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You Can't Take It with You (film)

You Can't Take It with You is a 1938 American romantic comedy film directed by Frank Capra and starring Jean Arthur, Lionel Barrymore, James Stewart, and Edward Arnold. Adapted by Robert Riskin from the Pulitzer Prize-winning 1936 play of the same name by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart,[5] the film is about a man from a family of rich snobs who becomes engaged to a woman from a good-natured, but decidedly eccentric family.

You Can't Take It with You
Theatrical release poster
Directed byFrank Capra
Screenplay byRobert Riskin
Based onYou Can't Take It with You
1936 play
by George Kaufman and Moss Hart
Produced byFrank Capra
Starring
CinematographyJoseph Walker
Edited byGene Havlick
Music byDimitri Tiomkin
Production
company
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release dates
  • August 23, 1938 (1938-08-23) (int'l press preview)[1]
  • September 1, 1938 (1938-09-01) (New York City)[2]
  • September 29, 1938 (1938-09-29) (U.S.)
Running time
126 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
BudgetUS$1,644,736 (est.)[3]
Box office
  • US$2,137,575 (U.S. rentals)[4]
  • US$5,295,526 (int'l rentals)

A critical and commercial success, the film received two Academy Awards from seven nominations: Best Picture and Best Director for Frank Capra. This was Capra's third Oscar for Best Director in just five years, following It Happened One Night (1934) and Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936).

Plot

A successful banker, Anthony P. Kirby (Edward Arnold), has just returned from Washington, DC, where he was effectively granted a government-sanctioned munitions monopoly, which will make him very rich. He intends to buy up a 12-block radius around a competitor's factory to put him out of business, but one house is a holdout to selling. Kirby instructs his real-estate broker, John Blakely (Clarence Wilson), to offer a huge sum for the house, and if that is not accepted, to cause trouble for the family. Meanwhile, Grandpa Vanderhof (Lionel Barrymore) convinces a banker named Poppins to pursue his dream of making animated toys.

Kirby's son, Tony (James Stewart), a vice president in the family company, has fallen in love with a company stenographer, Alice Sycamore (Jean Arthur). When Tony proposes marriage, Alice is worried that her family would be looked upon poorly by Tony's rich and famous family. In fact, Alice is the only relatively normal member of the eccentric Sycamore family, led by Vanderhof. Unbeknownst to the players, Alice's family lives in the house that will not sell out.

Kirby and his wife (Mary Forbes) strongly disapprove of Tony's choice for marriage. Before she accepts, Alice forces Tony to bring his family to become better acquainted with their future in-laws, but when Tony purposely brings his family on the wrong day (reasoning that he would rather the two families meet as they are, not in a formal 'stuffed-shirt' setting), the Sycamore family is caught off-guard, and the house is in disarray. As the Kirbys are preparing to leave after a rather disastrous meeting, the police arrive in response to what they perceive as printed threats on flyers by Grandpa's son-in-law, Ed Carmichael. When the fireworks in the basement go off, they arrest everyone in the house.

Held up in the drunk tank preparing to see the night-court judge, Mrs. Kirby repeatedly insults Alice and makes her feel unworthy of her son, while Grandpa explains to Kirby the importance of having friends, and that despite all the wealth and success in business, "you can't take it with you". At the court hearing, the judge (Harry Davenport) allows for Grandpa and his family to settle the charges for disturbing the peace and making illegal fireworks by assessing a fine, for which Grandpa's neighborhood friends pitch in to pay. He repeatedly asks why the Kirbys were at the Vanderhof house. When Grandpa, attempting to help Kirby, says it was to talk over selling the house, Alice has an outburst and says it was because she was engaged to Tony, but is spurning him because of how poorly she has been treated by his family. This causes a sensation in the papers, and Alice flees the city.

With Alice gone, Grandpa decides to sell the house, thus meaning the whole section of the town must vacate in preparation for building a new factory. Now, the Kirby companies merge, creating a huge fluctuation in the stock market. When Kirby's competitor, Ramsey (H. B. Warner), dies after confronting him for being ruthless and a failure of a man, Kirby has a realization he is heading for the same fate, and decides to leave the meeting where the signing of the contracts is to take place.

