Actress Ann Sothern and silk importer Robert Young are madly in love but total opposites. The picture opens with Young returning from a business trip just in time to find Sothern marrying somebody else: Naturally, he crashes the wedding and he and Sothern run off together and get married themselves. That's where their troubles begin.
Young has business to attend to, while Sothern enjoys partying with her show business friends. Lifestyles clash, arguments ensue. And then they spend the rest of the picture breaking up, reconciling, and arranging fantastic schemes to make each other jealous. A madcap idea for a movie, maybe, but unfortunately it just isn't very funny.
Reginald Owen is Young's cousin and business partner, a scientific type who is working on an artificial silk product that he has yet to perfect. The silk business is relevant to the plot because Owen's latest attempt at a fake silk product looks nice but dissolves when wet.
Cora Witherspoon is fine if somewhat wasted as Sothern's showbiz mother. Both Witherspoon and Owen are capable of great comedy - but neither really has much of a role here except to stand at one side of the action and make the occasional silly comment.
The stars are all likable enough and the picture is certainly fast paced. However, loud and fast does not automatically equal funny. This is one of those comedies that just doesn't quite click.
Young has business to attend to, while Sothern enjoys partying with her show business friends. Lifestyles clash, arguments ensue. And then they spend the rest of the picture breaking up, reconciling, and arranging fantastic schemes to make each other jealous. A madcap idea for a movie, maybe, but unfortunately it just isn't very funny.
Reginald Owen is Young's cousin and business partner, a scientific type who is working on an artificial silk product that he has yet to perfect. The silk business is relevant to the plot because Owen's latest attempt at a fake silk product looks nice but dissolves when wet.
Cora Witherspoon is fine if somewhat wasted as Sothern's showbiz mother. Both Witherspoon and Owen are capable of great comedy - but neither really has much of a role here except to stand at one side of the action and make the occasional silly comment.
The stars are all likable enough and the picture is certainly fast paced. However, loud and fast does not automatically equal funny. This is one of those comedies that just doesn't quite click.
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