This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.
View MoreTells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.
View MoreThis is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.
View MoreOne of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.
View MoreA crippled dancer and a brash ice cream man show they HAVE A HEART when they become the answer to the other's romantic dreams.This unfortunately obscure little film starts off as a lively comedy, but quickly takes a turn into very serious drama before finally settling into its final shape as a gentle love story -- with a bit of crime action thrown into the mix. The movie will be more than acceptable to those viewers looking for a soap opera with a bit of a punch.Jean Parker is terrific as the valiant young lady whose life is changed forever as the result of a terrible fall. Love finds her in the unexpected form of James Dunn, very good as the quick tempered but good natured fellow who woos her without knowing of her disability. They make a fine on-screen team, each character filling the void in the other's life.Pretty Una Merkel, the Southern belle whose prickly presence perked up many a film project in the 1930's, shines as Parker's tart-tongued friend. Laid-back Stuart Erwin is funny as her card-cheating boyfriend. Samuel S. Hinds plays Miss Parker's kindly doctor.Movie mavens will recognize an uncredited Edward Brophy as Dunn's pal at the ice cream factory.
View MoreI absolutely love early 1930s movies, but this one I thought was just awful. It has a quality of having been made up as the actors went along (perhaps it was made up as the writers went along!), and doesn't realistically address the problem of a disability, even for 1934. Jean Parker has a speech pattern similar to Una Merkel's, and in appearance reminds me of Mary Martin, but somehow her personality lacks the spark that would have made me care more about her character's plight. I've always loved Una Merkel, and the film would have been deadly without her, but this wasn't anyone's best performance. It certainly is a cornucopia of character actors, though, as an earlier commenter said.
View MoreThe plot of this lovely movie is set in motion by a shocking event, which takes the viewer by surprise: Jean Parker, at an impromptu engagement party, runs to a fire escape, which gives way beneath her, hurling her to the street.She survives but has injuries that necessitate her wearing very realistic looking orthopedic shoes, the more disturbing as the movie has opened with her teaching children to dance and with her own lighthearted dancing.The plot get s a bit complicated, but basically it is about four honorable people: Parker, her friend Una Merkel, Merkel's beau the always appealing Stuart Erwin, and James Dunn.Dunn drives a truck for the Have a Heart ice cream company and falls in love with her because of her sweet face. She tries to hide her disability from him but he is not the shallow type to be put off by it.This could make a stone cry (speaking as a stone.)
View MoreThis is a romantic comedy that is funny in parts, but the romance story does not hold up well. Jean Parker plays a young woman who has an accident which causes her fiance to run out on her. James Dunn is the hero who woos her next and is not turned off by her "handicap" (according to the film). A very busy plot that was too melodramatic to hold my interest all that well. Una Merkel (fast-talking cynical dame) and Stu Erwin (country bumpkin oaf) are the comic relief, and they are as good as ever. But otherwise poor acting. Still, well worth seeing once - I caught it on TCM.
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