The Women is one of my favourite classic films of all time, Joan Crawford and Norma Shearer are divine.
@charrid56maclean2 ай бұрын
From what I have read this was Freddie Mercury's favorite film and he watched it repeatedly. No men in this film, even all the animals are female. The fight scene!
@kenlau4572 ай бұрын
No men in it but it seems that’s all the women talked about in the film.
@TTM96912 ай бұрын
The first dog in the very beginning of the movie......that's Toto! Same year as Wiz Of Oz. Love that!
@billolsen4360Ай бұрын
You mean the dog fight or the cat fight? 🤗
@billolsen4360Ай бұрын
@@TTM9691 Did you ever see Terry the dog in the movie "Fury" also from 1936? She plays Rainbow
@marciebulsaraorcutt23 күн бұрын
I always read that Freddie’s favorite movie was Some Like It Hot (where Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon are dressed in drag)… but I can totally see him loving this too! (There was also a musical remake of this in 1956, he probably would’ve liked that, too)🥰
@rosanajaquez32742 ай бұрын
‘’There’s a name for you ladies, but it isn’t used in polite society outside of a kennel.” I had to open this comment with the iconic line for this film, one of my favorites all around which with the casting shows why Norma could easily reinvent herself after the Precodes and why Joan had such a hard time. It was all in the perception and it was harder to accept Joan as the good girl for the longest time. Norma played the part to perfection and had the backing of her powerful husband, Irving Thalberg to boot. For two great examples where you can see them almost with the opposite perception, check out Norma’s Oscar winning performance in “The Divorcee” and Joan’s heartbreaking performance in “Sadie McKee”. For two women who loathed each other, they were equally talented, ambitious and modern. Thank you for this great reaction, Mia! I look forward to continuing to follow your journey exploring classic cinema! ❤❤❤
@marksimmons4335Ай бұрын
Love this line
@Jonni10272 ай бұрын
In the 1970s one night, when my older sister was 17 and I was 16, we were staying up late and we ended up beginning this movie which started at 3am. We were captivated and knew all of the actors in it. One by one our parents got up for some water and they saw what we were watching and sat down to join us. We were all watching it for the first time and it’s a really happy memory for me of such a random way for all of us to be together in the middle of the night, not a care in the world, to do something as mundane as enjoying an old movie❤
@barbraseville89842 ай бұрын
Such a sweet story.
@Jonni1027Ай бұрын
@@barbraseville8984 ❤️❤️❤️
@terrisue40592 ай бұрын
One of those fighting dogs at the beginning is Terry...the dog that played Toto.
@agenttheater52 ай бұрын
Early celebrity dog.
@billolsen4360Ай бұрын
@@agenttheater5 And a female, so the cast is all "women"
@coxmosia12 ай бұрын
Punch! 😅 On the female rage part. Another good movie about mainly women of the time is "Stage Door", with the great Kathryn Hepburn and other up and coming actresses of the time period. Last. but not least, "Auntie Mame" with Rosalind Russell is exceptional.
@angelaluz4052 ай бұрын
Yes! Stage Door is fantastic!
@rosanajaquez32742 ай бұрын
@@coxmosia1 just hearing ‘the calla lilies are in bloom’ makes me tear up. Excellent recommendation!
@OceanKingNY2 ай бұрын
Joan Crawford made “A Woman’s Face” a few years after this movie. It’s worth watching. She plays a disfigured woman who has lived a life of crime because society shuns her. Then she has plastic surgery and becomes beautiful, but has to choose between the possibility of a new life or her criminal past.
@blackiemittensАй бұрын
@@OceanKingNY Oh, excellent choice 👏 Mia would love that one. 🍿 👍
@Dej246012 ай бұрын
For more Joan Crawford performances: Mildred Pierce; Strange Cargo; Sudden Fear; Johnny Guitar; Humoresque; Possessed.
