Mr. & Mrs. Smith (1941 film)

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For other uses see Mr. & Mrs. Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Smith

original film poster
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Produced by Harry E. Edington
Written by Norman Krasna
Starring Carole Lombard
Robert Montgomery
Gene Raymond
Music by Edward Ward
Cinematography Harry Stradling Sr.
Editing by William Hamilton
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Release date(s) January 31, 1941 (US)
Running time 95 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Mr. & Mrs. Smith is a 1941 screwball comedy film directed by Alfred Hitchcock, written by Norman Krasna, and starring Carole Lombard and Robert Montgomery. It also features Gene Raymond, Jack Carson, Philip Merivale and Lucile Watson.

While Hitchcock later claimed he directed the film – the only pure comedy he made in America – as a favor to Lombard, the files at RKO Radio Pictures show that Hitchcock himself pursued the project.[1]

Contents

[edit] Plot

Ann (Carole Lombard) and David Smith (Robert Montgomery) are a happily married couple living in New York. One morning, Ann asks David if he had to do it over again, would he marry her? To her shock, he answers he wouldn't. Later that day, they both separately find out that, due to a complication when they married three years ago, they are in fact not legally married. Ann does not mention this to David, and thinks he will remarry her that very night after he takes her out to a romantic dinner. When this does not happen, she angrily kicks David out of their home.

David spends the night at his club, where a friend advises him to just wait a day, and then come back home. But when David drops by after work, Ann announces behind a closed door that she is not married to David, and has no intention of ever marrying him.

An angry and disheartened David takes to following Ann around, in the process interrupting a date and getting her fired from her job. A friend and co-worker of David, Jeff (Gene Raymond), tells David he will talk to Ann and persuade her to remarry David. But when David shows up later that evening, he finds that Jeff has instead arranged a date with Ann the following night. David arranges a blind date at the same restaurant, but his date is vulgar and rude and the affair ends in disaster.

Later, Ann and Jeff go to the World's Fair, but become stuck on a ride and are forced to sit through several hours of rain many feet up in the air.

Ann and Jeff begin to date seriously, and Ann even meets Jeff's parents, an affair that quickly becomes awkward when David barges in. To escape, Ann and Jeff decide to take a vacation with Jeff's parents at a skiing resort – the same that Ann and David had earlier been planning to holiday at. Upon arriving at the resort, they find that David has rented a cabin right next to them, but when confronted, David simply faints. David spends the next few hours pretending to be sick and delirious whilst Ann fawns over him, but when Ann finds him out, she yells at him and leaves. Ann then loudly stages a pretend one-way conversation with Jeff in order for David to see they are very serious about each other. This falls through when David storms in to find her talking to thin air. In the end, Ann and David, once the picture of a happy couple, are screaming bloody murder at each other when Jeff walks in. Ann then attacks Jeff for not beating up David, and Jeff and his parents leave in a huff.

Ann, alone at last, struggles with her skis until David offers to help her, then lifts up her legs so that she cannot get up. When Ann yells at him, he just bends down and kisses her, silencing her.

[edit] Cast

Alfred Hitchcock can be seen passing Robert Montgomery in front of his building, at about 43 minutes into the film. Lombard herself directed Hitchcock in the brief scene, forcing him to redo his very simple part many times.[citation needed]

[edit] Miscellany

  • Hitchcock was amazed that in all their years in Hollywood together, Carole Lombard and Robert Montgomery had never made a film together.
  • Cary Grant was the first choice of both Hitchcock and Lombard. His schedule, however, was booked and they had to settle on Montgomery instead.
  • Taking to heart Hitchcock's famous phrase, "Actors are like cattle," Lombard brought three cows to the set, putting on nameplates that said Carole, Bob, and Gene.
  • Robert Montgomery was a staunch Republican, while Lombard was a liberal Democrat. She made a daily ritual of running to the studio parking lot and putting FDR re-election bumper stickers on his car bumper.
  • This film uses a plot device similar to the one in Hindle Wakes, a British stage drama from 1910.
  • Carole Lombard played the same role opposite Bob Hope for Lux Radio Theatre that same year.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Spoto, Donald (1999). The Dark Side of Genius: The Life of Alfred Hitchcock. Da Capo. p. 237. ISBN 030680932X. 

[edit] External links


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