5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- Comedy With A Touch Of Class, 29 July 2005
Author:
Ron Oliver (revilorest@juno.com) from Forest Ranch, CA
A FREE AND EASY father and son are dependent upon the largess of rich
ladies to continue living comfortable lives.
Running less than an hour, this bit of inconsequential fluff is
dignified by its fine cast. Nigel Bruce and Robert Cummings (using a
British accent) are the father and son constantly on the prowl for
wealthy women. Cummings provides an honest, appealing performance, as
was his wont, while Bruce's usual cuddly persona is not tarnished a bit
by his somewhat rakish behavior.
Lovely Ruth Hussey is the penniless girl upon which Cummings sets his
affections; fusty, fuming Reginald Owen is her lover who wants no
rivals. Marvelous old Sir C. Aubrey Smith appears as a horse-loving
Duke who can't keep a secret.
Best of all, Dame Judith Anderson plays Sir Aubrey's daughter, a
plain-faced woman with an immense amount of money who dotes on
Cummings. Portraying a female experiencing unexpected joy and terrible
disappointment, Dame Judith gives the kind of beautiful performance one
doesn't expect to find in a rather negligible comedy. Having displayed
her formidable talent the year before in Hitchcock's REBECCA, and even
though possessed of one of the Century's most remarkable speaking
voices, it became quickly obvious that Hollywood really wasn't big
enough to showcase her properly. Her greatest triumphs would be on the
stage.
This is a remake of MGM's BUT THE FLESH IS WEAK (1932), which also
starred Sir C. Aubrey Smith, along with Robert Montgomery, as the
father/son duo. MGM had previously used the title FREE AND EASY in 1930
for a comedy starring Montgomery and Buster Keaton.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Charming low-budget comedy, 20 February 2003
Author:
mark.waltz from Los Angeles
Robert Cummings and Nigel Bruce play a pair of son and father social
climbers who prey on gracious but rather plain English lady Judith
Anderson
in this second feature from MGM in 1941. Of course, Cummings falls in
love
with another socialite, the prettier Ruth Hussey. This leads to a series
of
romantic complications when Anderson actually falls for
Cummings.
This was just a year before Anderson and Cummings worked together in the
Warner Brothers classic "King's Row". Anderson, who had made a splash the
year earlier as the villianous Mrs. Danvers in "Rebecca" (receiving an
Oscar
Nomination), played against type in this and another MGM comedy, "Forty
Little Mothers" with Eddie Cantor. In "Free and Easy", Anderson gets to
wear some glamorous outfits, although her rather dowdy suit at the ballet
where she meets Cummings downplays her characterization as one of the
world's wealthiest women, especially with a stodgy monacle attached. She
is
also a lot more lighthearted in this film than she was in any of her other
movies or any of her Broadway shows where she was considered one of the
great ladies of the theater. She was actually quite capable of pulling
this
off, playing a sort of younger version of her character in "Cat on a Hot
Tin
Roof", where her Billie Burke like performance overshadowed a strong and
determined woman underneath.
Cummings, on the other hand, was not one of the more talented leading men
of
Hollywood's golden age in spite of the amazing list of credits he left
behind. While not a bad actor, he had a very limited range. Even the
so-called leading ladies men such as Herbert Marshall and George Brent
added
more spice to their weakly written parts. Nigel Bruce, always
entertaining,
and also from "Rebecca", just simply puts his on-screen son to shame in
the
acting department. C. Aubrey Smith, who had a small part in "Rebecca",
appears here as Anderson's uppercrust father, and delivers his always
commanding performance. As the love interest, Ruth Hussey is blander than
she was in "The Philadelphia Story", which gave her an Oscar Nomination
against Anderson. (Ironically, Anderson would appear in the Warner
Brothers
film "All Through the Night", which also starred Jane Darwell, who won the
Oscar that year).
According to "The MGM Story", this was a remake of a 1932 Robert
Montgomery
film entitled "But the Flesh is Weak". Hopefully both will be shown
together on Turner Classic Movies (where I saw "Free and Easy") to compare
the two. Montgomery, it should be noted, was one of Hollywood's best
leading men in the 1930's. His range was much greater than Cummings who
did
better in frivilous comedys like this rather than dramas such as "King's
Row" and "The Lost Moment". At 56 minutes, "Free and Easy" is easy and
free
to watch on cable, especially for the presence of the supporting players.
Own the rights?

