The Mad Miss Manton

Posted 7 April 2008 in Screening log

Rating 1938 US Dir Leigh Jason Cast Barbara Stanwyck, Henry Fonda, Hattie McDaniel IMDb

“Come on girls, we’ve got work to do!”
One of Barbara Stanwyck’s first chances to go screwy and she’s clearly loving it as free-spirited society dame Melsa Manton, whose madcap lifestyle is interrupted, but hardly halted, when she runs into a corpse one evening. By the time she drags a policeman to the scene the body is missing, and no one believes this isn’t another heedless adventure of hers, leaving the job of solving the crime up to her and her proto-Scooby Doo gang of girlfriends. Henry Fonda, in a slightly less straight-man persona than he would adopt for their classic pairing in The Lady Eve, plays the newspaper editor with an interest in the case, at first full of resentment for Melsa but soon going goofy over her many charms. At eighty minutes the film is a slapdash race to the finish, with as many solid gold lines as resounding clunkers. The girl sleuths are delightful as a mob, one or two getting a character trait or running joke (most effectively is Pat, who stops to eat at every crime scene). Stanwyck & Fonda play their roles broadly and out of the screwball playbook. A gem, if a rough one, for fans of screwball comedy, particularly the proliferation of mystery hybrids that followed the successful Thin Man series.
 

1 Comment »

I really adore The Mad Miss Manton. I love Fonda and Stanwyck together, and I think I might like this one even more than The Lady Eve. It’s completely insane.

Comment by Katie — 20 May 2008 @ 20 May 2008

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Lauren, 25, out-of-work librarian. At the moment, TLC is but a review blog and catalogue of my film-related perversions. I always plan to do more with it — and to one day step outside 30s Hollywood again. Who knows?


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