@gigi-ij1hk2 ай бұрын
Mildred Pierce and Johnny Guitar are essential
@AngelaGoodwin-fh6fw2 ай бұрын
Virginia Weidler had such presence as a child actor. She retired at the age of 16, married, and sadly passed away at the age of 41 from heart disease. I've always been fascinated with her. She seemed to have been a very private person and never gave interviews.
@paulpeacock11812 ай бұрын
Mia, another 30’s movie in the same vein as The Women is Stage Door(1937). Stage Door is set in a Broadway boardinghouse for women actors trying to get their big break. Features Katherine Hepburn, Ginger Rogers, Lucille Ball, Eve Arden Ann Miller and a couple of men. I think you’ll love it.
@ahnyisbillingsley85892 ай бұрын
OMGGGG THE QUEEN IS FINALLY BACKKK!!!! MISSED YOU SO MUCH MIAAAA 🩷🩷🩷🩷Loved the Women and i’m SO HAPPY that you’re reacting to it!! 🩷🩷
@richruksenas59922 ай бұрын
I've been waiting a week for this. Man, I've been dying a week for this. 😮
@ahnyisbillingsley85892 ай бұрын
@@richruksenas5992 Reall!!! I love this movie and the reaction was PHENOMENAL!!
@ahnyisbillingsley85892 ай бұрын
@@richruksenas5992Yes! Me too! And the reaction was beautifully done! I love Mia’s videos! She’s like my fav creator. 🩷
@richruksenas59922 ай бұрын
@@ahnyisbillingsley8589 I know, I wish she had more content faster. 😄
@OuterGalaxyLounge2 ай бұрын
Tremendous film. One of the best casts of all time. Again, another classic I was lucky to see on the big screen in the early 1980s. Thanks for covering this.
@BrettTwinSavageКүн бұрын
@@OuterGalaxyLounge Hi. I'm wondering if you saw it at the River Oaks Theater in Houston? I saw it there in the early 80s.
@izzonj2 ай бұрын
This is such a cultural time capsule! Only Mia would pick it to watch and that's why we watch Movies with Mia!
@Tberger92 ай бұрын
I love love love this film. The circle of my closest friends have incorporated so many one-liners from The Woman! Joan Crawford's best line, " There's a name for you ladies. But it isn't used in high society. Outside of a kennel."
@rosanajaquez32742 ай бұрын
@@Tberger9 Don’t forget the also classic, “Get me a bromide …and put some gin in it.” by the Countess.
@BrettTwinSavage2 ай бұрын
I think your circle probably looks like my circle and we love it too! We can't function without our lines from "The Women". "Nuts?" "She's got those kind of eyes that go up and down a man...like a soich light" "Hey. What do ya mean by that? A crack?!" and "Pour Flora another little drinkie". 😂
@harrietamidala16912 ай бұрын
The shade of it all.
@christopherschafer76752 ай бұрын
I've waited years for a reactor to watch this movie. This film was instrumental in Rosalind Russell's marriage a few years later. Many of the supporting actors had interesting careers themselves and when you figure out who they are you'll want to return for a second look.
@eraysererayser2 ай бұрын
The quick witted dialogue delivered by these phenomenal actresses is beyond anything that you would ever see today!!❤🔥❤️
@charrid56maclean2 ай бұрын
Norma Shearer is criminally under rated. One of my favorite films is Idiots Delight and Shearer is so good in it.
@MotherOf-Ferrets2 ай бұрын
@charrid56maclean OMG YES!!!! She really is and the fact that she stepped away while still popular amazed me. The Women was one of the last films she did during her heyday. I LOVE her in Strange Interlude, that film was quite scandalous for the time. I read Norma Shearer: The Biography and it was quite interesting. The Divorcee, A Free Soul and Private Lives are some other Shearer greats!!! So awesome to see someone give her a shout out, she is VERY underrated! I'm surprised how many people I've met that say they love classic films but have never heard of her.
