Our Wife (1941) Poster

(1941)

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5/10
Comedy Directed Like It's A Woman's Picture
alonzoiii-15 June 2012
Melvyn Douglas, talented trumpeter, stumbles drunkenly into somewhat stuck-up professor Ruth Hussey's life. She gets Douglas to complete his concerto and clean himself up, but what will she do when estranged wife Ellen Drew returns to the scene, and becomes OUR WIFE?

A lot of pictures made around 1940 -- after the screwball comedy had exhausted itself -- are billed as comedies, but do not seem intended to be terribly funny. This one, made by John M. Stahl, (best known for Leave Her to Heaven and a couple of sudsers remade by Douglas Sirk), has a script that might have one time been a howler, but, by the time Stahl is done with it, plays as a somewhat daft woman's picture with occasional "hilarious" drunk moments. The result, while interesting, is somewhat off, mostly because it takes half the picture to develop the dramatic situation that is the meat of the show, and because said dramatic situation resolves itself way too easily at the end.

But this picture does deserve to be seen. Stahl's very smooth style, frighteningly dispassionate style is distinctive, allows the actors a lot of space, and derives its tension from the acting, rather than flashy camera work or lighting. And the character played by Ruth Hussey is an interesting variant on the spinster professor, and is really humanized by the way Hussey portrays her. Also, a key moment from Leave Her To Heaven is actually foreshadowed in this film (and shot in rather the same way).

If they had only done away with the har de har har drunk moments and the last minute or so, which totally disrupts the movie's tone...
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6/10
The wife who came to dinner...
blanche-26 April 2013
...or, rather, The Wife Who Came to Reclaim Her Husband. "Our Wife" was released in 1941 and stars Melvyn Douglas, Ruth Hussey, Ellen Drew, and Charles Coburn. Douglas plays a composer, Jerry Marvin, who meets Susan Drake (Hussey) while she's on a ship with her father (Coburn) and brother Tom (John Hubbard). Finding Jerry drunk during one of the tourist stops and seeing him heading away from the boat, Susan and her family escort him back to the ship. However, someone has taken his cabin, and they find out it's because he was supposed to have disembarked. And, since all the cabins are taken, they're stuck with him. Despite his anger -- he was en route to a job -- they all become great friends.

Jerry turns his house in Westchester over to the family for the summer, but when he gets to his job, he finds out it's not what he wants, and he returns home to do some composing. But he wants the family to continue staying in the house. By then, he and Susan have fallen for one another.

Then Jerry's wife Babe (Drew), from whom his divorce becomes final in three months, shows up. Partly to get rid of her and partly because he's in love with Susan, he introduces Susan as his fiancé. Babe promptly manages to slip on the stairs and claims she can't walk. And it could take months for her to recover. Maybe a trip with Jerry to Hot Springs, Georgia will help her. Susan, meanwhile, is positive that Babe is faking and is determined to prove it. She soon learns that she will need to have the wiles of a snake in order to do it.

Directed by John Stahl, this is an amusing comedy rather than a hilarious one. The performances really make it, with the always relaxed and charming Douglas, the beautiful Drew, and the dry-witted Hussey all turning in very good performances. Charles Coburn is great as Susan and Tom's father.

I could have really done without the very end of the film, which seemed very silly. Otherwise, it was pleasant and well done for what it was. But it could have been a lot more.
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7/10
While not among his very best, it's still a dandy Douglas film....thanks to Ruth Hussey and Ellen Drew.
planktonrules9 February 2018
Vivid fire scene

The story begins on an ocean liner. Jerry Marvin (Melvin Douglas) is completely drunk and falls overboard. He's rescued and the Drake family befriends him and tries to help dry him out and give him a sense of purpose. After all, Jerry had been a famous composer and his life fell apart when his wife left him. Perhaps, with some friendship he'll return to being a productive human being instead of a drunken wreck.

Over the course of their time together, Jerry finds his muse and is once back creating beautiful music. He also falls for Susan (Ruth Hussey) and wants to marry her. At about this time, Jerry's wife returns and it's obvious Babe (Ellen Drew) is only interested in him because of his recent success. But Jerry is firm and insists he WILL marry Susan. At that time, Babe fakes and injury and pretends to be paralyzed...forcing Jerry and his maid to take care of her. But Susan is not as stupid as Jerry and knows, sooner or later, that Babe will overplay her hand and folks will realize she's a fake.

This is a very unusual film because for once, Melvyn Douglas is a much more passive character in one of his films. He's cute as the drunk in the first third of the film but is uncharacteristically dim....and he usually is one of the more cynical sort of actors. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, as the women make up for his passivity. Overall, well worth seeing, though not among Douglas' best.
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7/10
A different kind of romantic comedy for the time
AlsExGal12 November 2022
Professor Susan Drake (Ruth Hussey) is aboard a boat in the Caribbean along with her father, Professor Drake (Charles Coburn), and her brother Tom (John Hubbard). They go out on deck and hear somebody has jumped into the water in a suicide attempt. It turns out to be a famous bandleader who is drinking away his sorrows over his wife leaving him. This turns out to be Melvyn Douglas as Jerry Marvin, who gets to make quite the entrance wrapped in blankets and brought back aboard the ship.

