Too Many Husbands (1940) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
34 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
What a concept
blanche-220 January 2007
Though one might suspect "Too Many Husbands" as being in the same vein as "My Favorite Wife," it's actually based on a Somerset Maugham play. The stars of this 1940 film are Jean Arthur, Melvyn Douglas, Fred MacMurray and Harry Davenport. After her first husband, Bill Cardew (MacMurray) was lost at sea, his grieving, lonely widow Vicky marries his friend and business partner, Henry Lowndes (Douglas) six months later. Boy is she surprised when Bill shows up alive. So is her new husband and her father (Davenport). It then falls to the confused Vicky to decide which husband she wants.

This is a very amusing comedy with terrific performances from all the stars. Melvyn Douglas, one of the truly great American actors, had to do this type of film until he finally reached old age and could show the world how sensational he was. He's very funny, his voice cracking when he's upset. The men act like quarreling children, playing games of oneupmanship and chasing Vicky everywhere. Seeing the frilly guest room, Bill questions Henry's effeminate taste. "What's this fabric?" Bill asks, holding up a piece of curtain. "DOTTED SWISS!" Henry yells in a booming voice. In another scene, Bill impresses Vicky by jumping over furniture, causing Henry to give it a try. He falls flat on his face. Arthur does an excellent job as a somewhat dizzy woman who loves both men, and Davenport is a riot as her sober-faced, worried father. MacMurray has always seemed bland to me, but he holds his own as the returning husband who's been stranded on an island for a year.

Much better than I thought it would be, and Arthur fans will love it.
34 out of 37 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A Marriage In Which They Deserved Each Other -- All Three Of Them
oldblackandwhite29 January 2012
Too Many Husbands is a prime example of the screwball comedy. All the usual elements are in place -- romance out of whack, a collection of goofy but likable characters, frenetic, sometimes slapstick action, fast-delivery, witty dialog, a ridiculous situation, class satire, and the cops further gumming up the works -- all breaking off in unexpected directions like the baseball pitch the genre is named after.

A flighty rich dame (Jean Arthur) finds herself married to two different men at the same time, and she loves both of them. She is not an intentional bigamist. Hubby number one, sexy but ever wandering Fred MacMurry was lost at sea and declared legally dead, so the lonely widow marries his best friend, reliable, hard-working smoothie Melvin Douglas. When hubby number one shows up alive after all and ready for action with his beautiful wife, the fun ensues. Poor Jean, she just can't make up her mind which husband to choose. With one a reckless adventurer and the other a neglectful workaholic no sensible woman would want either, but this is Jean Arthur! She's having a whale of a time as the two compete to show her more attention than either ever had in the past. She may just take forever to make up her mind!

Jean Arthur, who was reportedly a serious dingbat in real life, seems perfectly cast in this type of role. MacMurry and Douglas are in their element here, too. The three bright stars, all at their peaks, make this one a delight all the way through. Good support comes from Henry Davenport, another mainstay of the screw-baller, as Jean's harried father, and Edgar Buchanan, looking younger than you thought he ever was, as a suspicious cop.

