Big Brown Eyes (1936) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
21 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
One of Cary Grant's better films before becoming a mega-star
planktonrules28 March 2009
Mega-stardom for Cary Grant still was ahead of him when he made this amiable romantic mystery with Joan Bennett, though the film is still well worth watching and is one of the better films in this era. By 1937-1939 he was pretty much a household name, with films such as THE AWFUL TRUTH, HOLIDAY and GUNGA DIN to his credit (BRINGING UP BABY was perhaps the best of the films of this time period, but in 1938 it was a financial flop).

As for Joan, though much of the film I thought she was her sister Constance, as Joan died her hair platinum blonde for the film and she's best known as a raven-haired actress. It's amazing how much alike they look given the same hair styles. She, too, had better and more popular films in the future and so this film is one from both their transitional periods--clearly they were stars, but not of the first order.

The film is a wonderful blend of comedy, romance and mystery and is one of the better examples of this odd genre combination. While it isn't up to the tip-top standards of THE THIN MAN (but what was?), it was certainly a very good film. What I liked best was the writing for Joan's character. She was a wonderful 'broad'--a worldly and wise lady who had some of the best one-liners I've ever heard in a film of the era. She was enticing AND mouthy at the same time--whatta dame! The mystery involves an evil private detective (Walter Pidgeon) who is not above a lot of larceny in order to make it in his racket. Not only does he find stolen items, but he's not above having others killed or dealing with crooks to get it. During most of the film, Grant plays a police detective (an odd casting decision, I know) who is in love with Joan AND is assigned to a case involving Pidgeon--though at this point, no one knows he's "Mr. Big" behind everything evil and corrupt Grant is investigating. Throughout the investigation, Joan in the role of a reporter, does amazingly well in helping her boyfriend and even though they snipe at each other a bit, they are a great screen couple.

Overall, a delightful film that is close to earning an 8. Very well written and surprisingly good for an earlier Grant film.
11 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Forensics And Manicurist Training
bkoganbing5 September 2010
Cary Grant and Joan Bennett co-star in Big Brown Eyes which had it been done over at Warner Brothers would have been standard material for James Cagney and Joan Blondell. In fact the whole project was an unusual one for Paramount, it was a gritty urban drama that Warner Brothers specialized in.

Grant is a police detective and Bennett a manicurist turned reporter (only in Hollywood) who team up in life and who team up to solve a series of robberies. What begins as high end jewel robberies turns deadly serious when during a payoff gone bad, a baby is killed in the park by a stray bullet.

When the doer Lloyd Nolan is acquitted in court due to perjured testimony and political influence, Grant quits the force and Bennett goes back to manicuring and look for justice in an unofficial manner. Need I say they get it though you have to see Big Brown Eyes to find out how its done. But I will say that forensics and Bennett's manicurist training does help a lot.

Walter Pidgeon is also in the cast as a crooked politician, hip deep in the rackets, a type that Thomas E. Dewey was putting in jail with increasing frequency in New York at the time. Two very funny supporting performances come from Marjorie Gateson as an amorous robbery victim with an eye for Cary Grant and Douglas Fowley who was one of the gang that they trick into squealing. That is the highlight of the movie.

Big Brown Eyes is a slick comedy directed by Raoul Walsh who gets the whole cast in sync like a Swiss watch. An unusual film for Cary Grant, but his fans will like it.
10 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Two years after the code, this slipped through!
mark.waltz19 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Who would believe that a film like this with such hard-boiled and often sexual dialog (as well as a baby murder!) would have been approved by the overly censorious Hays code in the mid 1930's? I sat there stunned by the witty dialog that seemed closer to things that Mae West or Jean Harlow might have said to Cary Grant three years before than Joan Bennett did to him here. The result is one of the most delightful surprises and a film that is certainly worthy of re-visiting just to catch everything each of them says to each other in this delightful screwball comedy with a touch of social relevance tossed in.

