Yes, The Way You Look
Tonight-Ginger Rogers And Fred Astaire’s “Swing Time” (1936)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Leslie Dumont
Swing Time, starring
Ginger Rogers, Fred Astaire, and all importantly music and lyrics by Jerome
Kern and Dorothy Fields, 1936
It probably is not good
form to start off a review of a light-hearted musical comedy, what the heck, a
dance film with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers with the music and comedy as
filler, or the comedy part anyway complaining about the assignment. But I will
try the reader’s patience long enough to make a point that I made in my last
film review since this is of a piece with that comment. Then, and now, I have complained
I won’t say bitterly yet that I have now been given five straight “women’s
films,” the modern cinematic term “chick flicks” although that does not ring as
a true statement with the ones I have done by new site manager Greg Green.
As I pointed out in that
last review, Coco Before Chanel, once
Greg became the day to day manager here he went out of his way to “lure” me
from a very comfortable by-line that I had with Women Today. I also noted that I had over a decade ago been a
stringer here under the old management when my companion Josh Breslin worked
here (which he still does) and had left for that Women Today by-line when the old site manager Allan Jackson would
not give me a by-line. Those were the days when it was clear for all to see,
all who wanted to see, that while the site had all the right positions on the
women’s liberation struggles (and still does) that Allan, who moreover was
Josh’s very long time friend, was starting down the road to keep the place very
much a male bastion haven for his “good old boys” friends whose friendship was
defined by the litmus test of being stuck in the nostalgic 1960s when all hell
broke loose in American society as they came of age. Greg was supposed to be a
welcome break from both of those conditions. Right now I wonder, wonder out
loud.
Don’t get me wrong this
little Rogers-Astaire vehicle Swing Time
one in about ten that this pair danced away the stars in is fine, is worth reviewing
if for no other reason that the Jerome Kern and Dorothy Fields music and lyrics
collaboration on some classic songs from the American Songbook which torch-singers
like Billie Holiday and Peggy Lee would feast on later. One good example which
served as headline here-The Way You Look
Tonight. Looking at the site archives though, after storming out of Greg’s
office when I received the assignment and I could not budge him off his position
that I needed to “broaden my horizons” since at Women Today any film reviews that I did, which were not many, were contemporary
efforts I noticed that all the previous four or five Rogers-Astaire reviews had
been done by men. Men who did a very good job of making the salient points about
the films but who also made the point that from their collective perspectives these
films were geared to the tastes and heartstrings of the women of those times
who made up the majority, in some cases as during World War II the great majority,
of the movie-going public. In other words-women’s films. So I bring no special
wisdom to this genre, and maybe less so since I, unlike Sam Lowell, Sandy
Salmon, and even one by my old heart-throb Josh did not live and die by
watching college time revivals of such films in the 1960s having been a child
of the late 1970s when that revival had burned itself out as a cheap date college
night out.
As to the film itself well
I think I telegraphed my take on these flashy big budget productions which were
merely, let’s face it, an excuse to have Fred and Ginger dance and sing between
coos. Here Fred plays Lucky, as in lucky at cards, gambling that sort of thing who
also happens to be light on his feet (not that “light on his feet” used back
then to signify a homosexual trait but dancing feet) who is stepping up in
class, literally. That step up to be done by marrying a town debutante and on
to easy street. Except through a series of lame pratfalls it never happens. No wedding
and so Lucky (and Pop) lam in to the Big Apple, to New York to see if they can
make some jack either from gambling or from his hoofing.
Through another series of
lame pratfalls Lucky meets Penny, Ginger’s role, a dance instructor. Meets and
the rest is really history. No, the rest is a song and dance through the Kerns-Fields
score interrupted by the usual attraction, distraction, misunderstanding, and
finally, lovers’ bliss. I would have thought that it would have been hard for this
pair to stumble through a series of plot-lines that would freeze the most indulgent
brain but they did until audiences got weary. But watching one or two, and make
this film one of them, will carry you through a few blue spots.
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