Too Many Husbands is a bit of a slow-starter, but give it a chance. Under Wesley Ruggles' sure direction, it soon picks up steam, getting wackier and funnier as it goes along. The great acting, gorgeous, luminous, old nitrate black and white cinematography and smooth editing you have come to expect from big studio productions of the 'thirties and the 'forties make this one a pleasure to watch. Smooth, glossy entertainment from Old Hollywood's Golden Era.
13 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Too Many Husbands Is Enough
CitizenCaine9 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Fred MacMurray, Melvyn Douglas, and Jean Arthur star in this very loose adaptation of the W. Somerset Maugham play about a woman with a dilemma that could potentially be scandalous. Jean Arthur's husband (MacMurray) supposedly drowns and is legally declared dead. Arthur marries his best friend (Douglas). MacMurray then turns up alive a year later. That's the simple premise behind this little seen film from 1940. Jean Arthur's voice, smile, and comic timing were always impeccable, and this film is no exception. While MacMurray and Douglas seem awkward in spots, eventually they gel enough to hold this farce together. Consistently funny throughout with great dialog and comic situations, comparisons have been drawn between it and My Favorite Wife which was actually released later that year. Harry Davenport shines as Arthur's fussy live-in father. Melville Cooper is the dour butler. Edgar Buchanan and Tom Dugan are great in their brief bit near the end. This is one of those films where casting makes all the difference. These pros sell it to us lock, stock, and barrel. I doubt this film could be cast today. *** of 4 stars.
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Fun, carefree romp!
Fitzweldon17 January 2007
Fred MacMurray is the long lost husband who returns to the scene to find that his wife, Jean Arthur is married to new husband, Melvyn Douglas. Arthur's character must choose which husband to keep. The viewer is compelled to want both men to win Arthur's hand; they are both charming. The plot is simple but the fun, witty dialog and situations that develop are very entertaining. I loved MacMurray and Douglas' tails and top hats. The ball gowns were lovely to look at. It's amusing to watch the dancing style in the party scene; lively, silly and fun. A fine, light movie to enjoy with popcorn and the family or champagne with a friend.
25 out of 31 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Not quite a great comedy
vincentlynch-moonoi24 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Yes, on the surface there are distinct similarities to "My Favorite Wife", and the Cary Grant film would probably get the nod here if there were a competition. But, in and of itself, this is a good film with solid laughs. I've always thought that Fred MacMurray deserves more credit than he gets nowadays for what was a fine career as an actor in both comedies and dramas (although I think he was better in, for example, "The Egg And I". But, as the lost and sea and presumed dead husband who returns only to find that his wife, Jean Arthur (really good in this film) is married to best friend and business associate Melvyn Douglas (who is utterly charming here). Arthur's character must choose which husband to dump...the crux of the plot...which goes on a bit too long...why can't she make up her mind. Both husbands are portrayed as being rather charming, and perhaps that's the reason she has trouble deciding. I'll bet most people would have been rooting for Melvyn Douglas' character, but guess what -- at the end of the film you're not sure who she's going to select -- a rather unsatisfying conclusion from my perspective. It's a bit too much of a drawing room (or bedroom) comedy...clearly it was adapted from a stage effort, but the closing party scene is nice...would have also worked well earlier in the film to break-up so much of the action taking place in the home. Perhaps it's supporting actor Harry Davenport (the doctor in GWTW) who really shines in this flick as the father of the Jean Arthur character; he's always a great addition to any film, but gets more play here and really excels. A good film comedy, but not memorable.
13 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Neither husband wanted her (originally)
rhoda-120 April 2007
The problem with this movie is that it keeps only the original premise of the play (Home and Beauty, 1918) by Somerset Maugham--that a man who has been presumed dead returns home to find his wife has remarried. In the play the comedy derived from the fact that neither husband wanted the wife and each kept trying to out-noble the other and step aside. (The wife is very pretty and charming, but each husband has been married to her long enough to discover that she is selfish and vain.) At the end of the play the wife married a third man, who did not know her well enough to know her true character. In a movie, however, one could hardly have a heroine whom both male leads disowned, so one is left only with the clumsy and repetitious jokes of one woman, two husbands, and which one will she pick.
25 out of 33 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Jean Arthur Is Worth Fighting For
evanston_dad25 August 2009
I wasn't expecting much from this Jean Arthur comedy vehicle, and as a result, I was pleasantly surprised by it.

Arthur plays a woman married to the best friend of her dead husband, who's mighty surprised when her dead husband turns out not to be so dead after all. Now she's got two men fighting over her, a state of affairs she settles back to enjoy, much to the dismay of her father, played by that terrific character actor Harry Davenport.

Jean Arthur is absolutely adorable, even if she is a bit of a brat in this. You want to hug her even as you want to see her kicked in the seat of her pants. Fred MacMurray plays the back from the dead husband, while Melvyn Douglas plays the best friend. I felt MacMurray straining a bit at the screwball comedy antics he was asked to tackle, but Douglas navigates the material expertly and probably gives the film's best performance.

I will say that the film is utterly unpredictable -- I could not guess how it was going to turn out right up until its closing credits.