Yes, Cary Grant plays a cop here, and Joan Bennett seems to go from every occupation from waitress to reporter to manicurist in less than 90 minutes. She's so hard boiled that it is surprising that Grant is able to crack her shell. The film surrounds a series of jewel robberies (a plot favorite in the 1930's), and in order to catch a thief, Grant utilizes Bennett's position on a big New York city paper that seems to focus more on scandals than detailing world news. Bennett, obviously in love with him, is jealous of his connection with robbery victim Marjorie Gateson, and obviously for no reason. Walter Pidgeon is a private investigator involved in trying to get to the bottom of the robberies, so it is no surprise when it turns out that he is involved! There's also Lloyd Nolan as a gangster whose shoot-out with fellow gangsters ends up with an innocent baby being killed in Central Park.

Bennett helps crack the case by getting one of the witnesses to crack in fear of his own life. Her way of doing this is ingenious, and I will not spoil that by revealing it here. Let me just say it is brilliant. If the murder of the baby isn't shocking enough, then there's the trial of the accused and the inevitable betrayal of each gangster from the other, indicating that these criminals are fine as long as each racket is going along swimmingly, but they are the first to either point the finger at the other or wipe them out when things start to fall apart.

As for that crackling screenplay, I wanted to start writing down each of Bennett's great lines, but no sooner had I started writing down the first line, she was on her third, then fourth crack, which made it impossible for me to continue that task. It's great to see these veteran stars whom many younger viewers may only remember from their later parts (in Ms. Bennett's case, either "Father of the Bride" or the TV soap "Dark Shadows"), and that deep, haunting voice of hers is a delight to behold. Grant, too, gets a lot of great retorts to each of her remarks, and their sexual chemistry is undeniable.

Pre-Greer Garson leading man Walter Pidgeon is as far from Mr. Miniver or Mr. Parkington or Monsieur Curie as he can be here, a villain that seems so sure of himself that he'll never get caught. Marjorie Gateson is very amusing as the Billie Burke society matron and gets to recite some hysterically funny malapropisms. Why this film hasn't become better known among the screwball comedy's of this era is beyond me. This is the type of film that while not excellent is certainly worth many repeat viewings and one I wouldn't mind seeing shown as part of a big screen revival house.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Grant Coming Into His Own
Michael_Elliott5 April 2017
Big Brown Eyes (1936)

*** (out of 4)

Detective Danny Barr (Cary Grant) is trying to track down some jewel thieves but one day he is given the grim news that a baby has been shot and killed in a park. He finds that the two crimes are connected but can't get any real clues until his girlfriend Eve (Joan Bennett) goes to work for a newspaper.

Yes, you heard the plot of BIG BROWN EYES correct. It's a movie that features a baby being shot and killed. That was a rather dark subject for any period of films but you have to wonder how that plot point got past the Hayes Office just a year after they were coming down on certain topics. Apparently a film with a baby being shot was okay as long as the male and female stars weren't kissing for over five seconds.

As far as the film goes, director and co-writer Raoul Walsh does a very good job at mixing several genres together and in the end they all work quite well. You've got the mystery of the jewel thieves and the baby murder. You've got the back and forth romance between Grant and Bennett. You've also got some comedy thrown in for good measure, although the killing of the baby is a tad bit dark for the rest of the picture. All of these elements work very well and it plays out quite nicely.

Grant was yet a major star but you can see the comic timing really starting to come out here. I've been going through his films in the order that he made them and this role was clearly one of the best of his early career. He got to play the tough cop and do it nicely but his comic and romantic timing is that classic Grant. Bennett is also very good in her supporting role and makes for some good charm and there's no question that the two leads have some nice chemistry. Walter Pidgeon, Lloyd Nolan and Joe Sawyer are also good in their supporting bits.

BIG BROWN EYES isn't all that well known, which is a tad bit shocking considering the cast, the director and the fact that it's a good movie. The film even has some fun with Grant having him play a ventriloquist. There's even more fun to be had when Bennett says a classic Mae West line to him.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Good comedy-mystery, could have been better
SimonJack12 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Cary Grant will probably be remembered well into the future for three films that he made. "Arsenic and Old Lace" is a comedy, crime and thriller of 1944. "An Affair to Remember" is a drama, light comedy and love story of 1957. And, "North by Northwest" of 1959 is the Alfred Hitchcock action, adventure and mystery film that is likely to remain on the IMDb top 250 list for decades to come.

