***Out In The 1950s Romantic Comedy
Night-Lauren Bacall’s Designing Woman
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Designing Woman, starring Lauren
Bacall, Gregory Peck, directed by Vincent Minelli, 1957
The last time the name Lauren Bacall
was mentioned in this space was when I was reviewing the film To Have And Have Not where she scorched the
screen in her film debut joining Humphrey Bogart in doing a hot sex tango of a
film-with all their clothes on. Of course that was the wild and wooly wartime
1940s when anything could go, or almost anything, as long as the bad guys go theirs.
In the tepid red scare Cold War 1950s thought the role of the myriad romantic pillow
talk comedies featured, after a few scraps of course, married domestic tranquility
in all its suburban splendors. The film under review, Vincent Minelli’s Designing Woman, puts paid to that
premise, except the suburban part, as Ms. Bacall goes through very different
paces.
Here is the skinny. Marilla (played
by Ms. Bacall), a fashion designer, meets Mike (played by Gregory Peck), a top
notch sports writer in California at some ill-defined party. It must be the California
water or something because these two professional from New York City turn into
teenage mush and rush off and get married after a couple of days of knowing
each other. The problem is when they get back to New York City and their
professional lives they find they do not really know each other, really have
nothing in common. But fear not love will out. See Mike is one of those
crusader reporters who is hot on the trail of corruption in the boxing arena.
And the guy who controls that action does not like being under the microscope,
not at all. Since he can’t get to Mike (he is in hiding) then he orders his boys
to snatch Marilla. That does it as Mike finds that he loves his Marilla despite
their lack of common interest. Ditto Marilla. See it was easy, very easy to
resolve. And they lived happily ever after.
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