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5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

Comedy With A Touch Of Class, 29 July 2005
Author: Ron Oliver (revilorest@juno.com) from Forest Ranch, CA
A FREE AND EASY father and son are dependent upon the largess of rich ladies to continue living comfortable lives.
Running less than an hour, this bit of inconsequential fluff is dignified by its fine cast. Nigel Bruce and Robert Cummings (using a British accent) are the father and son constantly on the prowl for wealthy women. Cummings provides an honest, appealing performance, as was his wont, while Bruce's usual cuddly persona is not tarnished a bit by his somewhat rakish behavior.
Lovely Ruth Hussey is the penniless girl upon which Cummings sets his affections; fusty, fuming Reginald Owen is her lover who wants no rivals. Marvelous old Sir C. Aubrey Smith appears as a horse-loving Duke who can't keep a secret.
Best of all, Dame Judith Anderson plays Sir Aubrey's daughter, a plain-faced woman with an immense amount of money who dotes on Cummings. Portraying a female experiencing unexpected joy and terrible disappointment, Dame Judith gives the kind of beautiful performance one doesn't expect to find in a rather negligible comedy. Having displayed her formidable talent the year before in Hitchcock's REBECCA, and even though possessed of one of the Century's most remarkable speaking voices, it became quickly obvious that Hollywood really wasn't big enough to showcase her properly. Her greatest triumphs would be on the stage.
This is a remake of MGM's BUT THE FLESH IS WEAK (1932), which also starred Sir C. Aubrey Smith, along with Robert Montgomery, as the father/son duo. MGM had previously used the title FREE AND EASY in 1930 for a comedy starring Montgomery and Buster Keaton.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

Charming low-budget comedy, 20 February 2003
Author: mark.waltz from Los Angeles
Robert Cummings and Nigel Bruce play a pair of son and father social climbers who prey on gracious but rather plain English lady Judith Anderson in this second feature from MGM in 1941. Of course, Cummings falls in love with another socialite, the prettier Ruth Hussey. This leads to a series of romantic complications when Anderson actually falls for Cummings.
This was just a year before Anderson and Cummings worked together in the Warner Brothers classic "King's Row". Anderson, who had made a splash the year earlier as the villianous Mrs. Danvers in "Rebecca" (receiving an Oscar Nomination), played against type in this and another MGM comedy, "Forty Little Mothers" with Eddie Cantor. In "Free and Easy", Anderson gets to wear some glamorous outfits, although her rather dowdy suit at the ballet where she meets Cummings downplays her characterization as one of the world's wealthiest women, especially with a stodgy monacle attached. She is also a lot more lighthearted in this film than she was in any of her other movies or any of her Broadway shows where she was considered one of the great ladies of the theater. She was actually quite capable of pulling this off, playing a sort of younger version of her character in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof", where her Billie Burke like performance overshadowed a strong and determined woman underneath.
Cummings, on the other hand, was not one of the more talented leading men of Hollywood's golden age in spite of the amazing list of credits he left behind. While not a bad actor, he had a very limited range. Even the so-called leading ladies men such as Herbert Marshall and George Brent added more spice to their weakly written parts. Nigel Bruce, always entertaining, and also from "Rebecca", just simply puts his on-screen son to shame in the acting department. C. Aubrey Smith, who had a small part in "Rebecca", appears here as Anderson's uppercrust father, and delivers his always commanding performance. As the love interest, Ruth Hussey is blander than she was in "The Philadelphia Story", which gave her an Oscar Nomination against Anderson. (Ironically, Anderson would appear in the Warner Brothers film "All Through the Night", which also starred Jane Darwell, who won the Oscar that year).
According to "The MGM Story", this was a remake of a 1932 Robert Montgomery film entitled "But the Flesh is Weak". Hopefully both will be shown together on Turner Classic Movies (where I saw "Free and Easy") to compare the two. Montgomery, it should be noted, was one of Hollywood's best leading men in the 1930's. His range was much greater than Cummings who did better in frivilous comedys like this rather than dramas such as "King's Row" and "The Lost Moment". At 56 minutes, "Free and Easy" is easy and free to watch on cable, especially for the presence of the supporting players.
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