Before, between and after those films Grant made many more movies - most of them big box office successes. Aside from the three most familiar films, he made a slew of comedy-romances. When we hear the name, Cary Grant, most movie buffs are likely to think first of "My Favorite Wife" of 1940, or "The Awful Truth" of 1937, or another one of his hilarious comedy-romances. Yet, besides "North by Northwest," Grant made a dozen other mystery-crime-thrillers. Most were very good.

"Big Brown Eyes" of 1936 is one of those films, but a somewhat lesser one. The acting is very good by all of the cast, and the plot is very good. But this film suffers from a disjointed screenplay, weak direction, and poor film editing.

Grant plays a police detective sergeant, Danny Barr. Joan Bennett is his sweetheart, Eve Fallon, who works as a manicurist. She leaves her job to work for a newspaper and tries to help Danny solve a jewel robbery. Walter Pidgeon is Richard Morey, an insurance investigator and adjuster. He runs a secret, crooked operation on the side. Among the rest of the supporting cast are Lloyd Nolan as Russ Cortig, Joe Sawyer as Jack Sully, and Edwin Maxwell as the editor.

This is an interesting and fun film that most should enjoy. With better writing, direction and overall care in the making, "Big Brown Eyes" could have been a much better film.

Danny and Eve have a scene with back and forth dialog that reminds one of the famous routine of Bud Abbott and Lou Costello - "Who's on First?"

Eve, "Where are you going?" Dan, "I don't know yet. I haven't made up my mind." Eve, "Can I go with you?" Dan, "Where?" Eve, "Where you're going." Dan, "Well, I just told ya. I don't know where I'm going." Eve, "Well, when do you leave?" Dan, "I don't know that either." Eve, "Well, why can't you take me along?" Dan, "Where?" Eve, "That's what I'm asking you." Dan, "I'm asking you that." Eve, "Say, who's going - you or me?" Dan, "Where?" Eve, "I don't know. I'm not going - you are." Dan, "Well look, what time is it?" Eve, "What time does your train leave?" Dan, "How do you know I'm going by train? I might be going by boat." Eve, "What kind of a boat?" Dan, "I don't know. I haven't seen it yet."

Here are a couple more favorite lines from this film.

Eve Fallon, "I knew it was you. I know the feel of your fingerprints." Benny Battle, "Ouch! Never say fingerprints when I'm around. It gives me a sickly feeling."

Bennie, "Don't they know? And me, as honest as the day is long." Eve Fallon, "Yeah, but how about the nights?"
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Everybody was so young!
blanche-25 September 2013
"Big Brown Eyes" is from 1936 and directed by Raoul Walsh. Joan Bennett was still a blond, and here, Cary Grant plays Dan Barr, a detective trying to recover someone's stolen jewels. Bennett plays his jealous manicurist girlfriend Eve, who takes a job on a newspaper after she quits manicuring.

Walter Pidgeon plays Cortig, the head of the jewel theft ring which is also involved in the murder of a child who was hit by one of Cortig's stray bullets. He's joined by Lloyd Nolan. Thanks to his crooked attorney, Cortig is found not guilty. Dan is so upset he quits the force to go out on his own and get justice. Eve returns to her manicure job; both are very defeated by the trial.

This is an okay, fast-moving film with Bennett playing what today would be considered a stereotype, you know, the gum-cracking, wisecracking blond. Grant is very handsome and slips easily into his role. He's not the "Cary Grant" persona quite yet. That's a couple of years away.

I don't know who the Big Brown Eyes were, but it must have been Cary Grant. I saw Joan Bennett in person near the end of her life - she was very tiny, with very black hair, and had beautiful blue eyes.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Bennett and Grant in Slick and Snappy Comedy-Mystery
dglink13 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Joan Bennett and Cary Grant worked well together, and they co-starred in two 1936 films, "Wedding Present" and this film, "Big Brown Eyes," an amusing mystery-comedy. The stars seem to relish the fast snappy dialogue, which they deliver in rapid-fire fashion. The farcical and improbable plot, written by Raoul Walsh and Bert Hanlon, is quite entertaining, despite lapses in logic and credibility. A blonde manicurist quits her job, becomes a reporter, and aides her policeman boyfriend track jewel robbers. When one criminal is acquitted by a jury, the cop quits his job to take justice into his own hands, while she quits her job as a reporter and returns to work as a manicurist. The casual job hopping must have stunned Depression-era audiences who were accustomed to double-digit unemployment rates.