Grade: B
13 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Inconvenient and unexpected
bkoganbing14 January 2016
Over at RKO Studios where My Favorite Wife was being done Columbia was working on Too Many Husbands, a reverse of the same plot premise. That is a presumed dead husband showing up unexpectedly and inconveniently and complicating poor Jean Arthur's life. Of course when your husbands are Fred MacMurray and Melvyn Douglas that's a choice any girl would love being stuck with.

Too Many Husbands as a history going back to a W.Somerset Maugham play and before that to Tennyson's Enoch Arden. In this version Arthur has married her late husband's publishing partner in their firm Melvyn Douglas. But like Irene Dunne who spent several years on her tropical island in My Favorite Wife, Fred MacMurray is only there for a few months. Douglas however convinced he was really dead got him declared so in order that he may marry Arthur.

So now what to do? After all kinds of methods tried the decision is really kind of taken out of their hands. Will the loser bow out gracefully? One never knows in these things.

Jean Arthur was a mainstay over at Columbia Pictures, but her leading men MacMurray and Douglas were borrowed from Paramount and MGM respectively. And instead of a live in mother Arthur has a doting father in Harry Davenport living with her who just wishes things would go back to normal with one man in her life. Presiding over it all is Douglas's butler Melville Cooper whose facial expressions are a throwback to silent era days. But they're all he needs to get his point across.

A remake of this with a military and show business background was done in 1955 called Three For The Show. Even with Betty Grable, Jack Lemmon, and Gower Champion around it's decidedly inferior to this.

Too Many Husbands even got some Oscar recognition with a nomination for Best Sound Recording. Fans of the three leads should be pleased.
7 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
surprisingly sprightly
richardrandbman17 January 2007
When I first heard the premise;a spouse declared dead comes back home after months alone on an island , only to find his beloved wife has re-entered marital bliss with his best friend, I thought 'it'll be interesting to see if they come anywhere near the brilliance of "My Favorite Wife"' And I also presumed this had to be a rather blatant rip-off of the Cary Grant-Irene Dunne classic released ,incidentally, in the same year. Boy was I wrong! For starters this appears to have been released months earlier and the screenplay,comic timing,and acting are easily in the same league as the best of the so-called 'screwball comedies'. When Jean Arthur is "on" there is no actress who can beat her and she looks about as good in this rarely shown film as she ever has . Fred MacMurry and Melvyn Douglas hold up their end, but the surprise, for me, was good old Harry Davenport who gets many lines , many chances to display bravado mugging and line readings, and never fails. This is a Jean Arthur film that needs immediate release on the DVD market!!
27 out of 31 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Seems like another spin on "My Favorite Wife"...
Doylenf16 January 2007
JEAN ARTHUR, FRED MacMURRAY and MELVYN DOUGLAS are the kind of stars who are able to turn formula stuff into gold that glitters. This may have been based on an original play by Somerset Maugham, but it's just another spin on MY FAVORITE WIFE from the same year.

The fun is wonderful while it lasts--for the first forty-five minutes. But soon it veers into repetition with a series of scenes showing Arthur unable to make up her mind as to which hubby she prefers.

MELVILLE COOPER is fun as the befuddled servant and HARRY DAVENPORT is delightful as Arthur's father. And FRED MacMURRAY and MELVYN DOUGLAS are especially funny in competitive moments, with Fred showing off his athletic prowess by jumping over furniture while Douglas fumes. But Claude Binyon's script is unable to overcome the one joke premise of the whole thing.

It threatens to run out of steam before the situation is resolved with a wacky nightclub scene in which all three kick up their heels for the finale.

It's formula comedy but there's no denying that all three stars were gifted at this sort of comedy and work extremely well together.

Trivia note: Like many a Jean Arthur film in the '30s and '40s, this one opened at Radio City Music Hall, a showcase for prestigious family films.
11 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Too Many, Too Much, Too Little
Handlinghandel21 January 2007
This has an excellent cast. It begins well. And it's not by any means terrible.

It seems forced after a while, though. We get the idea way before it's been resolved.

My objection is not based on the movie's similarity to the more familiar "My Favorite Wife." Much as I love Irene Dunne and like Cary Grant, and love them in "The Awful Truth," that movie has always seemed mean and smug to me.