As the Vanderhofs are moving out of the house, Tony tries to track down Alice. Kirby arrives and talks privately with Grandpa, sharing his realization. Grandpa responds by inviting him to play "Polly Wolly Doodle" on the harmonica that he gave him. The two let loose with the rest of the family joining in the merriment, and with Alice taking Tony back. Later, at the dinner table, Grandpa says grace for the Sycamore family and the Kirbys, revealing that Kirby has sold back the houses on the block.

Cast

Production

 
James Stewart and Jean Arthur in You Can't Take It with You

In November 1937, Harry Cohn of Columbia Pictures bought the film rights of the original play for $200,000 ($3,589,000 in 2019).[6]

After seeing actor James Stewart portray "a sensitive, heart-grabbing role in MGM's Navy Blue and Gold", Frank Capra cast Stewart for the role of leading male character, Tony Kirby, to "[fit] his concept of idealized America".[7]

Barrymore's infirmity was incorporated into the plot of the film. His character was on crutches the entire movie, which was said to be due to an accident from sliding down the banister. In reality, it was due to his increasing arthritis – earlier in the year he had been forced to withdraw from the movie A Christmas Carol.[8]

Ann Miller, who plays Essie Carmichael (Ed Carmichael's wife), was only 15 when You Can't Take It with You was filmed.

Reception

Frank Nugent of The New York Times called the film "a grand picture, which will disappoint only the most superficial admirers of the play".[9] Variety called it "fine audience material and over the heads of no one. The comedy is wholly American, wholesome, homespun, human, appealing, and touching in turn." The review suggested that "it could have been edited down a bit here and there, though as standing it is never tiresome".[10] Film Daily wrote: "Smoothly directed, naturally acted and carefully produced, 'You Can't Take It With You' has all the elements of screen entertainment that the fans could wish for."[11] "Excellent", wrote Harrison's Reports. "Robert Riskin did a fine job in adapting it from the stage play for he wisely placed emphasis on the human rather than on the farcical side of the story; yet he did this without sacrificing any of the comedy angles."[12] John Mosher of The New Yorker thought that the stage version was superior, writing that many of the story's new additions for the screen made the film "a long one and at times a ponderous thing, the more so the further from the play the screen version strays".[13]

Reviewing the film in 2010, James Berardinelli wrote that it "hasn't fared as well as the director's better, more timeless offerings" due to the dated nature of screwball comedies and the "innocence permeating the movie that doesn't play as well during an era when audiences value darkness in even the lightest of comedies. Still, You Can't Take it with You provides a pleasant enough two hours along with a reminder of how era-specific the criteria for winning an Oscar are".[14]

Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 95% from 76 reviews and an average rating of 7.50/10. The consensus summarizes: "It's predictably uplifting fare from Frank Capra, perhaps the most consciously uplifting of all great American directors – but thanks to immensely appealing performances and a nimble script, You Can't Take It with You is hard not to love."[15]

Academy Awards

Wins[16]
Nominations

Adaptations

You Can't Take it with You was adapted as a radio play on the October 2, 1939, broadcast of Lux Radio Theater with Edward Arnold, Robert Cummings and Fay Wray.

In popular culture

A line from this film, "Confidentially, she stinks!", said by Kolenkov the ballet master about one of his students, was used in a few Looney Tunes cartoons from the 1940s.[17]

Digital restoration

In 2013, Sony Colorworks and Prasad Corporation digitally restored the film, removing dirt, tears, scratches and other artifacts to emulate the film's original look.[18][19]