The purloined jewels at the center of the plot belong to a Mrs. Cole, amusingly played by Marjorie Gateson; the daffy rich lady seems deliciously unconcerned that she consistently loses her baubles to robbers, while she introduces her spoiled Pekinese to strangers. A young Walter Pidgeon plays Mrs. Cole's shady insurance agent, who sidelines as a fence; Pidgeon is assisted by a young Lloyd Nolan, whose insistence on a larger cut of the Cole-jewelry take creates complications. The two thugs, who actually have the loot, resent Nolan's middle-man cut, and the crimes remain light and amusing, until a child is accidentally shot and killed, which darkens the film's tone immediately.

While not a highlight in Raoul Walsh's extraordinary half-century career as a director, "Big Brown Eyes" is well paced, and clever montages of talking heads in the manicure salon fill in expository blanks in the story. Superior to their follow-up pairing, "Wedding Present," Bennett and Grant are fun to watch, and the lines ricochet between them at a pace that may require a second viewing to catch. Great stars, good supporting cast, good script, and a legendary director, no enduring classic, but an entertaining treat.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Cary Grant Still Shines
wordsmith_5721 July 2008
Big Brown Eyes would have been a big fat bomb if Cary Grant hadn't carried the movie. Even in such an early picture (1936) his debonair, yet cheeky gentleman style is evident. Playing a detective seemed odd, yet no matter what role he is cast in, he makes it his own. His romantic interest, Joan Bennett, seemed a tad too hard around the edges to play his girlfriend, but she did manage some decent repertoire with Grant, especially when the packing scene in Grant's apartment. Overall, the picture is uneven. It can't decide if it is a serious crime/drama or a light comedy. There is a scene where a stray bullet kills a baby (intimated) and there is nothing funny about that. Another scene a man is shot while arranging roses. It's incongruent action like these scenes that makes this movie just short of unwatchable. I have yet to see a Cary Grant movie that I didn't like, and this one seems a practice for his all out great flick His Gal Friday. Big Brown Eyes is watchable, only because of Cary Grant.
3 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The best of its class.
deltascorch909 February 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This is by all means a 10/10 film, the very kind that I watch an actor's entire filmography to find. After having watched the film, I was absolutely shocked to learn that it actually lost the studio money and that it hardly has a wikipedia article at all.

Perhaps I appreciate things in a different way than some other people: a lot of reviewers here have written off this film as being second-rate, or something only that die-hard films of the protagonists would enjoy.

The fact is that when watching this film, I couldn't help but say to myself "there's something amazing about this film." Essentially, it's the way that the camera would focus on faces in a titled way; it's how three or so times they utilized a scene of angled talking faces being done over in a barber/manicure salon to provide for distinct segmenting transitions.

Though maybe most of all is the cast itself, I mean Joan Bennett and Cary Grant. Joan Bennett here, as apparently I gather she does in this period in general, plays that perfect sort of woman that only existed in this era. She's full of energy and does everything with such coordination and awareness, it's simply glorious to see in another person.

Then there's the little things. The scene where the two young guys were called and they were laying on a bed sideways on their backs smoking, and how after that they started talking about airplanes and parachutes -- or when the baby-killer was listening to the radio about flowers, and seemed to have a genuine interest in horticulture in general. Or what about Cary Grant leaving the police station and scraping his cigarette against the engraved plaque in the wall, the one which exhorts the necessity of justice for freedom to work?

The thing is, this is clearly a film where a ton of thought and innovation has been poured into it: this film was obviously someone's darling. Those little things like that aren't found in the normal routine film either past or modern, and that's what makes it so spectacular.

By all means, this is a cult film, and it is absolutely "ahead of its time" while also being so quintessentially a part of it.

