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Thursday, October 15, 2020

A Lady Takes a Chance

The 120 Screwball Years of Jean Arthur Blogathon is an event celebrating the life and career of the actress, hosted by The Wonderful World of Cinema. For more information on participating bloggers, visit the link at the host site.

A Lady Takes a Chance

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Well, this movie sure has an unusual pairing: 30s romcom girl Jean Arthur, she of the squeaky voice and slightly-odd-but-still-cute looks, and John Wayne, on the verge of becoming the iconic superstar of the great John Ford westerns, together in a romantic comedy. Huh?

A Lady Takes a Chance realizes they’re an odd couple—from the perspective of a 21st century cinephile, she belongs with Jimmy Stewart and he belongs with Maureen O’Hara—but here they are. Can they believably fall in love with each other despite coming from not only different worlds but different genres?

The film begins with a message on title cards that has a surprising amount of resonance in 2020, a year that has made us all nostalgic for 2019:

“Once upon a time... It was so long ago that people drove sixty miles an hour, and skidded their tires, and drank three cups of coffee all at once, and ate big gobs of butter, and there were more fellows around than there were girls, and everybody was having a good time without knowing it, that’s when our story happened. Away back then... in 1938.

“And here’s hoping that ‘once upon a time’ goes on again some quick tomorrow. 

“Only better.”


Arthur is a big city girl going on a two-week bus tour of the west—possibly, in part, to get away from her three suitors. She meets Wayne at a rodeo; he falls off his bucking bronco during a competition and onto her. She’s interested in him at first but when he makes his intentions toward her clear, she goes to red alert and puts up her shields (is it me or did Arthur always feel the need to defend her virtue in the movies?). When she catches his softer side, though, she becomes convinced she can win his heart after all.

Arthur gets her moments: drinking beer with Wayne and getting foam on her upper lip; sampling a potent local brew and nearly having her head explode, pulling a Claudette Colbert while trying to hitchhike—all the silly little things that made her so adorable and precious and spunky.

Wayne, four years removed from Stagecoach and still looking youthful and slightly less rugged, gets to do his thing too: getting into a barroom brawl; riding a bucking bronco (or at least his stunt double does); tossing Arthur out a window and onto a bale of hay. His character is actually named Duke, if you can believe it.

Charles Winninger plays the Gabby Hayes/Andy Devine role as Wayne’s sidekick; I assume his official role is as Wayne’s trainer or perhaps manager. He sees Arthur as a threat to the status quo. He’s clearly jealous of her for stealing Wayne’s attention and Wayne is surprisingly clear as to how he views Winninger: Wayne calls him his “better half,” and when Winninger complains about Arthur, Wayne says “You sound like a wife.” (Imagine him saying that to Andy Devine!)

The opening narration would have you believe what we’re about to see is a modern fairy tale, and I’m willing to indulge in a bit of fantasy in seeing such an unusual duo as Arthur and Wayne fall in love out where the buffalo roam—but the title of the movie would also have you believe she’s the one who will learn to bend a little to get what she wants, when in fact it’s him who makes the big change.

Wayne is supposed to be Mr. Set In His Ways, yet all it takes is one lamb chop dinner (he claims to hate lamb chops) for him to decide that yes, he will give up his lone wolf existence which he says he values so much, ditch his sidekick (which we don’t see), travel 2000 miles, and literally fight off the three suitors to get Arthur back after she was convinced her master plan to win him over didn’t work and would never work. Seriously?

I can tell you from personal experience this sort of thing can happen, but it takes way more time than what we saw. To have him pop up in New York in the final reel, suddenly ready and willing to be what she wants him to be is a cheat. It’s dishonest; human nature doesn’t work that way, and I don’t believe this relationship would last.

Maybe I’m so sensitive to this because Wayne and Arthur play cartoon versions of the characters in my novel, and I’ve spent the past seven years trying to make them more believable than this. I’d rather Wayne and Arthur depart as friends and admit to themselves they’re incompatible. That would be more honest—but no, we gotta have a happy ending. It’s 1943, there’s a war on, and audiences don’t come to the movies to be depressed by “honesty.”

But like I said, Lady is presented from the outset as a fairy tale. Maybe I shouldn’t get so worked up. Besides, we know Arthur leaves Wayne once she realizes he’s not the man for him, because the next time we see her on the prairie, she’s married and settled down with Van Heflin!

Quick postscript: Phil Silvers plays a chatty bus driver. I must have seen him in something before, but I don’t recall where. Anyway, this was long before his self-titled TV show, which I’ve never seen but heard of through other places. He’s more or less how I imagined him.

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Other Jean Arthur films:

Mr. Deeds Goes to Town

Too Many Husbands 

The Talk of the Town

A Foreign Affair

Shane

10 comments:

  1. You're darn tootin'! If I plunk down my two bits at the picture show and it's not one of those Warner Bros. ripped from the headlines or one of those high-toned dramas, I expect a movie ending clinch between the stars. And I'll have it or know the reason why!

    Duke with Jean or Duke with Claudette Colbert (Without Reservations) or Joan Blondell (Lady for a Night) are combos that take some getting used to, but I'll admit that they all have a sweet appeal to me.

    PS: You are absolutely on the nose about the bus driver. I do believe that when Phil Silvers was born he was wearing glasses and the doctor said "Oh, it's that guy. I'd know him anywhere."

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  2. I’ll have to look up that Wayne/Blondell movie.

    I’ve never seen THE PHIL SILVERS SHOW but Silvers just seemed like the kind of guy you expect to see in movies like this.

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  3. If Phil Silvers rings a bell, you might have seen him in It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World! I saw this film (A Lady Takes a Chance) not a long time ago and overall enjoyed it. I thought there were some beautiful and credible moments between John Wayne and Jean Arthur (the scene in the haystack for example) but, in the end, I really don't understand why Jean's character would choose to spend the rest of her life with a man like Duke. I mean, he's like so childish and always complain for no good reasons lol. Thank you so much for this interesting contribution to the blogathon!

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  4. I have seen MAD WORLD, though not in a very long time. That’s the kind of movie they don’t make anymore.

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  5. I really adore this film and consider it under rated in JW's filmography. It is kind of unbelievable but its a fun ride!

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  6. It definitely has its moments. The bar scene where she drinks that powerful whiskey was great.

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  7. I can't believe I haven't seen this film yet... this sounds like just my cup of tea! Your review intrigued me, so I hope to take a look on the film once I have some free time - it'll take a while.
    Cheers!

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  8. It’s definitely worth seeing for Arthur.

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  9. I would never have thought of John Wayne with Jean Arthur, or in anything with Phil Silvers. Looks like a fun one!

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  10. Silvers isn’t in it much but he definitely makes his presence felt.

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