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The Lady Is Willing

The Lady Is Willing (1942)

February. 12,1942
|
6.3
| Romance

Bold, eccentric Broadway performer Elizabeth Madden befuddles her handlers by coming home with a baby she picked up on the street. She wants to keep the baby but has to find a husband to make adoption viable. She offers her new obstetrician Dr. McBain help with his research on rabbits in exchange for marriage - and he accepts. The marriage of convenience turns into a marriage of real love until Dr. McBain's ex-wife comes looking for money.

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Reviews

Armand
1942/02/12

for the self irony of Dietrich performance. for the nice story and air of far age of cinema. for inspired cast. and, sure, for the respect for recipes of romantic comedy. it is not a link from chain of fashion of art. few sparkles, a seductive Dietrich, mixture of love balloons and fine humor, the dramatic small slice and the touching solutions to create identity in a ocean of clones, all is good reason to see it and, in a measure or other, to love it. because it is almost magic like many films from that period. because the acting is smart and the game of nuances not uninspired. because, after war of blockbusters, this film has the gift to be comfortable. and for occasion to travel in time. and discover than life is beautiful.

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David Traversa
1942/02/13

Why does she blink all the time? The shy ingénue type? at forty? Preposterous. After a while it gets to be quite annoying. Is that the added touch to round up a dumb character? whatever, it's very difficult to accept Marlene Dietrich in such a disguise.She wears huge mink coats, shiny evening gowns (even in her kitchen and in the hospital scene) a la Cher (Yes, I know, Cher came later, but you know what I mean). Even in her more dramatic scenes she grabs that mink coat and doesn't let go, crying and all (It could have been a Carol Burnett sketch).I can only think that in those years people were extremely naive and took all these unreal props as part of movie life, so removed from their humble, dreary little lives and made it so enchanting to go home after the movie and dream while reading Photoplay or whatever movie magazine was issued back then.The movie is entertaining to a point but after a while you just want to give it up and go, do something else. All the situations are so outrageously phony that if you pretend to analyze them you'll stop watching this movie after the very first scene is completed.Froth to the nth degree.

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samhill5215
1942/02/14

This is one of those escapist, nonsensical, utterly unrealistic and yes, downright silly movies from a time when the world was anxious. Europe was under Nazi occupation and the US was contemplating its own role in the conflict. Hollywood had become very good at giving Americans just this kind of comic relief. So why should anyone bother with it? Because despite all the silliness the four leads manage to pull it off with great aplomb. Marlene Dietrich is just as exotic and glamorous as she was in 'The Blue Angel' if not more so. She was forty and a show-stopper without compare. How could Fred MacMurray help himself but fall for her. His role here is an early version of his absent-minded professor. And the supporting leads, Aline MacMahon and Stanley Ridges, are equally good and fun to watch. So sit back and enjoy the show!

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RanchoTuVu
1942/02/15

An amusing and fast-paced comedy about an actress (Marlene Dietrich) who finds an abandoned baby, brings it home, wants to adopt it but can't unless she gets married, then marries the pediatrician (Fred MacMurray) who she hired to check the baby out in what is at first a marriage of convenience. Later the pragmatist doctor and the impulsive actress will fall in love, and who better to play them than MacMurray and Dietrich? It all happens with great speed and dexterity, with some funny scenes with the police and a lady from child protective services and later a dishonest lawyer and a couple whom he persuades to declare that the baby is really theirs. In addition, MacMurray's true ambition is to do scientific research on rabbit reproduction, and Dietrich, as part of the deal sets up the adjacent apartment as his laboratory. Unfortunately, Dietrich's role gets to be bothersome and the film wanders off into melodramatic goo when the baby gets sick and needs an operation signaling a sad goodbye to what was a fairly sophisticated and promising comedy.

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