A total thrill, and something I hope to see again.
10 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Watchable, but unmemorable
robb_77227 December 2006
An adequate comedy/mystery, one that is serviceable while playing but will scarcely be remembered long after it concludes. In all fairness, the jumbled screenplay by Bert Hanlon and director Raoul Walsh has a reasonable degree of intriguing ideas spread throughout the picture's scant runtime, but the various story threads never gel into a completely coherent picture and the film is further hindered by some woefully leaden dialogue among it's lead characters. The film is still wholly watchable, and even enjoyable during certain stretches due to it's lead performers. The chemistry between Cary Grant and Joan Bennett (as a bickering couple thrown into a case involving stolen jewels and murder) is breezy and natural, and the duo significantly better the film with their thoroughly winning performances.
16 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
One for the Permanent Collection!
JohnHowardReid9 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
It's not hard to figure out why this one is a firm favorite with cultists on the one hand and yet is despised by critics and the general picturegoing public on the other. A picture that makes a glamor hero of a brutal baby-killer is not likely to win many friends except among the corduroy set. Nor is its sassy heroine who twists the law into her own brittle hands and easily outshines the nominal hero in righting wrongs going to be adopted as idol-of-the-month by the Bible belt (despite a number of Biblical precedents).

This said, however, for those of us who like to see and even more especially to hear Joan Bennett brilliantly outclass rushing hither-and-thither Cary Grant and debonair detective-about-town Walter Pidgeon, "Big Brown Eyes" (I assume the title refers to Joan) is a must.

Also to be reckoned with are Lloyd Nolan who manages to pull off an extremely difficult role, and Douglas Fowley giving the best performance of his career. If you don't literally jump out of your seat like I did during the scene in which Fowley exits the friendly police station, you shouldn't be watching vintage movies.

Raoul Walsh has directed all the proceedings here with admirable style, polish and economy. Production values are absolutely first class.
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
A strange entry in the Cary Grant Oeuvre
Handlinghandel29 August 2007
And in that of Raoul Walsh, as well. The early scenes, which try really hard to be cute, show no influence of Walsh. When it gets more into the career of policeman Grant, we see some fast-paced action and it makes sense as a Walsh project. Sort of.

Grant was young and hadn't become a major star yet. He looks great and does a creditable job. His female co-star is Joan Bennett. Now there was an interesting actress: She worked with all the great foreign directors when they came to Hollywood. She made several movies for Fritz Lang. She worked for Max Ophuls. She worked for Jean Renoir.

Here she is a blonde, like sister Constance. She's fine.

Walter Pidgeon looks young too. He is cast in the sort of role Robert Montgomery or Warren William got more frequently: He's a charming crook.

When the movie begins, Bennett is a manicurist. Then, suspiciously quickly, she's an ace newspaper reporter. Was this little film assembled from various attempts or is the plot just a little unconvincing? There are many wonderful reaction shots that move quickly from close-up of one bit player or extra to close-up of another. I think the most famous use of this sort of extreme close-up is that of the chatty woman in "Brief Encounter." But the ones here are great. Indeed, they elevate what is essentially a trivial movie up a notch or two.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
What Movie Is That, Kind Sir?
orbitsville-16 October 2011
Where I work, we do a fairly brisk trade in DVDs, including hard-to-find films, old films, some strange stuff too. And we are technically adept enough to have a nice big screen at the back which we have managed to hook up to something that will play the movies. If Stan is in, he basically picks what we will be watching for most of the day--special pleading or claims of overkill aside--but when Stan leaves, it generally devolves to me to select what will be showing. And this is fun. It means that, temporarily, MASTER AND COMMANDER, or LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, or PERRY MASON episodes are set aside, and we can loosen things up a bit, at my discretion. Into the realm of "What The Heck Are We Watching, And Why Am I Hypnotized By It?".

A rousing round of CULT OF THE COBRA, followed up by either DR CYCLOPS or FIEND WITHOUT A FACE (depending on whether I'm feeling a Marshall Thompson double-bill is called for), and onto NARROW MARGIN (Peter Hyams remake; not the suspense film of the ages, but I do like this director's work overall, plus the Lady Archer, and people our store will stop and watch the action, or the fun scene where Sikking confronts Hackman over drinks, on the train). If I'm feeling things should take a classier turn, Hitchcock's NOTORIOUS is a favorite, and just exactly how many times BRAZIL has been shown on the premises is a matter of debate...but it's somewhere between infinite, and whatever comes after infinite.

