The merriest Mr. and Mrs. team ever, William Powell and Myrna Loy, are at it again, for better...and worse! The domestic duo that enchanted filmgoers in The Thin Man series are completely out of their minds in this hilarious misadventure.On the night of her fourth wedding anniversary, Susan Ireland (Loy) discovers her hubby Steve (Powell) has been out carousing with an old flame. With the support of her overenthusiastic mother, she files for divorce, but the cunning Steve feigns insanity in order to postpone the proceedings and convince her she’s got it all wrong. The plan almost works, but the trickery is turned when Susan has him committed to an asylum. It’s nonstop fun as Steve tries to escape and win back her love – and he literally has to go nuts to do it!When sold by .com, this product is manufactured on demand using DVD-R recordable media. .com's standard return policy will apply.
J**J
If you know Powell and Loy films this is another goody
Maybe not as good as I Love you Again, which I love, this is another wacky comedy from Powell and Loy who were so brilliant together. They play a happily married couple until an old flame of Powell’s shows up and Loy suspects an affair and, when Powell gives a muddled response to her questions, she starts divorce proceedings. To stall this Powell goes mad.This pairs films will always be worth a look.
D**S
Crazy film!!! Laughed all through it!
We had seen this film many times on TCM and have thoroughly enjoyed it for years. It was unavailable in a single copy until recently. I checked Amazon recently and, Voila! there it was. We watched it again last night and howled in glee throughout.
B**D
"I've Decided to Keep You Another Year"
Marital bliss turns into amusing chaos as the only way William Powell can keep his wife Myrna Loy from divorcing him is to have himself declared insane, in Jack Conway's, "Love Crazy." While not quite as funny as the premise sounds, there are plenty of smiles and enough hilarious moments to put this in the upper echelon of the many films Powell and Loy made together. Pandro S. Berman's glossy production has a fine suporting cast that includes pretty Gail Patrick and Jack Carson, and a good screenplay from William Ludwig, Charles Lederer, and David Hertz, based on an original story by Hertz and Ludwig.Steve Ireland (William Powell) and his wife Susan (Myrna Loy) have been happily married for four years and only Steve's mother-in-law (Florence Bates) can ruin their anniversary. He can't get rid of her fast enough when she drops in unexpectedly and ruins all their plans. On his way to mail something for her to help speed up the process he runs into his old flame, Isobel Grayson, winningly portrayed by Gail Patrick. She is fun and freespirited, and a little thing like marriage, his or hers, is of small consequence.The mix-ups begin when they get trapped in an elevator and have to climb out the top to escape. It's hilarious when Steve gets his head caught and when the couple finally do manage to make it out, a discheveled Steve, his hat in Isobel's apartment and her shoes in his pocket, must make a different kind of escape from the carefree and more than willing Isobel.Steve gets back and things settle down, but when his mother-in-law slips on a rug she brought them, Susan is forced to leave Steve alone with her while she picks up her aunt Laura at the train station. Looking for an escape, any escape, he manages through a ruse to slip out and have a drink with Isobel, who lives downstairs. Susan's meddling mother overhears Steve's plan to sneak out, and Susan attempts to make him jealous and get even by arranging a kiss with Isobel's husband. When she gets the wrong apartment by mistake, a confused Ward Willoughby (Jack Carson) plays along because Susan is quite a dish.The merry mix-up results in Susan thinking Steve lied to her about his old girlfriend Isobel and she files for divorce. Steve's attorney pal advises him the only way he can keep Susan from making it final is to feign insanity. Just how far he'll go to convince everyone he's off his rocker may be too far, as a group of alienists from the lunacy board, in spite of Steve's protests, decide he's nutty as a fruitcake! When Susan, who knows, of course, he's faking it, refuses custody and has him wisked away to Doctor Wuthering's Rest Home, it just gets merrier.A visit from Willioughby so he can gloat, and an escape by Steve that will involve him dressing up and pretending to be his own sister to avoid the cops and win over his love Susan, are just some of the highlights in this fun and amusing marital farce. The "Hiawatha" scene and Steve getting to slap around Willoughby as his own sister offer a lot of fun for classic film fans.Loy is just a sweet doll here and Powell is his usual charming self as The Thin Man couple have an amusing outing that over six decades later still outshines anything Hollywood has to offer today. A sure bet for fans of our favorite screen couple, William Powell and Myrna Loy.
T**I
Classic movie
Great price and great delivery
J**N
Remember the good old days
Great old movie. It keeps old cinema alive.
C**P
offbeat film
a little difficult to follow, but as as always Powell and Loy make this couple makes the film enjoyable
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