The Well Groomed Bride

1946 "THE BRIDE SAW RED...WHITE...and BLEW!"
The Well Groomed Bride
5.6| 1h15m| en| More Info
Released: 17 May 1946 Released
Producted By: Paramount
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Synopsis

A man and a woman fight over the last bottle of champagne left in San Francisco--she wants it for a wedding, and he wants to use it to christen a ship.

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MartinHafer The plot for "The Well-Groomed Bride" is incredibly thin...too thin for an entire movie. This is odd, as Olivia de Havilland had just recently won the right to break her contract with Warner Brothers and was now a free agent...and she made THIS??When the story begins, a navy ship is about to be launched and the Captain (James Gleason) orders his Lieutenant (Ray Milland) to go buy a French Magnum...NOT an easy task considering that the war had just ended and champagne production (and everything else in Europe) was a mess. When he finally does locate a magnum, one of the only ones on the entire West Coast, Margie (de Havilland) has just purchased it. He tries to weasel it off her, but she needs it because her fiance (Sonny Tufts) is returning from the war to marry her...and he's instructed her to find the biggest bottle of champagne she can for the occasion. That is pretty much the entire plot, though in the course of things, the lady and the Lieutenant fall in love...which is pretty much what you'd expect.Is this a bad film? At times (such as when the Lieutenant SLUGS Margie!!), it is. But for the most part it's a forgettable time-passer that starred two actors who simply were too good for this sort of film. As for Sonny Tufts, well, this sort of fluff was pretty much as good as it gets for him and his somewhat sordid career.
mark.waltz It was champagne that brought them together, and I'm wondering how much of the bubbly the screenwriter had when they wrote this, and how much champagne that Olivia deHavilland and ray Milland drank when they signed to make this. Milland, fresh from hiding booze in chandeliers in "The Lost Weekend" was celebrating his Oscar victory perhaps, but deHavilland's first Oscar was a year away. It wasn't for this, one of the more embarrassing examples of screwball comedy and long made after the height of that sophisticated genre.After searching San Francisco for much of the first half for the largest bottle of champagne, rivals Milland and deHavilland end up on his navy ship, arguing with captain James Gleason over why the navy should have the bottle to christen a ship over deHavilland who wants it for her wedding to another Navy lieutenant, that great screen actor of such raw emotional power, Sonny Tufts. It doesn't take Milland and deHavilland long to discover their feelings for each other, leading to more ridiculous complications that bring the film down even more.If the thought of Percy Kilbride and Marjorie Main is a bizarre combination, try Kilbride playing deHavilland's father. Slinky Constance Dowling adds sultry seduction as the woman who initiates a split between deHavilland and Tuft. Her hairstyle here is reminiscent to Lauren Bacall's, already copied by Lizabeth Scott and K.T. Stevens. This seems to be the type of script put together through shuffled word cards, formulating a plot that reeks of desperation for all involved.
bogator As a long-time deHavilland fan, I've been looking for this film for years. It's never been on VHS or AMC/TCM. Anyone know why it's MIA? Surely it's not her best or among the greatest by far, but it seems strange it's never turned up somewhere!
Neil Doyle Before Olivia de Havilland made her remarkable comeback in 1946's To Each His Own, she stepped in as a last minute replacement for Paulette Goddard in 'The Well Groomed Bride', her first film after her two year legal battle with Warner Bros. Unfortunately, the script is so slight (about de Havilland and Milland fighting over rights to the last champagne bottle in San Francisco--she wants it for her wedding, he wants it to christen a ship). The laughs are scant although Olivia, Ray Milland and Sonny Tufts try hard to keep things bubbling. De Havilland manages to be pert and pretty as the heroine, Milland is his usual adept self at comedy and even Sonny Tufts manages to make his big "conceited muscle" role likeable at times--but the whole thing fails to get off the ground. The weak script defeats everyone, including Percy Kilbride as de Havilland's dad. Only avid fans of Ray Milland or de Havilland should watch this one--which does not turn up on TV these days--Paramount obviously deciding it wasn't worth saving.