When it occurs to me to slap BIG BROWN EYES on again--a wonderful, if forgotten "crime comedy"--I always get a warm fuzzy feeling. I love going that far back and yet still playing a film nobody seems to know, but is ultra-cool, and a little bit before its time. Some early vigilante-movie stuff going on here. Very savvy leading lady, aggressive, gets it done, out-performs the male detective who is enthusiastic to kick crime where it hurts, but seems either befuddled or embittered next to our smart-mouthed superwoman. Speaking of smart- mouths, I've just come fresh from my review of THE LONG KISS GOODNIGHT, and those who like the punch of a Shane Black script, and all that lightning-fast and super-entertaining dialogue, would do well to listen to everyone trading zingers in BIG BROWN EYES, decades ago. Try and listen; try and keep up.

Back to the screening of this film--me your Master Of Ceremonies--there are four huge reasons to watch this film, at the very least: Joan Bennett, Cary Grant, Walter Pidgeon, and maybe especially the amazing Mr. Lloyd Nolan. This was really my first look at Lloyd Nolan (I had seen HOUSE ON 92ND STREET, but that is a film that is trying not to draw attention to actors and acting, as it goes for docudrama as done by "regular people"), and I only really knew his name as if vaguely connected to THE TERMINATOR and lawsuits and THE TWILIGHT ZONE or some such complicated frippery. Anyway, when I run BIG BROWN EYES at the store, we are known to attract some curious viewers. Mainly the old fellows with the sentient beards, who realize they are watching something sprightly, and just a bit dangerous, filled with these big names giving energetic performances, and spouting sharp dialogue while weaving in and out of mayhem. These knowledgeable old film buffs with their beards and their trivia-packed memories try to connect Cary Grant, Joan Bennett, LLoyd Nolan, and Walter Pidgeon all together in a superior film which surely they must know, but don't--and all wind up asking me "Sirrah--(oops, or rather:) --Good Sir, stout fellow, what be yon film?". And I give them the scoop. And sometimes we sell a Cary Grant boxset. And everyone comes away happy. Especially me, as I watch flower-loving gangster prone to violence Lloyd Nolan define the breezy nastiness of this film in all his scenes.

Hitchcock seemed to do some culling here, for casting, Hey, isn't that the dude who shows up in FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT? That other guy there, playing one of the gunsels--he shows up in SABOTEUR, yes? Goodness me, I'm getting good at these old movies finally! And Cary Grant, I seem to recall him showing up in a few Hitchcock films, or am I wrong? Anyway, suffice it to say: I like BIG BROWN EYES better than ARSENIC AND OLD LACE, which I guess means there's something wrong with me and I can't be totally trusted, but there it is. A little less loudness and bombast going on, and I'm happy. A little more naturalism to the performances (even in 1936!), and I'm enjoying myself. Noisy where necessary, calm and cool where required.

A baby-killing in the middle of a "comedy" is probably not something everyone likes. I'm not saying that I sat there waiting for it to happen ("where's this big infanticide they advertised-- they sure are taking their sweet time!"--no no, nothing like that), but once the film commits to such a development, in a 1936 comedy, the film has one of those ahead-of-its-time moments. Is this Tarantino, shaking things up, making it edgy, making it a bit discomforting and depraved while still brilliant? No, it can't be. I don't think he wrote stuff before he was born. Anyway, I like risks; I like it when it gets in your face a bit. This film is charming enough--throw in some vigilante-justice stuff, and a vile act or two, and things percolate better. The social conscience of the film--before and after the life-taking gunplay in the park--means that it's wrong to see this just as a screwy comedy, and that's fine with me.

So, BIG BROWN EYES. Something a bit edgy for its time. Very slick and clever--great dialogue coming at you throughout, especially from the lady, who rips through things with guts and gusto. Hail Joan Bennett in this, liberated woman. I love this movie!
7 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A mature Grant, a complex and fluid plot, and some lightweight entertainment
secondtake2 August 2011
Big Brown Eyes (1936)

Well, the big brown eyes that come to mind here belong to Cary Grant, who is coming into his own here. You'll recognize not only the looks (the eyes are heavier in the earlier films) but a mature attitude, the relaxed and cocky and sarcastic fellow that is so famous.

