Mexican Spitfire's Blessed Event
Mexican Spitfire's Blessed Event
NR | 14 July 1943 (USA)
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Dennis mistakenly believes Carmelita is going to have a baby. Little does he know that the blessed event is her cat's new kittens.

Reviews
TaryBiggBall

It was OK. I don't see why everyone loves it so much. It wasn't very smart or deep or well-directed.

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Frances Chung

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

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Mathilde the Guild

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

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Staci Frederick

Blistering performances.

mark.waltz

While actress Lupe Velez's life would not end up on a happy note, the series and character for which she is best remembered would tie things up, hopefully happy. It was the end of Carmelita but not for Lord Epping who, with Leon Errol repeating the part, ended up as a short film several years later.The film here starts off with confusion for Dennis Lindsay, now in the Merchant Marines, and on leave to finalize some business with Lord Epping. Errol is in more scenes here as both Uncle Matt and Lord Epping, although they are never in the same frame at the same time, only with a double as Uncle Matt while the camera is focused on Lord Epping. A telegram arrives for Dennis to notify him from Carmelita that they have just had a "little blessed event". Believing that Carmelita just had a baby, they rush to the Arizona resort where she's staying, unaware that the "blessed event" is a tiger kitten, not a human baby.Of course, this gets one of Dennis's business rivals scheming to get Lord Epping to sign a contract, and this is where Uncle Matt must disguise himself as the British nobleman one more time. Every time this happens though, Carmelita reminds him of "the time you put on the goat face". The time? He did it several times in each of the 8 movies in the series, utilizing his rubber-legged comical ability over and over again. When Carmelita colors an Indian wig blonde, she refers to the "dyed" hair as "dead", one of the best malapropisms in the film.This isn't as funny as previous entries, but of course, it is a bit more touching knowing that Velez would never play this part again, and there's a very funny scene towards the end where Errol, as Lord Epping, not Matthew in disguise as the business rival thought, is dunked in a well as part of punishment for the supposed kidnapping of the local sheriff's new baby. Then, Carmelita comes in to make her announcement, which proves that's all's well that ends well. Of course, Uncle Matt gets his own revenge here against the business rival, the storyline which seems straight out of something you'd see on "Bewitched".

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vandino1

These Mexican Spitfire films are something else. Almost always the same plot and antics, but so lively that they breeze by. This series is the epitome of frantic farce. Leon Errol bounds from Uncle Matt, the sensible American, to Lord Epping, the befuddled Englishman, and brings things to a froth by consistently having Uncle Matt do impersonations of Epping. Much sputtering confusion, innuendos, door-slamming, and racing around ensues. But Errol is so effortlessly charming and game that it all goes down smoothly, no matter how high-pitched the antics get. And Errol is matched with the Spitfire herself, Lupe Velez. Sadly, this is her last Hollywood film. Her famous suicide followed at the end of the following year. It was thought she was washed up in Hollywood, but it's doubtful such a firecracker personality could have stayed unlit for long. She might have exploded on television in the fifties, if anything. But she left behind a lot of personality on screen for viewers to marvel at. She and Errol are unsung as one of the finest comedy teams in Hollywood history. The Mexican Spitfire films are worthless without their timing, talent, and inter-action. 'Blessed Event' concerns the confusion over Carmelita (Lupe) having a baby and how its existence, or non-existence, influences Lord Epping's signature on a contract for Carmelita's husband. Hugh Beaumont is competing for Epping's signature and he's well aware that the whole baby thing is a crock. But Epping goes to Arizona to find out, with Beaumont following. Inevitably, it's up to Uncle Matt to do his Epping impersonation again to save the day. Beaumont is okay, but the other cast members are wallpaper. Errol and Velez are a vortex of energy, leaving nothing to anyone else. There is one minor note: Alan Carney and Wally Brown have separate bit parts (Carney as bartender, Brown as desk clerk) but soon after in the same year would start their comedy team antics as RKO's answer to Abbott & Costello.

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jaykay-10

The last of the series, and not the best, but kudos to Lupe Velez, who was unique and never better than in this series. Leon Errol's rather nondescript film career was capped by his brilliant comic creation of Lord Epping. What an unlikely pair...but they are terrific together.

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logan2445

This was the 2nd MEXICAN SPITFIRE film that I saw and, although I loved MEXICAN SPITFIRE OUT WEST (my 1st)this film and every other subsequent MEXICAN SPITFIRE seemed like I already saw it... talk about beating a dead horse. Lupe Valez is comic as can be as Carmelitta, and teaming her up with Leon Errol makes for a great comedy team. It is a shame that the Lord Epping theme was over worked or this entire series would rate an 8 with me. If you've seen one, You've seen them all.

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