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Up Goes Maisie

Up Goes Maisie (1946)

February. 01,1946
|
6.2
|
NR
| Comedy Romance

A showgirl working for an inventor battles crooks, who want to steal his ideas.

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bkoganbing
1946/02/01

World War II is over and Maisie Ravier is now finished her Rosie the Riveteer thing and is looking for more traditional employment for women. She's even enrolled in a business school and got her diploma. But when she goes job hunting all the potential bosses see a former showgirl and a quick roll in the hay. In order to get a job and keep the wolves at bay Ann Sothern dresses down and gets a job working for George Murphy.Where to her complete surprise she finds her past experience in a war plant a real asset. Murphy is designing a brand helicopter and it's a hush hush project. But he doesn't know that tycoon Paul Harvey and his daughter Hillary Brooke are looking to steal it for themselves. Murphy's even got a Quisling in his own ranks.This is one of the best of the Maisie series with Sothern given some really good comic bits to work with. She gets slipped a Mickey Finn and does a great drunk act with tips no doubt from Red Skelton until she plunges into a swimming pool. The climax of the film is having Sothern fly Murphy's helicopter. It must be a good machine if a flying novice can handle it.One of the problems of the Maisie series is that she's gotten involved with some man in each of the films. But this is the first one where Sothern actually got a formal marriage proposal. And you know it once again didn't take because there was one more in the series that was so popular at MGM.But as Maisie Sothern is at the top of her game in Up Goes Maisie.

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jjnxn-1
1946/02/02

Bless Ann Sothern for her natural charm and ability to make even the most featherbrained script entertaining. Such is the case with Up Goes Maisie, the series almost always stretched belief but this one takes it to an extreme degree. It starts off innocuously enough with Maisie graduating from secretarial school and reentering the work force now that she off the swing shift. It even ventures to show helicopter innovation which really started to pick up as WWII was winding down by way of Maisie's new employer and romantic interest, second tier leading man George Murphy. The movie moves along well enough in an uninspired fashion with standard villains and assorted complications but it tips into surrealism at the climax. Suddenly as the title says Up Goes Maisie hovering over Los Angeles in a copter although she's never flown in her life!! What really pushes the limit is when while she seems to float effortlessly outside an office building and Connie Gilchrist, repeating from Swing Shift Maisie although in a completely different role, passes a telephone out to her! Of course it works perfectly and she manages to manipulate the machine to the exact spot she wants to! Not only that but she also manages to do all this and not be smudged of dirtied in the least with the enormous bow atop her head still being pristine. Absurd but there's always Ann Sothern who is so darn appealing she makes this sort of foolishness palatable.

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utgard14
1946/02/03

Another enjoyable Maisie movie starring the delightful and lovely Ann Sothern. Maisie has just graduated from business school and wants to get a job as a secretary. However, everywhere she goes the men who interview her are only interested in her looks. So Maisie puts on some glasses, pins her hair up, and tries to dress like a woman with her mind on nothing but business. In the movie this is supposed to make her less appealing. But it's pretty hard to buy as Sothern is so adorable you could put her in a potato sack and she would still be attractive. Anyway, Maisie gets a job with Joe Morton (George Murphy). When Morton learns who she really is and that she used to work assembling airplanes, he invites her into his secret helicopter project. It's always fun to watch Ann Sothern in these Maisie films. They're cute, funny, lightweight entertainment. This isn't my favorite in the series, but it's a good one.

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Neil Doyle
1946/02/04

These MAISIE films were churned out with alarming regularity by MGM, obviously intended to amuse post-war audiences as the second feature on a double bill. They passed the time pleasantly enough, but it's hard to review them by today's standards since much of the material is as dated as can be.Let's just say that ANN SOTHERN dispenses her usual charm and breezy style in the role of Maisie Revere, a gal who gets a job with an inventor (GEORGE MURPHY) who is trying to get his automatic helicopter on the market. Needless to say, Maisie and the inventor, played in his usual bland way by Murphy, soon find they have romance on their minds but little else in this silly script. Of course, she ends up saving the day by solo piloting the helicopter over downtown Los Angeles and landing in the Pasadena Rose Bowl for a grand touchdown.It's as silly as all the other Maisie movies, but not as hard to take as some of them. STEPHEN McNALLY and HILLARY BROOKE are capable at playing the villains, but Maisie getting the wolf whistle routine from every other male in the cast is a bit much.Trivia note: Watch for DON TAYLOR in soldier's uniform in an uncredited bit.

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