Jean Arthur looks pretty in "Too Many Husband" but she doesn't exactly have the usual Jean Arthur charm. At least I didn't find her to. Fred MacMurray is fine as her jock first husband. And this sort of chic comedy was catnip to the always charming Melvyn Douglas.

Harry Davenport contributes a whole lot, too. He plays Arthur's father. It's clear that he loves her and likes both men but has no patience for anyone's dawdling or neuroses.

It's a decent movie but if it's your first exposure to Jean Arthur, by all means give her some more tries. "The More The Merrier," of course, is sublime. I haven't seen "Easy Living" in ages but remember it as a joy. And she is very charming in "History Is Made At Night" -- as well as in many, many movies spanning several decades.

It's so great to have her back on the small screen!
15 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Delightful comedy
aberlour369 January 2009
This delightful comedy falls just short of being one of the classic screwball comedies of the era. It's a story of a woman whose husband disappears in a boating accident and is presumed to be dead. The woman then marries her late husband's business partner. When the first husband turns up alive after a year on a desert island, the woman has two legal husbands. The plot evolves around the woman's decision about which husband to keep. Jean Arthur is a delight, as always, and McMurray and Douglas could hardly be better.

It's a stage-bound film, however, clearly a filmed version of a play. There are really only six characters, including the butler. Columbia didn't want to spend much money on the production. In one scene, upstairs in the woman's family home, you can twice see the set walls shake when doors are shut. Still, the movie is great fun and should not be missed by serious students of film.
11 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
See the OTHER version of this same story line!
planktonrules20 January 2007
1940 was a wonderful year for "lost spouse returning" films. Both this film as well as MY FAVORITE WIFE debuted a short time apart and they are, on the surface, very, very similar movies.

In MY FAVORITE WIFE, Irene Dunne is lost at sea and assumed dead. Years later, she's declared legally dead and Cary Grant (her husband) remarries. Dunne then returns just after the wedding and hilarity ensues.

In TOO MANY HUSBANDS, Fred MacMurray is lost at sea and assumed dead. He's declared dead almost right away and Jean Arthur (his wife) remarried. Fred then returns to find she now has two husbands and only a little bit of hilarity ensued!

In fact, because these two films were so similar, lawsuits were launched. I really don't know how they were settled or which movie came first. All I know is that MY FAVORITE WIFE is definitely the better of the two. The fact that TOO MANY HUSBANDS was only showed on TCM for the first time a week ago is probably indication that it is the lesser films--especially since MY FAVORITE WIFE is a commonly seen film on American cable TV.

The problem is the writing. While the cast of TOO MANY HUSBANDS is just fine (Jean Arthur, Fred MacMurray and Melvin Douglas), the lines they are given and the situations they are placed in just aren't as funny. In particular, Jean's character is VERY annoying at times--as she seems like a selfish and immature person throughout the film. This is BAD, as Jean's usual screen persona is of a sweet and spunky lady--here she in an indecisive and whiny person. Just think--in this film, she learns she has two husbands and LIKES IT when the two guys are ready to fight it out as well as all the attention they pay her!! Conversely, the fact that Cary and Irene in the other film truly love each other never really is in question--the problem is just figuring out HOW to extricate themselves from the mess! While this is still a pretty good film (nearly meriting a 7), it just isn't in the same league as the other one. If you love old films like I do, see them both. If you only want to pick one, then the answer is pretty obvious.
13 out of 25 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
"I thought I married a man!" ... "You did, two of 'em."
moonspinner5530 August 2009
Businessman's wife, widowed for one year before marrying her deceased husband's best friend, finds out her first husband is still alive; he was believed by the Coast Guard to have drowned after the sinking of his ship, but instead was rescued off an island. Although based upon a play (by W. Somerset Maugham!), "Too Many Husbands" now resembles Cary Grant's 1940 comedy "My Favorite Wife" with a sex-switch (this film actually beat "Wife" into theaters by a scant two months, but was not as popular). Jean Arthur is enjoyable, as always, but her choice of men is rather depressing, and there isn't any fun in her predicament when the hubbies are this selfish and childish. Fred MacMurray's returning spouse comes on like an overgrown Boy Scout (and the actor's smug condescension towards everyone else on-screen is rather off-putting); Melvyn Douglas is a smoother fit for Arthur, but he's been directed to be boorish, with lots of heavy sighs and eyeball rolls (it's clear whom we in the audience are supposed to root for). Disgruntled characters harping on one another isn't usually the stuff of laugh-out-loud comedy, and this one palls with an hour left to go. ** from ****
13 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Polyandry Now!
rmax3048237 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Cute and diverting. Several other species of the genre have been produced over the years, like "Move Over Darling" and "My Favorite Wife." They're all amusing, but this may be the most dodgy while, in my humble opinion as an expert, "My Favorite Wife" is funnier, and also features the Ahwanee Hotel in Yosemite.