The leading woman is Joan Bennett, who plays Grant's love interest. Bennett is not well known as a type the way Crawford or other women from her period are, and it's partly because she plays a kind of generic character, in this case a blond, sweet, smart, fun woman. She actually became more famous later in a couple Fritz Lang dramas (as a brunette), also playing a type. what she had going for her was a natural and fluid ease before the camera. And an ability to fit a part, not steal the show.

Because the show belongs to Grant. And Grant here is a cop, Danny Barr. He tends to insert his casual confidence and slow ease as a cop and it's actually a pretty interesting fit, not at all the stereotype created by harder boiled types, or more witty ones (name a half a dozen famous ones). It's fascinating to watch him at this pivotal point in his career. It's usually pointed out that Grant's persona solidified in 1937 in "The Awful Truth" but having watched most of these films from this period it really seems that he's fully himself here, a year earlier. History is right in the sense that "The Awful Truth" pushed Grant's career up a notch simply because it's a better movie. And he has a more prominent role in it.

Here, the action is spread between Grant and his cops, Bennett and her life bouncing from being a manicurist to a reporter, and the "bad guys" who are up to their usual no good. These thugs are actually pretty convincing, falling short of the hardened awful types of some movies. One of them (the kingpin) is a young Walter Pidgeon, who is not quite right in his role, but it's fun to see him so early in his career.

"Big Brown Eyes" is poorly name, but besides that it's not a bad movie at all, and if you follow the several plot lines (all connected) it gets pretty interesting. Every now and then when the plot is sped up (thankfully) the camera shows a whole range of characters close up and at a tilt. It's both affected (a little at odds with the rest of the movie) and successful (at speeding up the plot with appropriate humor and agitation). There are some fun twists (like when Bennett accidentally makes a fingerprint dusting using some talcum powder. And there are lots of turns, people quitting jobs and leaving town, and some odd shocks, as when the baby is killed.

In the end it's also a romance with Grant in the lead role, well done and sharply acted. See it.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
A Shot in the Park
wes-connors15 August 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Joan Bennett is a manicurist/reporter, and Cary Grant is a police detective. They have a few funny lines in "Big Brown Eyes"; and, along comes Walter Pidgeon with his gang of jewel thieves. The main problem, for me, was the clash between the humor, and the crime drama. The major crime is the accidental shooting of a baby, in its baby carriage, in the park - the scene give you a jolt, and kills the "comedy". Later, a man is shot after he delivers a witty line. It doesn't mix well.

Ms. Bennett and Mr. Grant are the main attraction; they are fun to watch, and show promise as a movie "team". I did not care much for the story (or the slanted camera angles), however.

***** Big Brown Eyes (1936) Raoul Walsh ~ Cary Grant, Joan Bennett, Walter Pidgeon
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
for Bennett and Grant fans only
mukava99112 December 2011
The clumsily contrived "Big Brown Eyes" manages to hold some interest because of a fast pace and the magnetism of Cary Grant and Joan Bennett. She plays a wisecracking manicurist (too much a gum-chewing replica of her character in "Me and My Gal" opposite Spencer Tracy four years earlier) who engages in mutual flirtation with Grant's police detective. The plot involves a slippery jewel theft ring run by Walter Pidgeon (who would team wonderfully with Bennett 5 years later in Fritz Lang's "Man Hunt") that the cops just can't seem to crack. Bennett, driven to inexplicable frenzies of jealousy over Grant's innocent professional attentions to an older woman (Marjorie Gateson) whose diamonds have been stolen, bangs him over the head with a tray of utensils, is fired for bad behavior and promptly gets a job as a reporter with the town's newspaper. Overnight she is writing front page copy and leading the investigation into the jewel theft ring. Further absurdities take place until the predictable ending. Nowhere is there any reference to the anatomical features of the title, though one would assume they belong to the leading man, Cary Grant. The lack of connection between title and content is the perfect indicator of a tossed-together script. This Raoul Walsh-directed feature does what it can to supply action and speed and colorful incidentals in place of logic and wit and real dramatic substance. But despite the star power it can go only so far with such thin material.
2 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Cary Grant a Cop?
malvernp15 February 2010
Yes, it's true. The actor who in a few years would become the ultimate symbol of film sophistication and elegance has the role of a policeman in this fairly routine comedy-drama. But no matter. Grant has enough charm and grace to make even this kind of part his own. How did he do it? Grant just stands out and is so likable while a lesser actor would just walk through this rather thankless assignment.