@r3adrpro8112 ай бұрын
Norma Shearer was not underratated back in the day. She "ruled" as the queen of MGM from the time she was a silent movie star onwards. Clare Booth, who wrote the play, married Henry Luce, who was the founder of Time Magazine (and Life, Fortune, Sports Illustrated). She was part of high society and "knew" these women. She served a couple of terms in Congress and was Ambasassdor to Italy in the 1950's. the first woman to hold such an important diplomatic position. The Luces were the original "power couple."
@OuterGalaxyLounge2 ай бұрын
I really like her in Private Lives (1931) with Robert Montgomery.
@voceval12 ай бұрын
Her heart wrenching portrayal of Marie Antoinette, is one of her best works.
@MotherOf-Ferrets2 ай бұрын
@@voceval1 I am so ashamed to admit this, but I have yet to see it. I know I need to get on it and see it ASAP!
@TheKelJacob2 ай бұрын
The funny thing is that Joan Crawford started out as Norma Shearer's double in at least one silent movie.
@michaelsommers55032 ай бұрын
Enjoyed your smart reaction, thanks! You have yet to screen Grand Hotel, I think. That 1932 M-G-M classic offers Joan Crawford portraying a relatively vulnerable young woman amid a top-notch cast that includes Greta Garbo, both Barrymore brothers and Wallace Beery.
@rcmorl63902 ай бұрын
...I've grown claws..Jungle red!! YOU had to watch this one. I grew up watching old movies, and this one, a little dated. but a favorite classic essential...this is one of those with characters and dialogue and comebacks quotable for days...and The Red Shoes next! The music and the entire ballet sequence...another must. Cant wait.
@fabrisseterbrugghe85672 ай бұрын
Rosalind Russell did six different auditions for Sylvia. The first was -- in the vernacular of the time -- piss elegant. She went more down market with each one until the final was the type you see here. Joan Crawford's most famous role until -- _Baby Jane_ came along -- was _Mildred Pierce_ . You should probably also see _Our Dancing Daughters_ the silent that made her a star and _Rain_ which changed her image in the early 1930s.
@agenttheater52 ай бұрын
12:27 When she was saying "That is I do mind but it's such good discipline for me over my selfishness of you" and "oh Stephen, I do need you so" - was I the only one who thought "And he bought that?"
@richruksenas59922 ай бұрын
Virginia Wiedler was in "The Philadelphia Story" the next year, Marjorie Main was in "Meet Me In St. Louis" and the Thin Man series, Paulette Goddard was a brilliant spark in this movie.
@ednafenton75582 ай бұрын
Don't forget Marjorie Main in the "MA & Pa Kettle" movies. Also loved her small part in " Friendly Persuasion"
@richruksenas59922 ай бұрын
@@ednafenton7558 Yes, I have the whole Kettle series!
@ednafenton75582 ай бұрын
@@richruksenas5992 me to.
@harryrabbit28702 ай бұрын
I had never seen this movie before and now I'm sorry. I'll find a copy a watch it end to end. Thx Miss Mia. Loved your reaction as usual.
@sherriherbert50712 ай бұрын
Joan Crawford in the movie …Rain 1932…amazing performance
@toodlescae2 ай бұрын
The lady who ran the dude ranch in Reno is Marjorie Main. She used to play Ma in the Ma & Pa Kettle movies. I love her. I knew you'd like this movie. I also like Rosalind Russell in *Gypsy* with Natalie Wood.
@cstarv2 ай бұрын
One of my favorite comedies, love movies of that time; dialogue was everything. And not a single male in the cast! I would suggest Mildred Pierce for a Crawford movie.
@carollarson44512 ай бұрын
Mildred Pierce is an excellent recommendation! Crawford actually earns our sympathy.
@DEWwords2 ай бұрын
Clare Luce wrote it.
@lilyandrose855727 күн бұрын
Yay, i love this film! Rosalind Russell was so funny, Norma Shearer was lovely and Joan Fontaine was also great.