Fred MacMurry is lost at sea and presumed dead. His widow, Jean Arthur, marries their best friend, Melvyn Douglas. MacMurray shows up a year later, quite vital. Complications ensue.

Arthur now has two husbands in the same house. After the initial confusion, she gets to sort of like the idea of having two men competing for her. The men in their turn act like two kids in the fifth grade fighting over a girl in the schoolyard. When they're not fighting, they're pretending to be ill in order to attract her attention and gain her sympathy.

Well, why shouldn't she be tickled? It's a favorite feminine fantasy. The corresponding male fantasy is conquering a kingdom.

It's not really too inventive but it has moments. The two husbands are forced to sleep in the guest room, which has been decorated as a nursery for the daughter that Douglas and Arthur had been hoping for. It's filled with fripperies and bows. "What's this?", asks the sullen MacMurry, fingering a valence. "Dotted Swiss," replies the sulky Douglas. "Oh, dotted Swiss," says MacMurray breathlessly with the slightest of lisps.

I guess it was the code that demanded the men sleep in separate beds, although it would have been funnier if they'd had to argue over who was hoarding the blankets.

Jean Arthur was never a sexpot but she was always appealing with her cracked whine of a voice. She remained winsome even in middle age in a dramatic role in Shane (1952). She was born in New York state and died at 90 in Carmel, California. Not a bad life course.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Three's company
TheLittleSongbird23 June 2020
The premise is hardly unfamiliar, having been done quite a number of times, and always has the dangers of doing little new, being repetitive and trying too hard. 'Too Many Husbands' did sound very intriguing still though, because Wesley Ruggles was one of those competent if undistinguished directors and there are many good examples on film of the type of film 'Too Many Husbands' is. Not to mention having Jean Arthur, Melvyn Douglas, Fred MacMurray and Harry Davenport in the same cast.

A lot is done well in 'Too Many Husbands', as it does entertain and charm for most of its running time and most of the cast are strong. At the same time, it doesn't quite make the grade, it was in need of a stronger second half, one performance for me did not work really and it could have done with more subtlety and variety. Still, not too bad a way to spend a dreary afternoon when there is very little to do with bad weather and lockdown restrictions.

Shall start with the good things. Most of the performances are very good. Arthur is her usual perky and alluring self and Douglas is suave, just as charming and with great comic timing. My favourite performance came from Davenport, who is an absolute joy to watch and has a real twinkle to his performance. All in roles so well suited to them and played to their strengths. One shouldn't dismiss the dependable contributions from Melville Cooper and Edgar Buchanan. Ruggles directs with zest in the first half.

Was somewhat mixed on the visual side of things, the costumes coming off best visually. To me the first half was a lot of fun, with some sparkling wit and sophistication in the dialogue delivered with tremendous energy. The story also charmed and compelled in the first half as well and the characters more investable.

Not everything comes off well sadly. While the first half was thoroughly enjoyable, the second half was less so and sort of petered out really. It became thin on the ground story-wise, the charm got lost amidst the silliness and the material got rather repetitive and tried too hard for laughs. The ending also is practically a non-event.

MacMurray also didn't work for me. His character was not a meaty one really and he plays it rather blandly and is also too smug. While the costumes are fine, there is just too much of a filmed play feel to the photography which tends to confine the action too much.

