Film Review
Hollywood's most dynamic comedy duo Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn
join forces with director George Cukor and writers Ruth Gordon and
Garson Kanin to deliver another hit comedy, repeating the success of
this team's previous
Adam's Rib (1949), and striking
several blows for feminism along the way. As ever, it is a
delight to see complete opposites Hepburn and Tracy spar off one
another, each relishing every line of the well-crafted screenplay and
draining every last drop of comic potential from each scene.
Most memorable is the sequence where Hepburn's tennis match turns into
an expressionistic nightmare, her opponent's racket attaining a
monstrous proportion whilst hers shrinks to the size of a lollypop as
her confidence dwindles under the beady gaze of her
fiancé. We've all been there. The scene in which
Hepburn disarms and virtually maims a group of mobsters is also pretty
hilarious too. From the sporting prowess that Hepburn shows in
this film (slicing golf balls in much the same way that she slices her
dialogue), you'd be convinced she was a pro. Several professional
sportsmen and women appear in the film, notably Don Budge, Betty Hicks
and Alice Marble, and actor Charles Bronson makes one of his earliest
film appearances, here credited as Charles Buchinski.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next George Cukor film:
A Star Is Born (1954)
Film Synopsis
College physical education instructor Pat Pemberton appears destined
for a successful career as an all-round professional sportswoman - at
least she would be if it weren't for her disparaging fiancé, who
saps her resolve at every tournament she attends. At a golfing
championship, she is approached by unscrupulous sports promoter Mike
Conovan to deliberately lose in the final play off. She refuses,
but after having lost the tournament, she hires Mike as her fulltime
manager. Together, Pat and Mike achieve great things, and,
despite everything, they even end up liking one another...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.