I Wanna Love You Again Movie

1940 film by W. S. Van Dyke

I Love You Again
Iloveyouagainposter.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed by W.S. Van Dyke
Screenplay by Charles Lederer
George Oppenheimer
Harry Kurnitz
Story past Leon Gordon
Maurine Watkins
Based on I Love You Once again
1937 novel
by Octavus Roy Cohen
Produced past Lawrence Weingarten
Starring William Powell
Myrna Loy
Frank McHugh
Cinematography Oliver T. Marsh
Edited by Factor Ruggiero
Music by Franz Waxman

Production
visitor

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Distributed by Loew's Inc.

Release date

  • September 9, 1940 (1940-09-09)

Running fourth dimension

99 minutes
Land United States
Language English

I Beloved You Again is an MGM comedy released in 1940. It was directed by Due west.South. Van Dyke and starred William Powell and Myrna Loy, all three of whom were prominently involved in the Thin Man flick series.

Plot [edit]

In 1940, while on a cruise, stodgy, overly frugal businessman Larry Wilson is hit on the caput with an oar while rescuing a drunkard "Doc" Ryan from the water. He wakes up and remembers that he is actually a suave conman named George Carey. George's concluding retention is of going to place a large bet in 1931.

When the ship docks at New York, he is met by Kay, whom he discovers is his wife. She however is in the process of divorcing him to ally Herbert. They get home to the pocket-size boondocks of Habersville, Pennsylvania. George talks Doctor (who is also a con artist) into masquerading as a physician treating him, partly out of curiosity, but mostly considering of greed, after seeing the enormous residual in his checking account. That turns out to be a dead end (the coin is merely held in trust for the Community Chest), then he decides to swindle people using his alter ego's sterling reputation. He sends for his onetime crony Duke Sheldon, who plants oil on a lot George owns.

A complexity arises when he falls in dear with Kay a second time. She however wants nothing further to do with her deadening cheapskate of a husband. George attempts to win dorsum Kay'due south affections, while also trying to sell his land to several greedy leading citizens of the boondocks. George uses his other persona equally a celebrated woodsman to have his troop of Junior Rangers (many of them the sons of local businessmen) stumble upon the oil. This gets dorsum to their fathers, who chop-chop offer to buy the state.

In the end, wanting to remain with Kay who now loves him every bit George, he decides to abort the swindle, only Duke will not let him. They fight, and George is knocked out by a dial. When he comes to, he seems to be Larry once more. Duke leaves in disgust, but having hooked the biggest scammer of the citizens in a side deal. When Doc muses that one knock on the caput reversed the outcome of some other, Kay, who knows all and wants George dorsum, picks upwardly a vase. Earlier she can bring it down on his caput, "Larry" proves that he was but faking to get rid of Duke.

Cast [edit]

  • William Powell every bit Lawrence 'Larry' Wilson / George Carey
  • Myrna Loy every bit Katherine 'Kay' Wilson
  • Frank McHugh every bit 'Doc' Ryan
  • Edmund Lowe as Duke Sheldon
  • Donald Douglas equally Herbert
  • Nella Walker as Kay's mother
  • Carl "Alfalfa" Switzer as Leonard Harkspur Jr.
  • Pierre Watkin equally W.H. Sims
  • Paul Stanton as Edward Littlejohn Sr.
  • Morgan Wallace as Phil Belenson
  • Charles Arnt as Mr. Billings

Reception [edit]

Reviews of the picture were generally positive. New York Times critic Bosley Crowther praised the film writing: "Mr. Powell and Miss Loy, no matter what their names, are one of our almost versatile and frisky connubial one-act teams, and, given a script as daffy as the one here in evidence, they tin brand an 60 minutes and a half spin like a roulette bike."[1] W.S from Flick Daily stated that the audience was in "continuous laughter and adulation throughout the film" and claimed that "M-Grand-M has made the funniest motion picture this industry has seen in 10 years."

Other critics agreed. Laura Lee, critic for the Philadelphia Bulletin, wrote, "Likewise ridiculous for words, but 'I Love You lot Once again' is extremely funny. You may experience silly for laughing simply laugh you lot must." Gilbert Kanour of the Baltimore Evening Dominicus said, "William Powell and Myrna Loy have lost none of their skill in provoking laughter...a witty and inventive plot."

Co-ordinate to Movement Motion-picture show Daily, the moving picture did in a higher place average business at the box role during its commencement two weeks.

Radio adaptations [edit]

Lux Radio Theatre adjusted the film twice, first in 1941 with Loy and Cary Grant, and so in 1948 with Powell and Ann Sothern (Loy was supposed to reprise her film part in this adaptation, but had to drib out due to retakes on a film).[ii]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Bosley Crowther (Baronial 16, 1940). "I Love You Again (1940) THE SCREEN; William Powell and Myrna Loy Back Together in 'I Love You lot Once again,' at the Capitol". The New York Times.
  2. ^ "I Love Yous Over again (1940): Notes". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved November ten, 2015.

External links [edit]

  • I Dearest You lot Again at IMDb
  • I Love You lot Once again at the TCM Movie Database
  • I Dearest You Again at AllMovie
  • I Dearest You lot Again at the American Film Institute Catalog

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Love_You_Again

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