Overall, worth seeing but uneven. 6/10
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
The odd man out couple
weezeralfalfa15 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
1940 was the year of films about missing and presumed dead spouses inconveniently surfacing after their spouse had remarried. In "My Favorite Wife", Irene Dunne's character comes home after 7 years on a deserted island with Randolph Scott's character. Cary Grant's character had just remarried after the customary 7 year grace period before a person is declared legally dead, In the present film, Jean Arthur(Vicky) only waited 6 months before marrying her lost husband's best friend(played by Melvin Douglas) She gave some legal reason I didn't understand for this uncommonly short grace period. But, her first husband, played by Fred MacMurray, inconveniently showed up after one year, and was shocked to find his wife remarried already. If Vicky was legally allowed to divorce her 1st husband in his absence, I could see this happening. But the legal verdict near the end, is that her first husband still had priority within the time frame. Her 2nd husband graciously accepted this decision after fighting tooth and nail to retain his marriage.

This film is based upon the 1919 play "Home and Beauty", written by Somerset Maugham. However, there are significant differences. The lost husband was missing in action rather than marooned on a desert island. Instead of 2 husbands fighting to remain married to the same woman, the 2 husbands are fighting to decide which should divorce her, as both found that her beauty was her only good asset. In addition, she wanted to divorce both, and marry another man. This sounds like it has more comedic potential than the screenplay for the present film.

Actually, this play is a variation on the 1864 narrative poem Enoch Arden, in which a marooned sailor showed up after 10 years to find his wife happily married to his best friend. However, he doesn't reveal himself, as he doesn't want to cause a problem for his (former) wife. The basic story was also redone as a musical in 1955: "Three for the Show" and again as a non-musical in "Move Over Dalring",'63.

I agree with the majority of reviewers that "My Favorite Wife" is the more interesting of the 2 films. The present film too much emphasizes the endless bickering between the 2 husbands, promoted by Vicky's inability to choose which one she prefers.(They have quite different personalities, and Vicky apparently likes some of both). Besides, she gets more attention than when she had only one husband, as they try to outdo each other in pleasing her and emphasize the other's weak points. Although there are funny scenes, in addition to the perplexing situation, I think the plot could have been milked for more humor.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
A Woman in Power
Maleejandra5 October 2007
Vicky Lowndes (Jean Arthur) leads a normal life with her husband of less than a year. Hank (Melvyn Douglas) does his best to avoid the subject of Vicky's previous husband, his best friend Bill Cardew (Fred MacMurray). However, when Bill comes back from the dead via a boat from the island he'd been shipwrecked on, the happy Lowndeses become a strange threesome. It is up to Vicky to choose which husband she prefers, but it isn't as simple as it sounds. She can't very well hurt the man she loves in order to be with the other man she loves.

Each cast member is adept at screwball comedy, which is what this film essentially is. However, there is a deeper vein too. Because both men are likable, it is suspenseful waiting for Vicky to choose a husband. This predicament triggers an emotional response as well. Arthur is reminiscent of Irene Dunne in her teamings with Cary Grant, but slightly funnier. Douglas and MacMurray couldn't be more different from each other, so that adds a new spin on the situation.

This movie is very much like My Favorite Wife starring Dunne and the incomplete Something's Got to Give starring Marilyn Monroe, but this film gives the wife two husbands, not the other way around. It is interesting to see how she handles the situation and how the men schmooze themselves silly to get into her good graces. In this way, it is quite a bit funnier.
20 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Great Cast Wasted in Disappointing Comedy
krdement2 June 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I am a HUGE fan of all 4 of the main actors in this film. They have all made films that are high on my list of favorites. My expectations for this film were, therefore, VERY high. All of these actors are capable of elevating mundane roles and films into something special. Unfortunately none of them can do so in this film.

The comments of rhoda-1 are most illuminating. Changing the motivations of the characters in the original Somerset Maugham play results in a very unsatisfying movie. (I would love to see the original play!)

The situation in this film is the same as My Favorite Wife (and the mediocre remake, Move Over Darling) - except the male and female roles have been reversed. But there the similarity ends. In My Favorite Wife, Cary Grant wants to restore his first marriage to Irene Dunne. Ditto in the remake with Rock Hudson and Doris Day. Both Grant and Hudson are motivated by the desire to let the second wife down easily. By contrast, in Too Many Husbands, the normally lovable Jean Arthur plays a character who at first seems torn between her two husbands, but increasingly seems to just bask in the egocentric pleasure of having two men pursue her. This motivation completely undermines the sympathy I initially had for her. By contrast, I am completely sympathetic with the erstwhile husband and wife in the other two films.