@garybassin16512 ай бұрын
If you like Rosalind Russell, you might enjoy "Gypsy".
@kelly98762 ай бұрын
you may also like "My Sister Eileen" which is silly but Russell is so funny
@katherinebaxter68702 ай бұрын
I love this movie so much. The first time I watched it I didn’t realize there were no men in it until I was told after. So beautifully done. All of the amazing actresses. I love the wit from these older movies.
@QueenOfTheNorth652 ай бұрын
My favorite movie of all time. I am 58, and my best friend and I first saw this on TV when we were 16. We have seen it SO many times we can literally recite the entire film, verbatim. Thanks for covering this gem!
@bonitaburroughs86732 ай бұрын
My favorite Joan Crawford movie is Mildred Pierce. Another actress of the time period is Greer Garson. Blossoms In The Dust is a good one.
@stevenhomer36922 ай бұрын
@@bonitaburroughs8673 Mildred Pierce is a great movie.
@wfoster-graham63632 ай бұрын
Yes, this is one of my favorite movies. There are no men in the movie, but the movie is about men, and that made it stand out in 1939. Also, among many qualities, was its sensitive handling when Mary Haines tells her daughter about divorce. In my opinion, though it has been remade twice, nothing beats this original. I waited a long time for you to review this movie. Thank you once again for your great content and appreciation of classic movies!
@alexflowers972 ай бұрын
Please watch Joan Crawford’s masterpiece Mildred Pierce (1945) if you only seen Baby Jane and the woman. Then watch Johnny Guitar (1954) and Grand Hotel (1932).
@murrvvmurr2 ай бұрын
Why am I only now realizing Joan Fontaine is in this!
@cocoaorange12 ай бұрын
I saw it on TV almost 20 years ago, it was an interesting film!
@MotherOf-Ferrets2 ай бұрын
I was so excited that you watched this! I love Norma Shearer! Her and Clark Cable did a scandalous film for their day called Strange Interlude and it was that film that introduced me to her and then I found The Women. This show is so amazing. The cast is BRILLIANT. I hope you wore your jungle red while watching 😉 Thanks for this!!!
@Serai32 ай бұрын
The original tagline for this film was "It's all about Women - and their MEN!" It was the first all-female Hollywood production. Joan Crawford only really went for the film once the producer assured her that the lack of men didn't mean it was a lesbian film. (That wasn't the word she used, though.) The gossip columnist in the last scene was played by the infamous Hedda Hopper, who ruined more than one life with her magazine column. As you suspected, the color section was meant to show off the fashions, though it also emphasizes the fantasy element of a fashion show. It's really one of my favorites. It's so gloriously sharp, clever, and poisonous, and the claws are three inches long.
@philipholder56002 ай бұрын
You dared to edit out Joan Crawford's final line. The best line in the film. Such a classy way to call someone a bitch,without calling them a bitch. And you exited it it out!!!!!!!!!
@melanie629542 ай бұрын
The Red Shoes is going to be such a treat! Every one of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's films have a special magic. I do hope that The Red Shoes is a gateway drug and that you eventually get around to Black Narcissus, A Matter of Life and Death, I Know Where I'm Going!, A Canterbury Tale, and The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp!
@SueProv2 ай бұрын
I highly suggest Grand Hotel. Greta Garbo, Joan Crawford, John Barrymore, Lionel Barrymore, Wallace Beery. Crawford shines in this.
@blackiemittensАй бұрын
@SueProv She does indeed, but personally for me, Lionel Barrymore steals every scene he's in.
@tompease30222 ай бұрын
They only used color for the fashion show sequence because Technicolor was complicated and expensive, and they were already doing “Gone With the Wind” and “The Wizard of Oz” using it. What escaped most critics (and some viewers) is that the fashions were supposed to be a joke (jackets with mannequin hands for buttons?) but Adrian was so good you took it at face value. Great Performances filmed the Broadway revival with Cynthia Nixon, Jennifer Tilly, and Rue McClanahan. You can see where the Hollywood version cleaned things up a bit.
