The Lady Eve (2001)
The Lady Eve Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Preston Sturges
Studio:Universal Pictures Video
Producer:Paul Jones, Buddy G. DeSylva, Albert Lewin
Writer:Preston Sturges, Monckton Hoffe
Rating:5
Rated:Unrated
Date Added:2014-12-18
UPC:715515011624
Price:$39.95
Awards:Nominated for Oscar. Another 1 win
Genre:Comedy, Classics, Romantic
Release:2001-10-16
IMDb:0033804
Location:1433
Duration:97
Picture Format:Academy Ratio
Aspect Ratio:1.33:1
Sound:Unknown
Languages:English
Subtitles:English
Features:Black and White
New digital transfer
Edith Head costume designs
1942 broadcast of the Lux Radio Theater adaptation, performed by Barbara Stanwyck & Ray Milland
Preston Sturges  ...  (Director)
Preston Sturges, Monckton Hoffe  ...  (Writer)
 
Barbara Stanwyck  ...  Jean Harrington
Henry Fonda  ...  Charles Pike
Charles Coburn  ...  'Colonel' Harrington
Eugene Pallette  ...  Horace Pike
William Demarest  ...  Muggsy
Eric Blore  ...  Sir Alfred McGlennan Keith
Melville Cooper  ...  Gerald
Martha O'Driscoll  ...  Martha
Janet Beecher  ...  Janet Pike
Robert Greig  ...  Burrows
Dora Clement  ...  Gertrude
Luis Alberni  ...  Emile, Pike's chef
Phil Boutelje  ...  Composer
Charles Bradshaw  ...  Composer
Gil Grau  ...  Composer
Sigmund Krumgold  ...  Composer
John Leipold  ...  Composer
Leo Shuken  ...  Composer
Victor Milner  ...  Cinematographer
Stuart Gilmore  ...  Editor
Don Johnson  ...  Sound Department
Harry Lindgren  ...  Sound Department
Hans Dreier  ...  Art Director
Ernst Fegté  ...  Art Director
Edith Head  ...  Custome Designer
Ben Nye  ...  Makeup Artist
Wally Westmore  ...  Makeup Artist
Barton Adams  ...  second assistant director
Mel Epstein  ...  Assistant Director
Sam Comer  ...  set dresser
Ernest Johnson  ...  props
Robert McCrillis  ...  props
Summary: I like all of Preston Sturgesx27; films, but this one I love - it is nearly perfect - one of those rare films that affect you long after you have watched it. Anyone who thinks old films are stilted, naive or wet should watch The Lady Eve, there is cynicism, and sophisticated and ribald dialogue you still wouldnx27;t want a child to fully understand. To adapt a line from the film, it has a wonderful way of building up romance then bouncing it down again with wit. Having said that, it is still terribly romantic.
It is impossible not to fall for Barbara Stanwyckx27;s character and at no point, despite being opposites, do the leads feel mismatched in any way. Both of their early screen personas were used by Sturges; Fondax27;s stiffness to convey a touching innocence and Stanwyckx27;s tough yet vulnerable worldliness to rough him up.
A quick word about slapstick, which forms a part of almost all of Sturgesx27; films, Ix27;m not incredibly fond of it and quite often it can be a little tiresome and contrived for modern audiences, as anyone who has had to fast-forward through Rex Harrisonx27;s interminable solo scene in Unfaithfully Yours can attest, but here, though it is very important to the plot, it is limited and every instance fits naturally into the scene with perfect timing and, like the rest of the film, is still very, very funny.