Blondie's Secret (1948) Poster

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6/10
The Indispensable Man
bkoganbing25 October 2015
The more I see of Blondie comedies it is clear that Dagwood Bumstead is one indispensable man working either for Jonathan Hale or Jerome Cowan as he is in Blondie's Secret. It's only at the very end does Blondie discover she has a secret and she persuades one of Dagwood's fellow employees that revealing it would cost him greatly.

I've been reviewing Blondie films of late and I was reminded today that I must remember that this is all based on a comic strip. Knowing that I can accept some of the surreal plot setting such as they have here.

The Bumsteads are finally going on vacation, one that Arthur Lake's boss Jerome Cowan has finally relented and is letting them have it. But hitches develop in a big project that Thurston Hall has given the firm and Lake is the only one it seems that can deal with it.

Which leaves Jerome Cowan to come up with some Lucy Ricardo like schemes to get Dagwood to stay. We also learn that there's a bigger sap than Dagwood working in his company, his friend Ollie played by Jack Rice.

Add to that Blondie gets involved with some counterfeiters quite innocently. Those are the basic ingredients in a film that might have influenced the zany style of Mel Brooks.

You'll have to see it to believe it.
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7/10
This Time Around, Dagwood's the Only Dependable Employee!
Greenster23 October 2006
This time around, Dagwood's (Arthur Lake) the only responsible employee at Radcliffe Construction Agency--which doesn't sit very well with Blondie (Penny Singleton), who has thrice postponed the Bumstead's annual vacation because Mr. Radcliff (Jerome Cowan) couldn't do without Dagwood's expertise.

"Blondie's Secret" (Columbia 1948), Chapter 24 in this film series marks the first turn for Director Edward Bernds, who continues in this position for the duration. Written by Jack Henley, this one has the family looking forward to a week in a cottage at Lake Hokapoka.

Blondie and Dagwood both dream of vacationing at Lake Hokapoka, he literally, as visions of bathing beauties sharing his high dive brighten his nights, notwithstanding that Blondie would invariably feel jealousy toward any such notion.

But Radcliffe client George Whiteside (Thurston Hall) has other plans for the use of Dagwood's time than spending it away from the office. When he insists that Dagwood revise building plans according to ideas conceived by Dagwood alone, Mr. Radcliffe, naturally, must find a way to postpone the vacation yet again even though it's already September, and Alexander (Larry Simms) and Cookie (Marjorie Ann Mutchie) really ought to return to school.

Radcliffe employee Ollie Merton (Jack Rice) shares a plan with his superior: to sneak Blondie's luggage from the Bumstead residence so that they would have no provisions for any sort of vacation.

Neither have they provisions for meals should they remain in town, for Blondie has already cleaned the icebox. Well, perhaps if she and Dagwood were to shop for groceries the next day, she may consider a brief delay.

When Daisy, however, is alerted to a perpetrator's trespassing, she samples the trousers of his suit. A new plan develops to identify the culprit, which may lead Daisy into hot water with authorities.

Meanwhile, there is a counterfeiting ring going on at this same time. When the grocery store clerk informs Blondie of this, the gangster's moll (holding a purse containing faux moo-la) accidentally switches pocketbooks with Blondie, unbeknown to our heroine.

The confusion which follows leads to a series of odd moments, with different parties attempting to break into the Bumstead residence late the next evening. Blondie alerts Dagwood to the noises which she hears originating from downstairs. Cookie and Alexander hear them afterwards, and then do Daisy's pups.

(Why the by-now-six-year-old puppies don't catch on to intruders before the Bumsteads raises a question in itself. But, perhaps the bigger question regards the living room window, which is shattered around midnight. Early the next morning, when the family exits to await a taxicab, the same window miraculously heals itself, frame, panes, draperies and all.)

(Also, the mailman portrayed by Eddie Acuff is billed as "Mr. Beasley" here, and as "Mr. Johnson" the last time around.)

If "Blondie's Secret" contains some of the largest goofs in this series, it can be forgiven for its charms, which include Daisy's performance at the pound, the gangster's moll's trying to explain the seemingly deliberate mix-up, the radio announcer's reporting upon Daisy's plight, and the taxicab driver's intrigue regarding the Bumsteads' intention to visit Lake Hokapoka.
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7/10
Will the Bumsteads EVER get that vacation?
planktonrules16 August 2017
When the story begins, Dagwood and his family are preparing to go on vacation. However, Dagwood's annoying co-worker, Ollie, turns out to be an idiot and made a HUGE mistake on some important blueprints and the client insists that Radcliffe's BEST employee, Dagwood, fix it. Well, Dagwood puts the vacation on hold for one day...and then is raring to go. In the meantime, Ollie apparently made more mistakes and the client is threatening to cancel the contract. But Radcliffe has already promised Dagwood that nothing could stop him from leaving on time. So, Ollie comes up with a nasty plan...to sneak into the Bumstead home and steal their luggage...and this would allow Dagwood to once again fix the blueprints! What else is going to happen? See the film.

