The Very Idea (1929) Poster

(1929)

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6/10
An Interesting Early Talkie
atlasmb10 October 2014
This early talkie is rather static and at times it feels like the actors are playing to a theater audience. "The Very Idea" is adapted from a play.

The story is simple: a couple wants to have a baby and they employ a surrogate mother (and father) to produce a baby for them.

This does not seem very different from the surrogacy that is now very popular in the U.S. But dialogue about improving the human race make this story feel more like it is about eugenics, the social movement that existed during the early 20th century.

I found the story rather insipid and the acting amateurish and stiff, but this film is somewhat interesting just as a representation of film quality in 1929 and because of its intimations of eugenics, which later became tainted due to Nazi associations.
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6/10
Let's Make a Baby Deal
wes-connors20 October 2014
Wealthy writer Frank Craven (as Alan Camp) is a believer in eugenics (defined by the Oxford Dictionary as "the science of improving a human population by controlled breeding to increase the occurrence of desirable heritable characteristics. Developed largely by Francis Galton as a method of improving the human race, it fell into disfavor only after the perversion of its doctrines by the Nazis"). After publishing a book on the topic, Mr. Craven wants to help his sister and her husband have a baby. The couple has been trying to start a family for years, with no luck. Craven believes his driver Hugh Trevor (as Joe Garvin) is a perfect male specimen. He is engaged to very beautiful maid Sally Blane (as Nora Tracy). The exceptionally attractive couple have not yet married because Ms. Blane wants to be a supported housewife...

Craven approaches Mr. Trevor with his proposal. For $15,000, the handsome chauffeur is to impregnate the pretty maid. Then, he must give the baby to Craven's brother-in-law Allen Kearns and his wife Doris Eaton (as Gilbert and Edith Goodhue). The latter couple will go to California for a year, then return for their child. Trevor and Blane jump at the deal. One year later, the cast reassembles. Naturally, things do not go according to plan. There is a very long set-up to the comic highlight, but the last act is very funny. "The Very Idea" is a fine (and inoffensive) adaptation of William LeBaron's stage play, brought to the screen by Mr. LeBaron with actor/directors Richard Rosson and Craven managing the players. Longing to hear "the patter of little feet," Broadway stage actor Kearns is particularly memorable.

****** The Very Idea (9/15/29) Frank Craven, Richard Rosson ~ Frank Craven, Allen Kearns, Hugh Trevor, Sally Blane
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4/10
Really Staticy Curio
reginadanooyawkdiva19 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
I am a big fan of pre-code films and wanted to see this as it had been made in 1929. Like the previous reviewer noted, the film is very static and at times the plot drags.

The plot is that Alan Camp (Frank Craven) has written a book on eugenics and feels that his chauffeur (Hugh Trevor) and his sister's maid (Sally Blane) would make the "perfect" baby for his sister and brother-in-law to adopt through surrogacy. Today, this is not unheard of, but at this time, it was a very controversial move and the "perfect child" concept sounded like the previous poster said, it sounds like something out of Adolph Hitler's play book.

The husband of the sister in the movie was so clueless and dumb I wished that I could have punched him. Honestly, I wanted to punch everyone except Sally Blane and Hugh Trevor, who had the sense to refuse to give up their child. The sister and her dopey husband are so self absorbed and are too good to adopt a child from an orphanage, fearing they would get an infant Charles Manson or not get a child as "perfect" as they are. I won't give away the ending, but things work out in the end for Mr. and Mrs. Self Absorbed.

Watch this if you are into pre-codes, or into early sound films, as this doesn't have much going for it other than that.
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