@yvonnepalmquist86762 ай бұрын
I believe the Great Performances version is available to view on KZbin.
@yvonnepalmquist86762 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/fHrKgamgqc56e9k
@johnmoreland60892 ай бұрын
Great reaction to this super witty classic. Such a superb production with a perfect cast. And I LOVE the Pillow Talk, The Women and The Red Shoes posters behind you. 3 terrific films.
@angelaluz4052 ай бұрын
Incredible film! I'm so glad you've finally gotten around to it. Everyone in this film really nailed their parts. My favorites were Roz Russell and Paulette Goddard, whoni think is very underrated. The script is absolute genius. Love it. Can't wait for your next video!
@DEWwords2 ай бұрын
Clare Luce Booth wrote the play. Her hushand created Time and Look and etc etc.
@ElliotNesterman2 ай бұрын
So pleased to see you finally watching this great film. And _The Red Shoes_ is phenomenal. FWIW, the 2001 Broadway revival of the original play (which premiered in 1936) was excellent. Cynthia Nixon, as Mary, headed a spectacular cast. It was filmed and broadcast by PBS as part of its _Stage on Screen_ series. The video is available and is worth seeking out. For more Joan Crawford it's time for _Grand Hotel._ Also, there's _Letty Lynton,_ though you may want to wait until next year, when it will be in the public domain and will likely be reissued on DVD/BluRay.
@fabrisseterbrugghe85672 ай бұрын
_Rain_ is one that got her real notice when people thought she might not make the transition from silents.
@JP-ve7or2 ай бұрын
3:40 the story, at least, was that Crawford was knitting just offstage while Shearer was filming a close up, making a lot of loud, distracting clicking noise. She may have been doing it on purpose; Crawford was always envious of Shearer and the preferential treatment she got for the best roles (married to the boss, after all 😂) Joan never quite got over her first film role as Shearer's double (she basically played the back of her head.) There are a LOT of stories of these two getting snippy with each other, but again, who knows how many of them were true. What is true is that Crawford really relished playing her enemy in The Women.
@etherealtb60212 ай бұрын
I love this movie! You definitely need more Joan Crawford! A Woman's Face or Mildred Pierce would be great next watches for you. YOURE FINALLY DOING THE RED SHOES! OMG!!! Sorry for the caps, I've been waiting for this since you said you love Brit films. The only bad thing is it will send ou down a Powell and Pressburger rabbit hole - which you'll love!
@meela-w1x2 ай бұрын
Yay, welcome back! Thank you ☺️. Just as an aside, youu might find films like Red Dust, Baby Face and Golddiggers of 1933 interesting if you wanna watch more PreCodes ❤
@meela-w1x2 ай бұрын
(I know this film isn't PreCode by 5 years 😅 but it still has some of the vibes)
@seeflatbesharp2 ай бұрын
Those are my favorite pre-codes as well, along with "42nd Street"!
@meela-w1x2 ай бұрын
@@seeflatbesharpI love that one too! 😁
@stevenhomer36922 ай бұрын
The Red Shoes is *beautiful* and strange. I can’t wait to see your reaction. (And Pillow Talk, which I’m hoping you’re planning to watch.)
@MoviesWithMia2 ай бұрын
Hint: notice the movie posters 😉
@stevenhomer36922 ай бұрын
@@MoviesWithMia I was hoping that’s what that meant! I adore Pillow Talk; I think you’ll love it too.
@MoviesWithMia2 ай бұрын
I filmed it already… and I absolutely LOVED it!!
@pastorofmuppets132 ай бұрын
This film is so fantastic! There a a ton of "oh women are best friends" movies, but this one here is probably closer to reality lol. After working with mostly women, I find so many characters in this I have known. Loving your choices Mia
@etherealtb60212 ай бұрын
SO much closer to reality. Women haven't changed THAT much.
