An adman and an ad woman put a dangerous milk tycoon in line for the White House.An adman and an ad woman put a dangerous milk tycoon in line for the White House.An adman and an ad woman put a dangerous milk tycoon in line for the White House.
Fred Aldrich
- Audience Member
- (uncredited)
Leon Alton
- Andre - Maitre d'
- (uncredited)
Eddie Baker
- Audience Member
- (uncredited)
Harry Carter
- Club Patron
- (uncredited)
Doris Fesette
- Club Patron
- (uncredited)
Michael Ford
- Club Patron
- (uncredited)
Stuart Hall
- Club Patron
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Trivia"The Milk Song", performed by an uncredited female trio in the dairy convention sequence, was released as a single on the Ardee label, recorded by Bob Grabeau and The Harry Harris Singers.
- GoofsAlthough the film takes place in 1962, the rear projection when the actors are in taxicabs, is of late 1940s-era automobiles.
- SoundtracksMilk Song
by Harry Harris
Featured review
Correcting the Record
For bobbit-4 - Marilyn Monroe is not in this film - anywhere! Moreover, there is no disturbed woman in the film. Whatever could you have been watching?
The film itself is enjoyable for the acting and not much more, but it does manage to hold one's interest. The screenplay is a bit of a mess, and the film looks to have been produced quickly and on the relative cheap. Dana Andrews, always a good but rarely inspiring actor, is exactly that here, and I think he smoked something like 26,248 cigarettes in the course of the story! I always thought that Eleanor Parker was arguably the most underrated actress in the entire history of talking films. She's the only person in this film whose character changes at all (Eddie Albert's character is so unbelievable that any change in it doesn't even count), but it's not all that much of a change, and it's too bad she couldn't have sunk her teeth into something a bit more meaty around this period like "Suddenly Last Summer" or "Freud". And Jeanne Crain was so damned gorgeous in it that it is impossible to believe that she was the mother of seven kids, six of them born before this film was made! I was rather hoping that the film would have a real jolting ending - like Andrews tossing over both Parker and Crain, and marrying the most intelligent and likable person in the film, Kathleen Freeman. Now that would have been something!
The film itself is enjoyable for the acting and not much more, but it does manage to hold one's interest. The screenplay is a bit of a mess, and the film looks to have been produced quickly and on the relative cheap. Dana Andrews, always a good but rarely inspiring actor, is exactly that here, and I think he smoked something like 26,248 cigarettes in the course of the story! I always thought that Eleanor Parker was arguably the most underrated actress in the entire history of talking films. She's the only person in this film whose character changes at all (Eddie Albert's character is so unbelievable that any change in it doesn't even count), but it's not all that much of a change, and it's too bad she couldn't have sunk her teeth into something a bit more meaty around this period like "Suddenly Last Summer" or "Freud". And Jeanne Crain was so damned gorgeous in it that it is impossible to believe that she was the mother of seven kids, six of them born before this film was made! I was rather hoping that the film would have a real jolting ending - like Andrews tossing over both Parker and Crain, and marrying the most intelligent and likable person in the film, Kathleen Freeman. Now that would have been something!
helpful•11
- joe-pearce-1
- Nov 29, 2017
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Los propagandistas
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 34 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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