It's All Yours (1937) Poster

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7/10
Hardworking Girl becomes Millionaire and sets out to win her man
etjf2030 September 2008
One of the forgotten screwball comedies of the 30s, which is a shame. A wealthy man decides to change his will leaving his entire fortune to his faithful secretary rather than his foolish nephew. Of course the secretary is in love with the nephew and wants to get on the right track. The comedy ensues from the lesson she wants to teach him. Madeleine Carroll is the plain Jane secretary who sets out to win handsome Francis Leaderer. Along the way we have fun people like Misha Auer, Franklin Pangborn and Grace Bradley all contributing to the fun. The film while not in the same class as The Awful Truth or Bringing up Baby is nonetheless a fast paced comedy, attractively played and worthy of a look.
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6/10
A Czech Complains About Foreigners
boblipton8 February 2022
Francis Lederer is the loved wastrel nephew of J. C. Nugent. Nugent is dying, so he works out a scheme with his partners to cut Lederer off with a dollar, and leave the bulk of his wealth to his secretary, Madeleine Carroll with instructions to reform the fellow. Carroll has loved Lederer hopelessly for years and no discernible reason. After Nugent kicks the bucket, Miss Carroll goes on a bad investment spree, which causes Lederer to follow her to keep an eye on her, until he can have a witness to his uncle's will thrown out. In the meantime, European fortune hunter Mischa Auer....

Well, it's actually pretty amusing, although listening to Lederer complain about foreigners is very odd. Auer, as usual, is very funny, and so is Victor Kilian in a small role. Elliott Nugent directs competently, although with those two holes in the movie, he has some issues. I kept hearing Fred MacMurray in the Lederer role, and that worked very well.
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7/10
An enjoyable little rom-com...with odd casting.
planktonrules29 March 2018
It's odd to have Czech actor and a British actress in the leads in a romantic comedy set in the States, but if you can look past that, "It's All Yours" is a very sweet film....and it's well worth your time.

When the story begins, you learn that Jimmy (Francis Lederer) is a playboy and has come from Europe to stay with his very rich uncle. However, Jimmy's crazy and lavish ways worry the uncle...so much so that an odd arrangement seems to have been worked out after the old man's death. So, instead of Jimmy inheriting everything, the fortune apparently goes to the secretary, Linda (Medeleine Carroll). She shocks Jimmy by becoming an even bigger spender with a very lavish lifestyle. What Jimmy doesn't know is that this is all for show, as she is trying to reform him and get him to grow up...and hopefully one day marry her. Gumming up the works are two folks pursuing each of them for their money. What's to become of all this?

While you wouldn't normally think of either of these folks in a comedy, it works out well...so well I nearly give the film an 8. Well made and clever.
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3/10
Garrulous Nonsense That Ill Uses Madeleine Carroll
richardchatten15 November 2019
Madeleine Carroll is totally miscast in a role that cries out for Jean Arthur, in which the usual shenanigans ensue when she plays a mousy secretary nursing a secret crush on millionaire playboy Francis Lederer, who is led to believe all his inheritance has gone to her in order to "make a man of him".

Ho hum.
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3/10
Good idea for a plot, but a very boring film with leads to suit
SimonJack29 January 2021
"It's All Yours" has a very unusual plot, but one with potential for a good comedy. But this film isn't it for a few reasons. First, the story and screenplay are just a little off - it needed better writing. Then, the leads don't work. Not only do they not mesh, but individually their performances fall way short.

Madeleine Carroll and Francis Lederer are both hit and miss with comedy - mostly miss. She's not very good - just can't carry it off. Another reviewer mentioned Jean Arthur, but Carol Lombard, Claudette Colbert, Irene Dunne, Paulette Goddard and a number of other actresses would have been splendid in the role, even without a rewrite. But that's all there would have been to the film unless Francis Lederer also were changed. He's nothing but a loud, obnoxious cad - most of the time. And his change in character toward the end just doesn't seem real.

No, this is one Melvyn Douglas, or William Powell, or maybe Dick Powell would have done quite well with. But we didn't have them, so this is a real yawner that's very hard to keep enough interest to even see to the end.

The film has a few lines that showed the comedy possibilities. But there were very few, and here they are.

Linda Gray, "You've been a dear. You know I'm grateful." Alexander Duncan, "Oh, nonsense. I haven't had so much fun since I defended that fan dancer."

Linda Gray, "You may serve tea now, uh, Celeste." Maggie, "Yes, mum." Jimmy Barnes, "Celeste?" Linda Gray, "Yes. I've always wanted a maid named Celeste, so I call her Celeste. Her name's Maggie." Jimmy Banes, "Maggie?" Linda Gray, "Celeste."

Jimmy Barnes, "Look, Gray, let's skip tea if you don't mind. I didn't come 3,00 miles for orange pekoe."

Jimmy Barnes, "Don't confide in... He's after your money." Linda Gray, "What are you after, Jimmy?" Jimmy Barnes, "My money."

Stewardess, "We're in Mountain Time now, you'd better change your watches." Constance Marlowe, "Oh, dear, I wish everybody had the same kinda time. I get all mixed up. It's really four, only we have to say it's five, and in New York everybody thinks its two." Baron Rene de Montigny, "No, no, no, no! In New York it is wh, uh, shaseeza... it is eight. In China it is two. But it is yesterday." Constance Marlowe, "But we're not going to China." Baron, "No." Constance, "And if we don't get to New York until yesterday, we might as well have taken the train." Baron, "Hmmm?"
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