This is another quality installment of the Blondie series. However, it is interesting to note that Dagwood is acknowledged several times in the film to be a great employee..the best at his firm and NOT some bumbling idiot! Now THAT is a first! Well worth seeing...especially since it's fun seeing Ollie get his!
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6/10
The Bumsteads: The Vacation That Almost Wasn't
lugonian24 January 2007
BLONDIE'S SECRET (Columbia, 1948), directed by Edward Bernds, reunites the Chic Young comic strip family on screen for the 24th time in another one of their madcap adventures. The title might indicate something interesting about Blondie's past, namely being married before and having a long lost husband appearing at their front door, which this is not the case, although might have made a good story. So, what is Blondie's secret anyway? First off, let's examine the situations involved this time around.

Blondie (Penny Singleton) and Dagwood (Arthur Lake) have been planning their long-awaited vacation to Lake Hokapola with their children, Alexander (Larry Simms) and Cookie (Marjorie Kent) all summer, but thanks to Dagwood's boss, Mr. Radcliffe (Jerome Cowan), responsible for having it postponed three times already, is about to do it to them a fourth time. It's now September and summer nearly over. Radcliffe talks Dagwood into correcting the blueprints for Mr. Whiteside (Thurston Hall), a prominent client, but how to tell Blondie. With much persuasion, Blondie agrees to put off their vacation for one more day, and no more. The plans are then completed, but after Whiteside examines them, he finds more errors that puts Radcliffe in a tough situation. Would he dare cancel the Bumstead's vacation again? Fellow employee Ollie Merton (Jack Rice) agrees to help Radcliffe by breaking into the Bumstead home during the night and stealing their luggage, which would prevent them from going anyway. While carrying out his plan, a sudden noise awakens Daisy, the Bumstead dog, causing her to run over to the living room and bite the seat of Ollie's pants as he's climbing out the window. Ollie's plan has succeeded now that the Bumsteads are homebound and Dagwood has no other choice but to come to the office and perfect the blueprints for Mr. Whiteside. Things start to really get complex when Alvin Fuddow (Danny Mummert), the Bumstead's next door neighbor, suggests to Mrs. Bumstead the only way to capture the burglar is to make it known through a radio broadcast that Daisy is rabid, causing the culprit to seek a physician once he hears the news. The plan backfires as Daisy is picked up and sent to the pound for examination. Blondie is told the only way to get Daisy back is for the culprit to come forward, or else the pooch will have to be put to sleep. Will the Bumsteads ever get to go on their vacation? Not without their Daisy. And if that's not enough. While at the butcher shop, Blondie and another customer, Mona (Greta Grandstadt) unwittingly switch purses, with Blondie picking up the one containing counterfeit money. In order to retrieve her purse, Mona and her mobster friends (Murray Alper and William "Bill" Phillips) attempt to break into the Bumstead home while the Bumsteads are asleep to make the switch, the very same night Ollie is to sneak in and return the luggage, leading to enough disturbance to wake up the entire neighborhood. By this time Blondie discovers something that's to become her secret from Dagwood.

While gags and all else concerned appear to be overly familiar, since the "Blondie" series has reached its tenth year on screen, BLONDIE'S SECRET is actually not a bad entry, reminiscent to a good comedy short, thanks to Edward Bernds, in his debut as the series director, in keeping the pace moving and story interesting, even when situations become too complex with enough situations squeezed into 69 minutes of screen time. As usual, Arthur Lake as Dagwood provides the most laughs, especially when awaken due to the commotion downstairs, going downstairs to investigate with his pants put on backwards. Even when Dagwood breaks into tears at the office after learning Daisy may have to be put to sleep is done with humor and a touch of sentiment, especially when crying like a squeaking mouse.

Also seen in the supporting cast are Frank Orth as Mr. Philpont; Alyn Lockwood as Mary, the switchboard operator; Eddie Acuff as Mr. Beasley, the postman; Edward Gargan as the butcher; and Grandon Rhodes as Ken Marcy, among others.

