
combining pathos and slapstick, Tracy's nuanced performance captures
the anguish and anticipation of a father facing the prospect of his
daughter's impending wedding day. The story has all the
ingredients for a soppy homespun sitcom but the first rate
performances, direction and sparkling screenplay elevate the film way
above such mediocre fare, earning it a place in the pantheon
of comedy classics.
Just 17 when she made this film, Elizabeth Taylor is at her most
radiant, stunningly beautiful in her bridal gown (the kind of apparel
she would get very used to wearing in the years that
followed). Spencer Tracy and Joan Bennett make a convincing
married couple; they hadn't appeared together since Raoul Walsh's
Me and My Gal (1932) (at the end of
which their character's marry).
In their publicity, MGM exploited Elizabeth Taylor's contemporaneous
high-profile marriage to Conrad Hilton, the son of the man who founded
the Hilton Hotels chain. This certainly didn't harm the film's
popularity and it ended up one of the most successful comedies of the
year. Indeed, the film was so well-received that a sequel -
Father's Little Dividend (1951) -
was released the following year, made by the same team. An
inferior remake of
Father of the
Bride came along in 1991, directed by Charles Shyer and starring
Steve Martin and Diane Keaton.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Vincente Minnelli film:
An American in Paris (1951)
Film Synopsis
Stanley and Ellie Banks are an ordinary middle-class American couple
who have lived a well-ordered, trouble-free life - until that awful
Earth-shattering day when their daughter Kay announces that she intends
to get married. Seized by anxieties that only a father about to
lose his daughter can ever know, Stanley immediately insists on meeting
the man who is about to steal his beloved Kay so that he can find out
everything he can about him, right down to his bank balance and shoe
size. Far from being the psychopathic child-molesting
gold-digging hoodlum that Stanley had been expecting, Kay's intended turns out to be a nice,
respectable young man, and so now all that Stanley has to worry about
is the cost of the wedding. He had been hoping that Kay would
have the good sense to opt for a modest affair, but instead she insists
on a church wedding with all the trimmings. Stanley soon realises
that the price of his daughter's happiness could very well be financial
ruin of the kind not seen since October 1929...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.