@kidrauhlbr2 ай бұрын
so glad the video is out!!!! the women is one of my fave classics, all performances were perfect and i do love the - like you said - "quick witted and fast paced dialogues of the 30s", i watch it at least twice a year. it was nice hearing some background of it, i had no idea norma and joan werent on good terms omg!
@holliesheet31822 ай бұрын
Enjoyed your reactions, Ms Mia! Claws out! 😂😂 Please, consider , "The Stage Door" 1939 with a stellar cast of women!
@patrickcosgrove8862 ай бұрын
Remember seeing this picture in a theater in Los Angeles. My friend and I had smoked a joint before going in the theater. I was stunned when the fashion show started in technicolor.
@matthewwirta60402 ай бұрын
This was one of the first classic films I ever saw when I rented it from Blockbuster. While all the cast was A+ I actually fell in love with Norma Shearer who is still my favorite actress of all-time. So glad you enjoyed this film. If you’re looking for a sophisticated comedy, try Trouble in Paradise (1932) Classic pre-code.
@MaD-gs9qx2 ай бұрын
That was Toto in the opening.
@MoviesWithMia2 ай бұрын
NO WAY 😨😨😨😨
@yvonnepalmquist86762 ай бұрын
Remade as a musical, The Opposite Sex (1956), with June Allyson, Dolores Gray, and Joan Collins in the roles played, respectively, by Norma Shearer, Rosalind Russell, and Joan Crawford. The worst of the three, but I love watching them all and comparing them to each other. Unlike the other two movies, this one definitely had men in it.
@Dashervescents2 ай бұрын
I very much enjoyed how this wasn’t a review of someone searching for something to be offended over! That seems to be the only thing people do when they talk about the past is proclaim their superiority. It’s nice to see someone who doesn’t think that way! 😃
@Laurenteamec2 ай бұрын
I’m going to have to rewatch this movie now, it’s iconic. On the note of Joan Crawford, Mildred Pierce is a must.
@yvonnepalmquist86762 ай бұрын
Tubi is currently streaming it.
@HuntingViolets2 ай бұрын
"I understand the position you're in." The position of having to marry someone he cheated on you with, Mary. He doesn't seem worth getting back, really.
@mingluke12Ай бұрын
I honestly have waited your review of this film. Finally!!
@brkoher4227 күн бұрын
They did b&w to color and back to b&w was technicolor. Newly created, they beat out Wizard of Oz by 2 months. This is one of my all time favs and you did it great justice. Brava and keep you the fantastic work. BTW you watching Auntie Mame, fantastic!
@beamanact2 ай бұрын
HOORAY!!! Mia, so glad you watched one of my favorite quotable films of all time!! You rock.
@coolcpa33212 ай бұрын
The Women is one of my all-time favorite films. I love Marjorie Main (Lucy in Reno). She, along with Percy Kilbride, created the recurring characters Ma and Pa Kettle. First appearing as the Kettles in 1947's The Egg and I, they went on the portray the characters in about a dozen Ma and Pa Kettle films. She was also wonderful as The Widow Hudspeth living on a farm during the Civil War with two lonely, but eager to marry, homely daughters in 1956's Friendly Persuasion. She was also notable in Stella Dallas, The Harvey Girls, Stella Dallas, Meet Me in St Louis and The Long, Long Trailer. Her charisma and self-deprecation shines.
@DXElliott2 ай бұрын
Grand Hotel (1932) Daisy Kenyon (1947)
@paulmorgan100910 күн бұрын
Thank you for reacting to one of my favorite movies. And for doing this for one I think is incredibly important and unique. Thank you!
@vintagegal5412 ай бұрын
Oh, "The Women" cannot be beat! I loved Joan, Rosalind and Paulette in this one, plus Marjorie.
@battlegirldeb2 ай бұрын
I have watched more the a few of your reaction and can't believe your just getting to the best movie of 1939 in my opinion.