Joan Bennett played the kind of sassy brassy part that was often taken on by the likes of Ginger Rogers or Joan Blondell. Did anyone else catch her throwaway line that mirrored Mae West's famous "come up and see me sometime?" Many folks don't remember that Bennett was a blond BEFORE she became better known to later movie audiences as a brunette. Does anyone know of any other famous actress who made such a transition? Not me.

The rest of the cast did serviceable work in the film. Douglas Fowley, who played a humorous bit as one of the crooks, is far better known to most film audiences as the harried movie director in "Singing in the Rain," who had to deal with the chaotic and riotous problems of bringing sound to what were formerly silent movies.

But this film belongs to its male lead. You can almost see in watching the movies he made at this time just how he developed the layers of "business" that came together to produce the screen personality we all know as Cary Grant. He may have been paying his dues by taking on this fairly routine role. In the long run----we are all the better for it. Cary Grant was one of the greatest screen actors of all time----maybe the greatest.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Fast talking comedy/mystery is second-rate stuff...
Doylenf15 August 2007
Raoul Walsh directs this fast-paced, fast talking comedy/drama in the style of THE FRONT PAGE--but despite the sassy dialog among criminals and assorted tough guys, as well as manicurist JOAN BENNETT who becomes a newspaper reporter, it's lacking in entertainment value despite a cast that includes CARY GRANT, WALTER PIDGEON, LLOYD NOLAN, DOUGLAS FOWLEY and ISABEL JEWELL.

The mystery revolves around stolen diamonds and the killing of a baby by a stray bullet. Grant pretty much plays his usual self as a detective who happens to be the boyfriend of Bennett. The playful banter between them makes her sound like the prototype of the kind of wisecracking female she would play throughout all of her femme fatale roles. But here, she's blonde and pretty while playing her role in much the same style as Rosalind Russell played a girl reporter in THE FRONT PAGE.

Strictly second-rate stuff as entertainment despite the good cast.
1 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
A nice watch when you're in it
clevurguy26 April 2020
A fun mystery movie, it keeps you on the edge. The chemistry between the two leads is very good. A lot of interesting camera angles And style, but The ventriloquist scenes were hokey. Characters are interesting and fun to follow. I agree with an earlier review that says it's not very memorable, but A nice watch when you're in it.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Babykiller
tedg2 May 2006
This little movie is more than forgotten. It is so mundane that no one has decided they can make a nickle from it, despite having some of the very same features and creative crew as projects that are celebrated. Cary Grant is about the same here, as in, say, "Charade."

I have to admit, it is flat. It all can be laid at the feet of the writer, I suppose.

These comedies are delicate. I suppose they cannot be engineered, like so much in film can. Oh, the execution can of course, but if the writer doesn't froth intuitively, nothing can spin it in after the fact.

But then again, this was the 30's where experimentation was the rule. And I suppose you need several failures before you get a "His Girl Friday" (which this resembles) out of so many tries.

Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.
7 out of 33 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Early Cary Grant
BandSAboutMovies5 November 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I haven't seen many crime comedies that revolve around manicures, but that's exactly what this Raoul Walsh (the one-eyed director of High Sierra) comedy is all about.

Cary Grant plays police officer Danny Barr, who is growing tired of chasing jewel thieves. His girlfriend Eve Fallon (Joan Bennett, Dark Shadows, Madame Blanc in Suspiria) gives up her manicurist job to become a reporter, aiding Danny as he hunts down the criminals. One of them gives up way too much info while getting his nails done, which leads to them finally tracking down the big bad, Richard Morey (Walter Pidgeon, who was in both Sextette and Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood at the end of his career).

It's a fun little farce. It was also one of more than seven hundred Paramount productions, filmed between 1929-49, which were sold to MCA/Universal in 1958 for television distribution. It aired for the first time on TV in 1959.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed