Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA young girl finds herself attracted to one of her father's business partners.A young girl finds herself attracted to one of her father's business partners.A young girl finds herself attracted to one of her father's business partners.
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 wins total
Georgie Billings
- Pinky Greene
- (as George Billings)
Kathryn Adams
- Bride
- (Nicht genannt)
Frank Austin
- Small Town Man
- (Nicht genannt)
Brandon Beach
- Townsman
- (Nicht genannt)
Ralph Brooks
- Celebration Guest
- (Nicht genannt)
Nora Bush
- Townswoman
- (Nicht genannt)
Ausgewählte Rezension
I must start my review by stating that I was born in 1935 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, wherein I have lived my entire life to the present date and will continue to live here as long as I still exist. Canada was one of Great Britain's Dominions until it became a nation forming, to the present day, part of the British Commonwealth of Nations titularly led by the British monarch, presently the Queen.
Yesterday, by chance, for the very first time, I watched Nice Girl?, on my computer, it having been shown a few years ago on TCM. I knew nothing about it other than its star, Deanna Durbin, who's face and singing voice I had always adored as a kid. and that it was dated from 1941.
I found the movie to be delightful from the start. The actors and their acting were/was super; humour laughingly appropriate; small town U.S.A. July 4th festivities with Deanna's songs gorgeously sung and after Robert Stack climbed out from under the army truck and she sang the patriotic Thank You America so wholesomely, I had concluded that the movie, now ending, was indubitably worth 7 stars.
I was about to bestow them when suddenly, shockingly, something happened. She began to sing again! "There'll Always Be An England" a song we regularly heard on the radio, learned and sang in my pre-teen primary school years, and which I haven't heard again since the War's end. I was both dumbfounded and elated. A verification on IMDb showed me that filming of the movie took place from November 11, 1940 to January 1941. The big party took place on the July 4th weekend so it must have depicted July 1940, yet the U.S. didn't enter the war until Pearl Harbour, seventeen months later. even though her boyfriend left to join the army a day or two after that weekend. The army audience was there in full uniform to listen to her singing it!! Big unanswerable question!!
But it doesn't matter. She sang it so fulsomely, with such heart. I can still remember big parts of that song today. For that song, so sung, my score of the film's points MUST rise an additional minimal two points, from 7 to nine!
- lisa-wolofsky
- 28. Juni 2019
- Permalink
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesIn the British release of this film, Deanna Durbin's finale was the patriotic favorite, "There'll Always Be an England" (music by Ross Parker and Harry Parr Davies, lyrics by Hugh Charles). Durbin's "Thank You America" (music and lyrics by Walter Jurmann and Bernie Grossman), a song which didn't become popular despite Durbin's commercial single on Decca, closed the U.S. print. Both endings are included on the VHS and DVD release of the movie from Universal Studios.
- PatzerThere are no pygmies in Australia. Calvert should have been studying Australian aborigines.
- Alternative VersionenOriginal prints featured different final songs for the US (Thank You America) and UK (There'll Always Be an England) markets. The 2011 DD Video UK release on DVD featured both songs cut into the film (US first, followed by UK).
- VerbindungenReferenced in Film is Dead. Long Live Film! (2024)
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 31 Minuten
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