In addition, while there is some clever dialog in Too Many Husbands, it is too scant. Most of the time the characters are just sophomoric. Jean Arthur reverts to a flirty schoolgirl leading-on two schoolboys. Unfortunately both Fred MacMurray and Melyn Douglas behave accordingly. The furniture-jumping scene is painful to watch. Nothing of this juvenile nature happens in My Favorite Wife (or Move Over Darling).

This one trick pony becomes all the more annoying when the end arrives without any resolution. It is as if the viewer has simply been watching the beginning of a perpetual competition between two high school boys pursuing the same girl.

Basically this film is disappointing because Jean Arthur becomes pretty unsympathetic, the 3 characters in the love triangle are all sophomoric in the extreme, and there is no resolution at the end of the film.

I absolutely love both romantic comedies and screwball comedies. Too Many Husbands is an insult to both. It is ANTI-romantic and not screwball but sophomoric, slapstick silliness. What a total waste of incredible talent.
11 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Lots of witty dialogue and amusing situations
lora641 July 2001
I've just discovered this lighthearted film today on tv and must admit it has all the fine elements that make for a good stage play -- plenty of sure-fire dialogue, continual momentum to the story (never a dull moment), and light touches of original music. There are some hilarious moments so downright comical it made me burst out laughing. Just accept it as one more comedy of that era and you'll enjoy it nicely without having to make comparisons or look for weaknesses. Harry Davenport as the father adds his wisdom where he can. I feel all the actors had a good romp in this movie and I liked the repartee amongst them very much. Not sure precisely how it ended so will need to see it again some day. It's a fun movie indeed.
21 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Best of the three
liscarkat24 June 2007
"Too Many Husbands" impressed me as the best of the three main versions of this plot (the others being "My Favorite Wife" and "Move Over Darling"). Only in "Too Many Husbands" did I get a distinct sense of the terrible dilemma faced by the spouse who has to make a choice. This is because in this version alone are the two competing spouses portrayed as equally worthy, charming, and attractive by actors who were close to one another in those qualities, as well as in their respective levels of stardom at the time the film was made. In both "My Favorite Wife" and "Move Over Darling", it is quite clear, from the portrayal of one of the competing spouses and from the casting of a lesser star in the role, whom we are supposed to be rooting for. Not so in "Too Many Husbands". Douglas and MacMurray are very near equals in star power and in the way their characters are written and portrayed. Unlike the other two films, this results in as real a conflict for the viewer as it does for Jean Arthur's character. Unfortunately, it also results in the movie's weakest point--the ending (or lack of one). The dilemma was apparently so strong that the film makers themselves were unable to decide. After having Arthur's character seemingly make her choice, they tacked on a rather strange ambiguous ending suggesting that the "losing" husband might still have a chance. The effect is a non-ending that suggests the film makers couldn't make up their minds, so they just turned off the camera.
15 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Too Many Husbands Needs A Resolution *1/2
edwagreen6 March 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Despite the interesting cast of Arthur, MacMurray and Melvyn Douglas, this film literally runs out of steam with the concocted ending it displays. Arthur marries MacMurray's business partner, Douglas, after the former is presumed to have drowned in an accident. Of course, a year later, MacMurray turns up alive and who shall Jean Arthur select as her husband? With the kind of ending we get, it appears that the film is a proponent of bigamy.

We've been down this road before in movies, but let's remember that when MacMurray shows up alive, her marriage to Douglas no longer legally exists. This is conveniently forgotten.

Douglas and MacMurray go through all sorts of silly ideas, even drawing lots to reach a conclusion.