Formerly available on video cassette through King Features, BLONDOE'S SECRET, along with 27 others in the series, had a successful run (1996-2000) on American Movie Classics cable television. How did this series get to last this long? Well, that's Blondie's Secret. Next installment: BLONDIE'S BIG DEAL (1949) (**1/2)
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7/10
Blondie's Secret was the first in the series directed by Edward Bernds
tavm28 July 2015
This is the twenty-fourth in the Blondie movie series. The Bumsteads are ready for their vacation but because a client of Mr. Radcliffe wants only Dagwood to correct some errors in some building plans, Blondie reluctantly agrees to a one-day delay despite Dagwood's boss having done that three times already! Then this client wants some more corrections and now Radcliffe has to find a way to delay yet again without upsetting Blondie. His toady, Ollie Merton (Jack Rice), has some ideas...Being the first of the series directed by Edward Bernds, this one has plenty of good laughs as well as a plot that for once doesn't have Dag getting fired, asking for a raise, or Blondie getting jealous of other females around her hubby. (Though if she knew what Dag was dreaming about, she wouldn't like it!) I should note that Alvin Fuddle, as played by Danny Mummert, sounds like the native Texan Mummert really was in this one. Oh, and there's a subplot involving a counterfeiting ring. So on that note, Blondie's Secret is another worthy one in the series. P.S. While Eddie Acuff's postman was addressed as Mr. Johnson in the last one, here he's Mr. Beasley which was the name used in the actual comic strip created by Chic Young as well as the name for the previous regular mailman, Irving Bacon, in the very first Blondie movie 10 years earlier!
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6/10
Definitely one of the lesser entries for Mr. Lake and Miss Singleton!
JohnHowardReid11 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Penny Singleton (Blondie), Arthur Lake (Dagwood), Larry Simms (Alexander), Marjorie Kent (Cookie), Jerome Cowan (Radcliffe), Thurston Hall (George Whiteside), Jack Rice (Ollie), Danny Mummert (Alvin), Frank Orth (dog pound attendant), Alyn Lockwood (Mary), Eddie Acuff (mailman), Murray Alper (Larry), William "Bill" Phillips (Chips), Greta Granstedt (Mona), Grandon Rhodes (Ken Marcy), Paula Raymond (nurse), Allen Mathews (big man), Joseph Crehan (sergeant), Ralph Sanford (cab-driver), Edward Gargan (butcher), and "Daisy".

Director: EDWARD BERNDS. Screenplay: Jack Henley. Based on characters created by Chic Young. Photography: Vincent Farrar. Film editor: Richard Fantl. Art director: George Brooks. Set decorator: Louis Diage. Music director: Mischa Bakaleinikoff. Producer: Burt Kelly.

Copyright 14 December 1948 by Columbia Pictures Corp. No New York opening. U.S. release: 23 December 1948. U.K. release: 18 April 1949. Australian release: 21 April 1949. 6,073 feet. 68 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: Complications involving office pranks, a robbery and counterfeit money, delay the Bumstead's vacation.

NOTES: Number 24 of the 28-picture series. See Blondie in this volume.

COMMENT: "Blondie's Secret" is the first directed by Edward Bernds, though the change in director won't be the least bit noticeable to any viewer as Bernds' style is exactly the same as Berlin's — ruthlessly routine, if more or less capable. Still the script provides Eddie Acuff with some more amusing variations on his mailman routines and gives Jack Rice a major part in the proceedings for once. At first it seems as if the film is going to take us into somewhat the same territory as Blondie Takes a Vacation but wouldn't you know it, we stay strictly within the confines of the studio sets. Dagwood takes a walk down the studio street and we are on strictly familiar territory. One odd thing, you would think they kept the sets standing from one Blondie film to the next, but evidently they did not for Radcliffe's door on this one says "M.R. RADCLIFFE" whereas in the previous pic it was "GEORGE M. RADCLIFFE". Another example of sloppy continuity is that Acuff is called Mr. Beasley in this film whereas it was Mr. Johnson in the previous pic. And Thurston Hall who played Randy Whosthis in "Footlight Glamour" is playing an entirely different character here — although Thurston Hall of course makes him seem exactly the same.

There's a nice support cast, but the script gives them little to work on and though there are a few chuckles here and there and a destructive fight climax, this is definitely one of the lesser entries. Mr. Lake and Miss Singleton serve us the mixture as before and we are getting just a little tired of their identical-from-film- to-film shenanigans.

Credits are no more than competent, the pace (at least in the 75- minute version) is slow, there is too much verbosity and not nearly enough wit. Master Simms is still a bit stiff and Miss Kent's part is negligible.
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6/10
Today, the former baby dumpling becomes a man.
mark.waltz11 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This entry in the series has one of the funniest situations involving the postman's effort to deliver mail to the Bumsteads. Dagwood's on time for once in his life, and when the postman sees him coming out the door, he fears the worst, but Dagwood calmly walks out the door and says good morning. But it's not over for the postman who hasn't made it to the door yet, and that is a surprise worth waiting for.

This episode surrounds the Bumstead's efforts to leave on vacation, delayed by boss Jerome Cowan's need for Dagwood to update some plans for client Thurston Hall. Along with a nervous clerk, they plot to steal the Bumstead luggage, and that puts Daisy on attack and later in the pound. A subplot concerning counterfeit money pops up as well, showing that the best laid plans of Dagwood and Blondie should never be set in stone.

A good episode, winding down to the end of the series and with a new director. Daisy gets her best material since she was a pup, and the site of the lonely puppies missing your mom is sad indeed. Kids might find this element of the movie as sad as "Old Yeller" when it's insinuated that she might be put down. Cowan's at his most scheming in this, and he gets both hisses and an A for effort in his plan to once again delay them from going on vacation although he obviously has some guilt.
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