Later in San Cristobal, the Drakes see Jerry wandering around, drunk. The car taking passengers back to the boat is about to depart, and soon thereafter the boat. They grab a very inebriated Jerry and push him into the car. Later, when all are back aboard the boat, the discover that Jerry meant to stay in San Cristobal - He had a job there, all of his luggage is there, and since he had checked out of his cabin, his cabin is gone. Sure, Jerry's drunken state had the Drakes thinking he was going to miss the boat by accident, but they are at fault too. They try to make amends by having him stay in one of their state rooms while Tom and his dad double up. They pay for him to have additional clothes, and they pay for his airfare back to San Cristobal at the next port of call.

Jerry is awful to the Drakes about them butting in for awhile, but Susan's sassiness wins him over. He gives them access to his country house in New York while they will be working there, and then he shows up there unexpectedly. Jerry sobers up, writes a symphony and performs it, and asks Susan to marry him.

But then SHE reappears - his not quite ex wife Babe. She appears at the New York house to say hello to Jerry, winds up having a tumble down the stairs, and according to the doctors is paralyzed from shock, and is a now maybe permanent guest in Jerry's home.. Susan believes Babe can walk based on objects that were out of reach that she later saw Babe using, but nobody has actually seen her walking, and if Susan says anything to Jerry she figures it could backfire. So Susan wants to prove Babe can walk and let the proof do the talking. How will this turn out? Watch and find out.

Melvyn Douglas wouldn't be funny unless he is dishing some of the sass, but here he plays a rather guileless person compared to his other roles, just accepting his ex wife at face value. It is Hussey who is playing the kind of role that he often did, suspicious of the facts as presented. As usual, a little Charles Coburn goes a long way. With an unusual combination of plot devices and characters - Douglas as a bandleader who writes a symphony, the idea of a family of globetrotting college professors, and even Warm Springs, Georgia entering the conversation, this low key comedy is worth your time.
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6/10
Watch the first half and then turn it off!
JohnHowardReid28 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
A John M. Stahl Production. Copyright 8 August 1941 by Columbia Pictures Corp. New York opening at the Paramount: 17 September 1941. U.S. release: 28 August 1941. Australian release: 2 February 1942. 10 reels. 8,463 feet. 94 minutes. (Not available on a Sony DVD at press time).

SYNOPSIS: Estranged wife fakes a fall down the stairs in order to gain her ex-husband's sympathy and attention.

NOTES: The stage play opened at the Booth on 2 March 1933 and ran only 20 performances. Humphrey Bogart, Rose Hobart and June Walker starred in the roles now played by Douglas, Hussey and Drew respectively. Edward C. Lilley directed, Thomas Brotherton and Abe Halle produced.

COMMENT: The first half of this movie is an enjoyably sophisticated comedy of manners in which Wolfson's bright dialogue and keen observation keeps interest bubbling perkily, whilst Stahl handles his stars to perfection. Unfortunately, about 50 minutes in, this delightful prelude is ended and the play itself starts. A sort of female version of The Man Who Came To Dinner. And playing the female, Ellen Drew of all people. A lovely girl most assuredly, but certainly no distaff counterpart for Monty Woolley! If only Wolfson had jettisoned the dreary play entirely, and found some other gimmick to keep our true lovers temporarily apart for the Second Act.

Never mind, that introductory forty or fifty minutes is great, full of wonderful scenes, with Douglas, Hussey (beautifully photographed and gowned), Coburn and Hubbard in top form. Planer's photography is at its deep focus best, the sets are attractive, production values expansive, and Stahl handles it all with just the right touch -- hovering in perfect balance between sympathy and glee. Douglas manages this difficult balancing act between boorishness and charm, repulsion and sympathy with the grace of a master. Whoever said that Douglas in the late 30s and early 40s was no great actor and that he just walked through his roles like an immaculate tailor's dummy, should see the first half of Our Wife for a new and different Douglas, an actor who successfully brings off an almost impossibly difficult role with grace, with flair, with finesse, with style.
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4/10
Second rate screwball comedy a mutt among a field of champions.
mark.waltz16 April 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A light atmosphere with little to nothing funny has Melvyn Douglas once again in William Powell territory as a troubled musician whose wife dumps him, opening up the field for a new woman in his life. Ellen Drew's the wanna be ex, with Ruth Hussey the new lady in his life, Charles Coburn as Hussey's dad and John Hubbard as her brother. With part of the movie on a cruise ship and the rest on shore, this film never seems to achieve where it wants to be, what it wants to be, and how its going to get there.

