For Love or Money (1933) Poster

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6/10
Cash is the key
david-frieze10 June 2012
"Cash" is not only the title but the leitmotif of this fast-moving farce: it's what entrepreneur Edmund Gilbert (Edmund Gwenn) and his family lack; it's what their creditors keep hounding them for; it's what young Paul Martin has found ($100,000 worth); it's what he waves in front of prospective investors in Gilbert's latest scheme. The plot of this quota quickie creaks a bit, although events move along at a good clip in the second half. Good performances help immensely - not just from the two future Oscar-winners in the cast (Gwenn is particularly entertaining, and more manic than we're used to seeing him), but from Clifford Heatherley as a slightly bemused butler and Hugh E. Wright as an investor with a hearty appetite. It's not a classic, but it is a decent example of the kind of fantasy that kept audiences hoping during the depths of the Depression.
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5/10
Suddenly Acquired Fortune
bkoganbing22 October 2014
Sad to say that I had to deal with poor sound and botched edited version of For Love Or Money. Otherwise I might have rated this British Depression Era comedy a bit higher.

Before his first international exposure Robert Donat was in three quota quickies which was the British term for B picture. The last of them was this one where he plays a formerly prosperous person now reduced to a job with the London utilities getting people to cough up their electric bills or be turned off. Donat turns other people's electricity off to keep his on.

One fine day on the London underground a fleeing crook drops on him a newspaper filled bank notes in American currency totaling $100,000.00 while he's on the way to turn off Edmund Gwenn's life. Gwenn is an old robber baron type temporarily between fortunes and meeting some investors tonight. It won't due to have the lights off when you're trying to put up a front entertaining guests.

Gwenn and his beautiful daughter Wendy Barrie persuade Donat not to cut off the electric and then when his suddenly acquired fortune is discovered there's a bigger need. I can't say more, but you might keep the later Gregory Peck film made in the United Kingdom Man With A Million in mind. Nothing attracts money more than money and seeing it in cash up close and personal loosens many a purse string.

Still that's hardly the end and there's a kicker in this film that really gives it a last minute oomph.

This film could use some restoration and I'll bet those lost several minutes of this slightly over an hour version I saw.
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6/10
Cash
CinemaSerf11 February 2023
Although Robert Donat takes top billing here, the film really belongs to the entertainingly devious and scheming Edmund Gwenn. He is "Gilbert", a man who has made and lost a fortune in his time and now, together with his daughter "Lilian" (Wendy Barrie) and butler "Joseph" (Lawrence Grossmith) they are all facing the bailiffs. There is one glimmer of hope, though. He might just be able to interest some investors in his latest schemes - so he bounces a cheque and prepares a lavish dinner. Thing is, before that can happen the electricians arrive to disconnect him! When he discovers that one - "Paul" (Robert Donat) has found rather a large amount of US Dollars, the three concoct a plan and... It takes a little time to get going, but once Gwenn is in his stride and the plot firmly established this is actually quite a characterful B-feature than nips along nicely towards a conclusion that was fitting and mildly amusing. Gwenn usually had a cheery demeanour, and that benefits this light-hearted film and ensures it is still worth a watch almost ninety years later.
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2/10
It's not Easy Being Green
arfdawg-122 November 2019
Very odd film on several levels. Firstly Wiki says this is an American comedy. It's not. It's English.

Next, for some reason the titles are actually superimposed OVER an Alpha Video logo ( not the opposite!)

And next, the entire print is in a light green wash. What's that all about? At first I thought it was faded color but it's an early '30's film so it was originally in B&W.

Obviously Alpha Video decided to give it this creepy Absinthe feel.

It's a very slow moving film that is short on comedy and long on boredom
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4/10
Early Donat film
malcolmgsw30 March 2020
Many people have commented on the poor condition of this copy.Well I think this is the only copy.The BFI has no film elements in its collection.This is an early film from that great actor Robert Donat,who died much too youg.Unlike most other reviewers I did not find it to be funny,but it is of historical interest.
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8/10
Stupid ol' Alpha Video...
planktonrules27 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
My relationship with Alpha Video is like having a co-dependent relationship with a drug addict. You want to hate the person, but there's something that keeps on bringing you back...despite common sense. Alpha Video specializes in producing DVDs mostly from public domain films and is very consistent in quality...bad. You never get any worthwhile extras, there are never captions or closed captions and the print quality is usually (but not always) bad. Many times, the sound is so bad that I feel like screaming--and those missing captions sure would help! But, despite promising myself never to watch another Alpha DVD, I find myself coming back because in many cases they are the only ones who produce certain films--such as silents, old-time comedies and movie serials--the sort of odd fare I often like. My rule of thumb is that if I can find the movie from a free public domain download, I skip Alpha--the print quality can't be any worse than Alpha's in most cases! In this case, I simply could find no other DVD other than Alpha's, so I bore with the typically bad print and sound. I am glad in hindsight that I did, as it was a dandy film--most enjoyable and clever.

Edmund Gwenn and Wendy Barrie star as a father-daughter team who have hit financial rock bottom. They have nothing...just when Gwenn's latest money-making scheme is about to be realized. How can you impress potential investors when the lights have been turned out and you have no food to feed them? Into this conundrum comes Robert Donat. He plays a guy who lost his fortune during the Depression and now has a job turning off the power of clients behind in their payments. However, he hates this job and feels sorry for Barrie and Gwenn and turns their power back on and hangs about for a bit because he is smitten with Barrie. While making time with her, he discovers that a thief had hidden $100,000 on his person! He fully intends to take this to the police--but Barrie and Gwenn convince him to wait until AFTER their business meeting. Why? So Donat could flash the money in front of the potential investors--thus piquing their interest in funding the project. Well, it turns out the investors truly are tepid on working with Gwenn...until they see the money. Then, they practically throw money into the scheme.

What happens next is pretty funny, clever and unexpected--making this a film well worth seeing...even with Alpha's lousy DVD. See this film--excellent acting and writing make this a very nice and brisk comedy.
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8/10
Gwenn Hilariously Funny
joe-pearce-114 August 2011
I've given this a high rating not so much due to the film itself, which is a very entertaining and charming comedy, but because every one of the performances in the film is first rate and at least somewhat attention-stealing. You expect this from the stars, Robert Donat, Wendy Barrie and Edmund Gwenn, but not quite from the supporting players, four of whom - Lawrence Grossmith, Clifford Heatherley, Morris Harvey and Hugh E. Wright - make it impossible not to regret the general lack of knowledge most of us have about the plethora of great English character actors that peopled the stage and screen of Great Britain over the last century. These were all important actors in their day (Heatherley had his own acting company for many years and was of considerable importance in the English theater), and one could enjoy the film over and over just for their contributions. However, as good as they are, and as well as Donat and Barrie play together, this is Edmund Gwenn's film, and at least four or five times he had me laughing out loud at his delightful performance as a destitute businessman trying, with the help of Barrie and Donat, to pull the wool over the eyes of some other businessmen in order to get them to invest in his latest scheme. Gwenn, of course, was one of the most lovable actors in creation, and achieved a real measure of fame in the U.S.A. thanks to his performances in PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, THE MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET, MR. 880 and THEM, but even though most of those films were comedies, he was not usually funny, nor was he supposed to be, in them; he specialized in warm and lovable elderly types and played them to perfection (although he played an assassin in FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT, where he was anything but warm and lovable!). Before all of this, however, he had been one of G.B. Shaw's favorite actors and had appeared in both the original casts and in revivals of many of the great man's plays. In IF I WERE RICH, however, he has a comedic role that requires an astonishing amount of energy, pointed delivery, slyness and befuddlement, and he acts it to hilarious perfection. If I were to choose only one role to remember Edmund Gwenn by, it would be this one.
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8/10
Hilarious drawing room comedy
rsoonsa7 March 2001
Some of England's favorite actors, including Edmund Gwenn, Robert Donat, and Wendy Barrie, head the cast in this Depression-era comedy written by Arthur Wimperis, who was one of his nation's finest screenwriters for the best part of two decades. The rapid-fire dialogue could be a fatal test for performers but, thankfully, Donat and Barrie display wondrous chemistry with the scenario as well as with each other, and are nicely backed by a talented group, markedly Clifford Heatherley and Lawrence Grossmith. The plot is pleasantly complicated, involving a quixotic business venture, found money, the travails of the formerly wealthy during a financial downturn and, of course, love. Ordering of the film's quickly shifting events is capably managed by director Zoltan Korda.
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8/10
An early flimflam man at work, and his allies
SimonJack3 April 2014
Whoops! Here's another movie that had three different titles in its day. I'm reviewing it here as "If I Were Rich," which is the title on the DVD I bought. The IMDb listing has it as "For Love of Money," which is probably the title it went under when it was first released in England. But, it also went under the title "Cash," according to the billing here. Why they can't stick with one title, I'll never know.