References

Citations
  1. ^ "Notes". Turner Classic Movies. Turner Entertainment Networks. Retrieved September 14, 2015.
  2. ^ "A World Premiere of World Importance! (Advertisement)". Film Daily. New York: Wid's Films and Film Folk, Inc.: 8–9 August 25, 1938.
  3. ^ "Top Films and Stars". Variety. January 4, 1939. p. 10. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
  4. ^ Joseph McBride, Frank Capra: The Catastrophe of Success University Press of Mississippi, 1992 p 381
  5. ^ ​You Can't Take It With You​ at the Internet Broadway Database
  6. ^ Sklar, Robert; Zagarrio, Vito. Frank Capra: Authorship and the Studio System. ISBN 9781439904893. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  7. ^ Thomas, Tony (January 1997). A Wonderful Life: The Films and Career of James Stewart – Tony Thomas. ISBN 9780806519531. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  8. ^ Guida, Fred (1999). A Christmas Carol and Its Adaptations: A Critical Examination of Dickens's Story and Its Productions on Screen and Television. McFarland. pp. 95–98. ISBN 978-0-7864-2840-3.
  9. ^ The New York Times Film Reviews, Volume 2: 1932–1938. New York: The New York Times & Arno Press. 1970. p. 1527.
  10. ^ "Film Reviews". Variety. New York: Variety, Inc. September 7, 1938. p. 12.
  11. ^ "Reviews". Film Daily. New York: Wid's Films and Film Folk, Inc.: 9 August 26, 1938.
  12. ^ "You Can't Take It with You". Harrison's Reports. New York: Harrison's Reports, Inc.: 150 September 17, 1938.
  13. ^ Mosher, John (September 10, 1938). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker. New York: F-R Publishing Corp. p. 79.
  14. ^ Berardinelli, James (May 6, 2010). "You Can't Take it with You". Reelviews. Retrieved September 14, 2015.
  15. ^ "You Can't Take It with You". Rotten Tomatoes.
  16. ^ "The 11th Academy Awards (1939) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved August 10, 2011.
  17. ^ "The Warner Brothers Cartoon Companion: C".
  18. ^ "Sony Pictures' Rita Belda on Film Grain, 4K, and Restoring a Screwball Classic". Studio Daily. December 23, 2013. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  19. ^ Altman, Randi (November 18, 2013). "Capra's classic 'It Happened One Night' restored in 4K – postPerspective – Randi Altman's". postPerspective. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
Bibliography
  • Hart, Moss; Kaufman, George S. (1936). You Can't Take It with You (Archival manuscript ed.). New York: Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman. OCLC 44091928.

External links

take, with, film, take, with, 1938, american, romantic, comedy, film, directed, frank, capra, starring, jean, arthur, lionel, barrymore, james, stewart, edward, arnold, adapted, robert, riskin, from, pulitzer, prize, winning, 1936, play, same, name, george, ka. You Can t Take It with You is a 1938 American romantic comedy film directed by Frank Capra and starring Jean Arthur Lionel Barrymore James Stewart and Edward Arnold Adapted by Robert Riskin from the Pulitzer Prize winning 1936 play of the same name by George S Kaufman and Moss Hart 5 the film is about a man from a family of rich snobs who becomes engaged to a woman from a good natured but decidedly eccentric family You Can t Take It with YouTheatrical release posterDirected byFrank CapraScreenplay byRobert RiskinBased onYou Can t Take It with You1936 playby George Kaufman and Moss HartProduced byFrank CapraStarringJean Arthur Lionel Barrymore James Stewart Edward ArnoldCinematographyJoseph WalkerEdited byGene HavlickMusic byDimitri TiomkinProductioncompanyColumbia PicturesDistributed byColumbia PicturesRelease datesAugust 23 1938 1938 08 23 int l press preview 1 September 1 1938 1938 09 01 New York City 2 September 29 1938 1938 09 29 U S Running time126 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudgetUS 1 644 736 est 3 Box officeUS 2 137 575 U S rentals 4 US 5 295 526 int l rentals A critical and commercial success the film received two Academy Awards from seven nominations Best Picture and Best Director for Frank Capra This was Capra s third Oscar for Best Director in just five years following It Happened One Night 1934 and Mr Deeds Goes to Town 1936 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 5 Academy Awards 6 Adaptations 7 In popular culture 8 Digital restoration 9 References 10 External linksPlot EditA successful banker Anthony P Kirby Edward Arnold has just returned from Washington DC where he was effectively granted a government sanctioned munitions monopoly which will make him very rich He intends to buy up a 12 block radius around a competitor s factory to put him out of business but one house is a holdout to selling Kirby instructs his real estate broker John Blakely Clarence Wilson to offer a huge sum for the house and if that is not accepted to cause trouble for the family Meanwhile Grandpa Vanderhof Lionel Barrymore convinces a banker named Poppins to pursue his dream of making animated toys Kirby s son Tony James Stewart a vice president in the family company has fallen in love with a company stenographer Alice Sycamore Jean Arthur When Tony proposes marriage Alice is worried that her family would be looked upon poorly by Tony s rich and famous family In fact Alice is the only relatively normal member of the eccentric Sycamore family led by Vanderhof Unbeknownst to the players Alice s family lives in the house that will not sell out Kirby and his wife Mary Forbes strongly disapprove of Tony s choice for marriage Before she accepts Alice forces Tony to bring his family to become better acquainted with their future in laws but when Tony purposely brings his family on the wrong day reasoning that he would rather the two families meet as they are not in a formal stuffed shirt setting the Sycamore family is caught off guard and the house is in disarray As the Kirbys are preparing to leave after a rather disastrous meeting the police arrive in response to what they perceive as printed threats on flyers by Grandpa s son in law Ed Carmichael When the fireworks in the basement go off they arrest everyone in the house Held up in the drunk tank preparing to see the night court judge Mrs Kirby repeatedly insults Alice and makes her feel unworthy of her son while Grandpa explains to Kirby the importance of having friends and that despite all the wealth and success in business you can t take it with you At the court hearing the judge Harry Davenport allows for Grandpa and his family to settle the charges for disturbing the peace and making illegal fireworks by assessing a fine for which Grandpa s neighborhood friends pitch in to pay He repeatedly asks why the Kirbys were at the Vanderhof house When Grandpa attempting to help Kirby says it was to talk over selling the house Alice has an outburst and says it was because she was engaged to Tony but is spurning him because of how poorly she has been treated by his family This causes a sensation in the papers and Alice flees the city With Alice gone Grandpa decides to sell the house thus meaning the whole section of the town must vacate in preparation for building a new factory Now the Kirby companies merge creating a huge fluctuation in the stock market When Kirby s competitor Ramsey H B Warner dies after confronting him for being ruthless and a failure of a man Kirby has a realization he is heading for the same fate and decides to leave the meeting where the signing of the contracts is to take place As the Vanderhofs are moving out of the house Tony tries to track down Alice Kirby arrives and talks privately with Grandpa sharing his realization Grandpa responds by inviting him to play Polly Wolly Doodle on the harmonica that he gave him The two let loose with the rest of the family joining in the merriment and with Alice taking Tony back Later at the dinner table Grandpa says grace for the Sycamore family and the Kirbys revealing that Kirby has sold back the houses on the block Cast EditJean Arthur as Alice Sycamore Lionel Barrymore as Grandpa Martin Vanderhof James Stewart as Tony Kirby Edward Arnold as Anthony P Kirby Mischa Auer as Potap Kolenkhov Ann Miller as Essie Carmichael Spring Byington as Penelope Penny Sycamore Samuel S Hinds as Paul Sycamore Donald Meek as Poppins an accountant at Kirby s bank H B Warner as Ramsey Halliwell Hobbes as DePinna Dub Taylor as Ed Carmichael Mary Forbes as Meriam Kirby Anthony s wife Lillian Yarbo as Rheba Eddie Anderson as Donald Clarence Wilson as John Blakeley Kirby s real estate broker Josef Swickard as the Professor Ann Doran as Maggie O Neill Christian Rub as Mr Schmidt Bodil Rosing as Mrs Schmidt Charles Lane as Wilbur G Henderson IRS agent Harry Davenport as the Night Court JudgeProduction Edit James Stewart and Jean Arthur in You Can t Take It with YouIn November 1937 Harry Cohn of Columbia Pictures bought the film rights