@dgs80112 ай бұрын
Crawford plays the sympathetic character in Mildred Pierce. There her daughter, played by Ann Blyth I think, is the one you want to slap the whole movie. Butterfly McQueen is stuck in a servant role and didn't even get a screen credit, even though she has quite a few lines. Crazy. Mildred is the most sympathetic Crawford role I can think of. I also like the movie Best of Everything, but she's an Anna Wintour kind of character in that. Hope Lange, Diane Baker, and Suzy Parker shine, along with 1950s Manhattan, in that one, set in the offices of a book publisher.
@Courtclerkk2 ай бұрын
Yesss! So glad you are reacting to this! It is my absolute favorite movie!!!
@Ned_of_the_Hill2 ай бұрын
I watched this movie a couple weeks ago, when I saw that you were going to review it. Thanks so much for the recommendation! This was such a great movie. Seeing all these classic screen ladies together was awesome. Special shout-out to one of my favorite lesser-known character players: Theresa Harris (Olive, the dog minder at the health spa). It was also fun to see a send-up of the early 20th Century Reno divorce tourism industry.
@auapplemac24412 ай бұрын
Since Shearer was the main character and the story revolves around her, it seems normal that she would get top billing. This has always been one of my favorites. BTW, affairs in movies go way back to silents movies, stage plays and even earlier, books. For example the 1857 novel, Madame Bovary (also made into a 1940s movie.)
@melissakalloway19162 ай бұрын
Little Virginia Weidler stole the show for me. What a fantastic actress! She also played the wise-cracking little sister to Katharine Hepburn in "The Philadelphia Story" with Cary Grant. I think she "steals" the scene whenever she's on the screen.
@ericechols60562 ай бұрын
Mia, I like your content, channel, passion, & love for movies & film, you're a great hostess, and narrator. Keep up the good work and fun. Even though black people were objectified to mostly subservient roles in that era, @ 5:31, the woman of color is simply gorgeous and has presence. The costume design is luxurious, the acting superb, and the movie was great. The scene in color, where they introduced the ladies modeling clothes, was done to showcase that particular style at that time, which was out in 1939, this was a creative way of advertising & highlighting these vintage clothes to the female audiences watching the movie. In this movie Rosalind Russel reminds me of a younger Susan Sarandon. 😉👍
@francoisevassy66142 ай бұрын
Virginia Weidler was a wonderful actress ❤❤❤ I specially loved her in The Philadelphia Story and in All This and Heaven Too. She was only 41 when she died.
@ScottAinge-tm4lz2 ай бұрын
The red shoes a British classic
@fabrisseterbrugghe85672 ай бұрын
Powell and Pressburger (sic?) aka The Archers did so many great films. _A Matter of Time_ is brilliant in so many ways.
@lanaowens80282 ай бұрын
OMG, I love this movie and I love you covering it 🎉
@jackasswhiskyandpintobeans93442 ай бұрын
12:29 I think it's the hairstyle, but I never found Joan Crawford to be beautiful or even pretty, until I saw her in "The Unknown," 1927 Silent. Very pretty in that movie. It's not just because she was younger.
@kjgammon1658Ай бұрын
Catch her in "Sadie Mckee"
@JennLynnTarot2 ай бұрын
May I recommend watching The Farmer's Daughter with Loretta Young and Joseph Cotton now that we're in an election time? 💓💓💓
@roberthansen92942 ай бұрын
You are going to love the red shoes beside the fact that the dancer is one of the best dancers to ever grace the movie stage at that time. She’s magnificent and she strikingly beautiful. It’s a great movie. It’s very twisted psychologically
@johnvonundzu21702 ай бұрын
The stage play of The Women contained the phrase "orgasm by gossip". Obviously this was too much for Hollywood then, but okay for Broadway.
@bleuedee65312 ай бұрын
I am so glad you are watching this movie!!!