Well, by whatever name, this is a delicious comedy that has some top British actors of the day – although most of them would not be well known in the States for a time. The big exception, of course, is Edmund Gwenn who was known then and would become very well known in later years for his roles in a number of American-made movies. He won an Oscar for his 1948 role in "Miracle on 34th Street." In this film, Gwenn is riotously funny as a flimflam man, Edmund Gilbert. All of the cast excel in their roles in this film. Robert Donat plays Paul Martin. He also won an Oscar for his later role in "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" (1940).

Donat is another one of those great actors whose life was cut short. He died at age 53 of a chronic asthma attack. Movie buffs will know him from some outstanding films in which he had starring roles. Among them were: "The Count of Monte Cristo" in 1934, "The 39 Steps" in 1935, "The Citadel" in 1938, "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" in 1939, "The Adventures of Tartu" in 1943, "The Magic Box" in 1951, "Lease of Life" in 1954, and "The Inn of the Sixth Happiness" in 1958.

Others have noted the fine roles by the supporting cast in this film. Some of the lines are hilarious. The electric supervisor says to Martin: "Now then, Mr. Upper Class. I'm going to leave you here for a bit while I go out to make a few more calls. I'll meet you around the corner in 10 minutes." Then, looking at Lilian Gilbert, played by Wendy Barrie, he says, "Yes, and not so much of your sex appeal. Oh, she may be Greeta Garbo or Marjoreen Deetrich (sic), but you cut off her lights, you see what I mean?"

Later, Gilbert says to Martin, "You're not going to take that money with you on the street?" Martin replies, "Oh, I can take care of it." Gilbert: "But you might lose it. I say, why not put it in the safe? You can take away the key." Martin: "Suppose I lose the key?" Gilbert: "Well, I've got another." Martin: "No! As a working man to a business man, I prefer to take the money."

This is a very good British comedy. Unfortunately, the film quality is very poor. But don't let that stop you from getting or watching this wonderful film.
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9/10
Donat, Barrie and Gwenn -- what a team!
JohnHowardReid27 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
A comedy of manners – remember them? When I was starting out in the movie business in the 1950s, it was still a popular genre – always had been, even in silent days. But I don't recall ever seeing a poster for a comedy of manners at my local multiplex. Admittedly, it's only been open since 1990. Nevertheless, the comedy of manners seems to have dropped right off the plate so far as contemporary film-makers are concerned. We're indeed fortunate that Alpha, Grapevine and few other DVD companies are keeping the genre alive by re-issuing movies like Cash/For Love/Rich! It's a fine example – even in its cut version. And I wouldn't worry too much about the cuts. What's missing is about six or seven minutes of establishing dialogue from Act One, principally designed to allow late-comers to find their seats without missing anything of the slightest relevance or importance. As it is, we see just enough of crooked-as-a-hound's- tooth Edmund Gwenn to whet the appetite for Robert Donat's entrance. Yes, the screenplay is constructed like a stage play. Aside from a prologue in a train, just about all the action occurs in the one set, namely the London house occupied by down-at-heels confidence man, Edmund Gwenn, and the imposingly slim Wendy Barrie. This is the sort of movie in which the stars carry the film – and you couldn't ask for better bearers than Donat, Gwenn and Barrie! A nice tinted copy is available on a very good Alpha DVD.
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9/10
Well worth seeing, if you are able to find it on video.
mtownsend22 March 2002
A charming tongue-in-cheek fast-paced romp about money, it's manipulation, "value", etc. that is as fresh and funny today as it ever was. This 70 year-old comedy has aged very well, however the video copy I viewed indicated that the film itself could do with some restoration work. None-the-less, I would definitely recommend it as well worth seeing, if you are able to find it on video.
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