Another obscure stage comedy seemingly defused for the screen, this is disappointing considering how long I've waited to find it. The cast is outstanding, but the magic is missing. Even Hussey's drunk scene is a failure. When Coburn, one of the great scene stealers of all time, doesn't get the remotest sound reaction resembling a laugh, something has to be wrong. It's obvious to me that what ultimately killed the screwball comedy as a genre was an overabundance of mediocre scripts, co-stars that lacked chemistry, and a small percentage of ones that actually worked. For every "Philadelphia Story" there were five like this, and ultimately, audiences became bored and simply stayed away.
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4/10
Disappointing and tedious
krdement31 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This movie is a real bait-and-switch frustration. it starts out as a wonderful, light comedy and then becomes an all-too-earnest match of wits between Susan (Ruth Hussey) and Babe (Ellen Drew) vying for the affections of Jerry (Melvyn Douglas).

After the promising start, this film comes crashing down when Babe tumbles down they stairs. The film becomes literally confined to a bedroom, and a ruse that should be pretty easy to expose turns into an impossible scam and an interminable mental chess match between Babe and Susan. It is simply not believable that Babe can avoid reacting to being stuck with pins and can fool two doctors. Neither Babe nor Susan is a very credible character, and all the scheming fails to generate much of a chuckle. All semblance of comedy has already gone up in smoke long before the stupid, unfunny climax of the house burning. All in all, a frustrating, schizophrenic film.
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2/10
Not Funny
vgasgirl10 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Melvyn Douglas' wife is divorcing him, and he meets Ruth Hussey on a boat. Ruth is very cold and controlled throughout the movie, and I couldn't figure out what he saw in her. He was still married to Ellen Drew, who wanted a divorce. Melvyn moves Ruth and her family in his house, and when Ellen returns, deciding she didn't want the divorce after all, Ruth refuses to leave, even though good manners and a sense of decency would dictate she should. (After all, since Ellen was divorcing Melvyn and not the other way around, he probably didn't want the divorce in the first place, and Ruth would just be a 'rebound'). If Melvyn still wants to leave Ellen, he should do it with Ruth not there, because that's the only way she'd really know. But he was never given the chance, and the writers did everything they could to make Ellen look like a terrible person, but all it did was make her look like a woman trying to hold her marriage together. Ruth should have figured out that if he didn't leave his wife then, he probably never would have. So, in order to prove Ellen can walk, Ruth sets his house on fire (hoping Ellen will flee). Melvyn's decision ultimately is, does he stay with Ellen or go with a psycho who can't think of anything except to set his house on fire. In the end, we still don't know if he did or not. It left you hanging.....
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4/10
Douglas and Coburn can't save this poor screenplay
SimonJack30 October 2020
I almost stretched and gave "Our Wife" five stars, because I can't think of any film that Melvyn Douglas or Charles Coburn are in that doesn't rate that high. But, then, the screenplay for this story is so weak (just short of terrible), that one can't in honesty give it much credit. Douglas was in some great comedies and most were at least very good. But this film hardly deserves the label, comedy. Likewise for Coburn's film output in some smashing comedies.

This is not the first film with a plot that was different and might have been quite good, with a quality screenplay. I notice this problem especially with Columbia Pictures around this period - from late 1930s into early 1940s when that studio was a second-tier movie producer. The major area that Columbia Pictures seemed to suffer in was screenplays. It often got top actors from the Big 5 studios, and sometimes it had very good films. But more often, those films were little better than mediocre, and sometimes almost duds.

This film was panned by critics - again, mostly for the terrible script. It had only $1.3 million at the domestic box office - around 180th for the year, so it was a financial flop too.

Douglas gives it his best shot, and Ruth Hussey is good as Professor Susan Drake. But Charles Coburn's part as Professor Drake is barely noticeable, and Ellen Drew's Babe Marvin isn't much. It's too bad - the talent was here for a good film, but with a stinker of a script, even great actors can't save a film. Seeing a film like this, one wonders what the studio people were thinking (or drinking?) when they read the script and watched this film being made.

Even die-hard fans of Douglas will be sorely pressed to keep watching this film after just the first 20 minutes. With so little humor, I scratched to find a couple of decent lines.

Professor Drake, "Right this very night, I'm so proud of you. I'd like to wake Tom up and give him a good thrashing for not being another girl like you."

Professor Susan Drake, "This is just as big a job as smashing a few atoms. After all, we only pass through this life once and any little kindness we can leave along the way should be left along the way."
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Perhaps the key moment of this instructive tale . . .
tadpole-596-91825618 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
. . . comes when elephantine bride Dull-Sea shows her dad a picture of her fiance Ollie for the first time on the morning of her wedding. "No, No--I say emphatically, a thousand times NO!" Pops immediately thunders, locking up the family hippo in her room. As it turns out, Ollie is just slightly less rotund than his intended. Being geometrically minded, the iceberg's father swiftly realizes that there will be no plausible way to consummate such a union. As documented later on in OUR WIFE, the ill-matched pair cannot even fit in the same vehicle together. Even preschoolers will know that the only possible solution to such a marital predicament is to follow the example of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sprat, and splice thick hamburgers only to lean hot dogs.
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