@unclebobunclebob2 ай бұрын
Another classic made in 1939...called by many the best year ever for movies.
@PSPguy22 ай бұрын
I've only seen this movie once but remember what a fun one! It has everything you want in a 1930's movie. Set design, dialog, fashion and an all-star cast!
@TTM96912 ай бұрын
Watching this now, I can't believe I have both this AND The Red Shoes to watch with you! Hey, the dog in the very beginning of the movie? That's Toto! (Real name: Terry. Who was a female, so add that to the cast list!). Same year as Wizard Of Oz. I love that! She did two iconic movies in the same year! Good girl! (LOVING this reaction so far!!!)
@blackiemittens2 ай бұрын
"How is it that the child has more wisdom than the adults in this triangle?" Truth and wisdom right there. "I aspire to be Rosalind Russell when I grow up!" (Okay, i want that on a T-shirt, coffee mug and bumper sticker)! 👍
@HuntingViolets2 ай бұрын
There's also a recording of a stage version of this with Cynthia Nixon.
@yvonnepalmquist86762 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/fHrKgamgqc56e9k
@marciebulsaraorcutt23 күн бұрын
This movie was remade in 1956 with the title The Opposite Sex, then remade again in 2008 (as The Women).
@flpndrox2 ай бұрын
FEMALE RAGE! lol, luv it
@paullambert78402 ай бұрын
One of my favorite movies. I've watched dozens of times.
@nicolejohnson06132 ай бұрын
The comedy is too good to care about the bad messaging. Love this movie. It never should’ve gotten a remake
@amybethkit2 ай бұрын
I like the first remake, just not the modern one.
@JP-ve7or2 ай бұрын
I've heard it said that back then, audiences knew to ignore the last 10 minutes of any movie because it was just the studios being forced to push a happy, "moral" ending 😂
@amybethkit2 ай бұрын
@@JP-ve7or yes! The heroine had to end up married or dead because otherwise it sent a bad message. Grr.
@MatthewWirtaАй бұрын
This was one of the first classic films I ever saw, and I fell in love with it, classic films, and Norma Shearer. You should watch Trouble in Paradise (1932).
@Dej246012 ай бұрын
Enjoy The Red Shoes! Martin Scorsese spent $250K to restore/conserve this magnificent Technicolor masterpiece.
@mckeldin19612 ай бұрын
Thoroughly enjoyed your reaction (as usual). Such a fun movie! I’m so excited that you’re reacting to The Red Shoes next. One of my favorite movies of all time!
@wfoster-graham636322 күн бұрын
Fun fact: Joan Crawford was loaded for bear when she went for the part of Crystal Allen. When the front office asked her, "Why do you want to play this awful b*tch?" her reply was, "I'd play Noah Beery's grandmother if the part was good!" In her body of work, she rarely played that kind of a role, but when she did it was memorable (examples: "Harriet Craig" (1950) and "Queen Bee" (1955)). Other examples of her best work: "Mildred Pierce" (1945) (for which she won the Academy Award for Best Actres) "Humoresque" (1946) "Possessed" (1947) "The Damned Don't Cry" (1950) "Sudden Fear" (1952) By the way, since Noirvember is coming up, have you considered doing a reaction to "Out of the Past" (1947), starring Robert Mitchum and Jane Greer? Wishing you an excellent day!
@JesseOaks-ef9xn2 ай бұрын
At the end when you shook your curls reminded me of Avantgardey. They are a Japanese dance group and are mesmerizing to watch.
@HuntingViolets2 ай бұрын
Oh, there's a lot of infidelity in older movies.
@fourthgirl2 ай бұрын
One of my favortite movies! Love it!
@TennesseeMelanie2 ай бұрын
Absolutely one of my top 2 favorites
@rabrab32 ай бұрын
Absolute Winner!!!!!! The Countess is by far my favorite!!! Toujour L'Amour!!! Lets all have a little drinkie.