Advocates for group marriage shall enjoy this, give me monogamy.
5 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
She won't choose so a battle of dialog ensues
SimonJack15 January 2017
Warning: Spoilers
The plot for this film has been used a couple of times in literature, and a few times with variations in movies. A man is lost at sea and presumed dead, so in time his wife marries another man, only to have the first husband return. "Enoch Arden" was an 1864 poem by Alfred Lord Tennyson that was made into movies in 1911, 1914 and 1915. This remake stars Jean Arthur, Fred MacMurray and Melvyn Douglas.

It came out in 1940 just two months before "My Favorite Wife." RKO Radio Pictures was filming a story that reversed the plot of "Enoch Arden." It was based on a 1919 W. Somerset Maugham play. In it, the wife is lost at sea and returns just as her husband is getting married again. While both 1940 films were hits, the latter was a bigger one. The comedy output and film outcome were easier to achieve with the reverse scenario.

Still, this movie is loaded with comedy. The plot as such is very simple – the wife must choose between her two husbands. Much of the humor is in a battle of dialog between the two men. Jean Arthur is Vicky, Fred MacMurray is Bill (first husband), Melvyn Douglas is Henry (second husband), and Harry Davenport is George (Vicky's dad). All of the supporting cast are very good. Bill and Henry were best of friends and partners in a publishing firm. Henry had been best man at Bill's wedding. Bill had been lost at sea and reported by the Coast Guard as drowned. That was one year ago. Now, Vicky and Henry have been married six months.

Two scenarios are very hilarious. One is Bill and Henry trying to show one another up by physical prowess in high jumping the furniture. The other is in the guest bedroom where Vicky has sent the two men for the night. Here are some of my favorite lines from this film. For more hilarious dialog snippets, see the Quotes section in this IMDb Web page for "Too Many Husbands."

(In the guest bedroom.) Vicky, "I just thought I'd see if you were all right." Bill, "I don't feel very good." Vicky, "No? What's the matter?" Bill, "Fever, I guess. Deadly tropical fever." Vicky, "Your forehead isn't hot." Bill, "Don't take you hand away." Vicky, "Get some aspirin from the cabinet, will you, Henry?" Henry, "Let him get his own aspirin. I don't feel any too well myself." Vicky, "Really, dear?" Henry, "No." Vicky, "Stick out your tongue." Henry, "What's my tongue got to do with it? You held his head." Vicky, "Let me see your tongue. You know your stomach always goes bad first." Bill, "I'd be sick if I had that in my mouth." Vicky, "You're all right. Did you brush your teeth?" Henry, "Ask him if he brushed his." Bill, "Can I help it if somebody gave my toothbrush to a tramp?" Henry, "The tramp wouldn't take it." Vicky, "Now, please don't quarrel."

Vicky, "If you loved me at all, you never would have left here, even if I did tell you to get out."

Henry, "Vicky, as your legal husband, I'm asking you to order this cad out of the house." Bill, "As her legal husband, I'm asking you to shut your mouth before I slit your throat."

Henry, "What are you whispering?" Vicky, "I wasn't whispering." Bill, "I was showing her where a barracuda bit me."

Henry, "A fine thing. And may I comment in passing that it seems awfully strange to order a man out of his own bedroom just because a squealing corpse has washed ashore." Bill, "This. This is the night I dreamed about while I starved on berries and fish."

Bill, "Say, where are my suits?" Henry, "I gave them to a tramp." Bill, "You didn't even save one to bury me in?"

Bill, "This is my table, and I want a steak." Henry, "A glorious night for romance, and you want to tear a cow apart with your teeth."
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Jean Arthur's worst film
touser20049 January 2024
I am a massive fan of Jean Arthur but this film fails on so many levels. The idea that she would get married in such a short space of time doesn't fit with the narrative of her loving her first husband and the film goes downhill from there. Both Fred McMurray or Melvyn Douglas fail to convince the audience that they actually love their wife. This is in stark contrast to Cary Grant who we totally believe loves Irene Dunne in My Favourite Wife.

Early on we hear that Douglas's secretary loves both men and the audience expects that at some point she will be reintroduced to console the losing husband ,instead she is just a loose end .Instead we are left with a very unsatisfactory ending where she picks no one but the law decides MacMurray is her rightful husband but she keeps Douglas as a back up in case Mac Murray doesn't keep up to his promises. Even Jean Arthur can't save this Turkey.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed