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Every Girl Should Be Married [1948] [VHS]
 
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Every Girl Should Be Married [1948] [VHS]

Cary Grant , Betsy Drake , Don Hartman    Universal, suitable for all   VHS Tape
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Cary Grant, Betsy Drake, Diana Lynn, Franchot Tone, Alan Mowbray
  • Directors: Don Hartman
  • Language English
  • Classification: U
  • Studio: 4 Front
  • VHS Release Date: 12 Jan 1998
  • Run Time: 84 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00004R6XC
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 11,159 in Video (See Top 100 in Video)

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Great film 3 Mar 2012
By Lexa
Format:DVD
This product came very quickly upon order. It is a great film of its time, the acting is brilliant and Betsy Drake and Cary Grant had excellent on screen chemistry. A good buy if you want a light hearted romantic comedy.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
On DVD at last! 6 Feb 2012
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
As a longtime Cary Grant fan I've been waiting for this film to come out on DVD for years. It's a great feel good film, totally of it's time. Betsy Drake - who was to become Cary Grant's wife decides Cary Grant is husband material, and she goes to great lengths to ensure he comes around to her way of thinking, today you would be worried that she was stalking him! Her behaviour is justified because every girl should be married - all we want is to be wives and mothers!
This is a charming film, full of fun, with great performances. Cary Grant is his immaculate self. A great film for a rainy Sunday afternoon.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
By Spike Owen TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:DVD
Every Girl Should Be Married is directed by Don Hartman who also co-writes with Stephen Morehouse Avery and Eleanor Harris. It stars Cary Grant, Betsy Drake, Franchot Tone and Diana Lynn. Music is by Leigh Harline and photography by George E. Diskant.

Betsy Drake (in her screen debut) plays Anabel Sims, a department-store clerk who goes after paediatrician Dr. Madison W. Brown (Grant), determined to snag him as her husband.

Women have found it necessary to use subterfuge and their own feminine devices for centuries.

Fun, frothy and a little daring, Every Girl Should Be Married is of its time but none the worse for it. It's a different spin on the battle of the sexes format with Betsy Drake's determined femme proving to be the aggressor in the pursuit of happiness. There would have been some feminists cringing at the notion of one of their number seemingly courting marriage as a reason for being, but digging further into the character reveals a strong lady who knows what she wants and sets about getting it. As the character stands up and says during a marvellous sequence at a lecture given by Grant's eminent doctor, who wrote the rule that only men can ask a girl out? To be the one doing the pursuing? It's relevant stuff and via its comedy zeal puts the sexes on an even playing field. And you know what? As a red blooded male I found this in itself to be very sexy!

Drake only had a short career, she would marry Grant soon after this film had been a hit at the Christmas 1948 box office. It's a shame we never got more from her because she owns this film. Managing to shift easily from girlish charm to strong willed woman when the narrative demands, she offers up a counterpoint to the foggy memory of the "Suzy Homemakers" so rife in 50s and 60s American romantic comedies . Drake brings originality to the role, while simultaneously providing great comedy opposite the ever coy Grant. She also has a smile that could melt the coldest of hearts. Grant, Tone and Lynn are playing second fiddle, but that's not to the film's detriment, and with Hartman unfussy in his direction it rounds the film out as a winner. It does pick some ideas from the pockets of previous screw balls, but with its centre fresh and interesting it would be churlish to criticise some outer edge formula steals. 7.5/10
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