of the original play for 200 000 3 589 000 in 2019 6 After seeing actor James Stewart portray a sensitive heart grabbing role in MGM s Navy Blue and Gold Frank Capra cast Stewart for the role of leading male character Tony Kirby to fit his concept of idealized America 7 Barrymore s infirmity was incorporated into the plot of the film His character was on crutches the entire movie which was said to be due to an accident from sliding down the banister In reality it was due to his increasing arthritis earlier in the year he had been forced to withdraw from the movie A Christmas Carol 8 Ann Miller who plays Essie Carmichael Ed Carmichael s wife was only 15 when You Can t Take It with You was filmed Reception EditFrank Nugent of The New York Times called the film a grand picture which will disappoint only the most superficial admirers of the play 9 Variety called it fine audience material and over the heads of no one The comedy is wholly American wholesome homespun human appealing and touching in turn The review suggested that it could have been edited down a bit here and there though as standing it is never tiresome 10 Film Daily wrote Smoothly directed naturally acted and carefully produced You Can t Take It With You has all the elements of screen entertainment that the fans could wish for 11 Excellent wrote Harrison s Reports Robert Riskin did a fine job in adapting it from the stage play for he wisely placed emphasis on the human rather than on the farcical side of the story yet he did this without sacrificing any of the comedy angles 12 John Mosher of The New Yorker thought that the stage version was superior writing that many of the story s new additions for the screen made the film a long one and at times a ponderous thing the more so the further from the play the screen version strays 13 Reviewing the film in 2010 James Berardinelli wrote that it hasn t fared as well as the director s better more timeless offerings due to the dated nature of screwball comedies and the innocence permeating the movie that doesn t play as well during an era when audiences value darkness in even the lightest of comedies Still You Can t Take it with You provides a pleasant enough two hours along with a reminder of how era specific the criteria for winning an Oscar are 14 Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 95 from 76 reviews and an average rating of 7 50 10 The consensus summarizes It s predictably uplifting fare from Frank Capra perhaps the most consciously uplifting of all great American directors but thanks to immensely appealing performances and a nimble script You Can t Take It with You is hard not to love 15 Academy Awards EditWins 16 Best Picture Columbia Pictures Best Director Frank CapraNominationsBest Supporting Actress Spring Byington Best Writing Screenplay Robert Riskin Best Cinematography Joseph Walker Best Film Editing Gene Havlick Best Sound Recording Columbia Studio Sound Department John P Livadary Sound DirectorAdaptations EditYou Can t Take it with You was adapted as a radio play on the October 2 1939 broadcast of Lux Radio Theater with Edward Arnold Robert Cummings and Fay Wray In popular culture EditA line from this film Confidentially she stinks said by Kolenkov the ballet master about one of his students was used in a few Looney Tunes cartoons from the 1940s 17 Digital restoration EditIn 2013 Sony Colorworks and Prasad Corporation digitally restored the film removing dirt tears scratches and other artifacts to emulate the film s original look 18 19 References EditCitations Notes Turner Classic Movies Turner Entertainment Networks Retrieved September 14 2015 A World Premiere of World Importance Advertisement Film Daily New York Wid s Films and Film Folk Inc 8 9 August 25 1938 Top Films and Stars Variety January 4 1939 p 10 Retrieved March 18 2023 Joseph McBride Frank Capra The Catastrophe of Success University Press of Mississippi 1992 p 381 You Can t Take It With You at the Internet Broadway Database Sklar Robert Zagarrio Vito Frank Capra Authorship and the Studio System ISBN 9781439904893 Retrieved August 10 2015 Thomas Tony January 1997 A Wonderful Life The Films and Career of James Stewart Tony Thomas ISBN 9780806519531 Retrieved August 10 2015 Guida Fred 1999 A Christmas Carol and Its Adaptations A Critical Examination of Dickens s Story and Its Productions on Screen and Television McFarland pp 95 98 ISBN 978 0 7864 2840 3 The New York Times Film Reviews Volume 2 1932 1938 New York The New York Times amp Arno Press 1970 p 1527 Film Reviews Variety New York Variety Inc September 7 1938 p 12 Reviews Film Daily New York Wid s Films and Film Folk Inc 9 August 26 1938 You Can t Take It with You Harrison s Reports New York Harrison s Reports Inc 150 September 17 1938 Mosher John September 10 1938 The Current Cinema The New Yorker New York F R Publishing Corp p 79 Berardinelli James May 6 2010 You Can t Take it with You Reelviews Retrieved September 14 2015 You Can t Take It with You Rotten Tomatoes The 11th Academy Awards 1939 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved August 10 2011 The Warner Brothers Cartoon Companion C Sony Pictures Rita Belda on Film Grain 4K and Restoring a Screwball Classic Studio Daily December 23 2013 Retrieved August 10 2015 Altman Randi November 18 2013 Capra s classic It Happened One Night restored in 4K postPerspective Randi Altman s postPerspective Retrieved August 10 2015 BibliographyHart Moss Kaufman George S 1936 You Can t Take It with You Archival manuscript ed New York Moss Hart and George S Kaufman OCLC 44091928 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to You Can t Take It with You film Wikimedia Commons has media related to You Can t Take It with You film You Can t Take It With You at AllMovie You Can t Take It With You at IMDb You Can t Take It With You at the Internet Broadway Database You Can t Take It With You at the TCM Movie Database You Can t Take It With You at the American Film Institute Catalog You Can t Take It With You at Rotten Tomatoes You Can t Take It With You on Lux Radio Theater October 2 1939 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title You Can 27t Take It with You film amp oldid 1164930263, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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