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Movies Similar to Behave Yourself! (1951)

Behave Yourself! (1951)
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One of the oddest comedies of the 1950s, Behave Yourself! stars Farley Granger and Shelley Winters as a pair of none-too-bright newlyweds. Granger and Winters adopt a stray pooch named Archie, who unbeknownst to them has been trained as a go-between for a couple of underworld gangs. To the ever-mounting amazement of our hero and heroine, corpses begin to pile up all around them as one gang endeavors to rub out the other during a million-dollar smuggling operation. While it's quite possible to treat murder as a farcical situation-remember Arsenic and Old Lace?--the killings in this film are sometimes too graphic to induce laughter (there's nothing terribly mirth-provoking about gang flunkey Hans Conried lying dead in a bathtub with a bullet hole between his eyes). Another detriment is the casting of Granger and Winters, both of whom are woefully unsuited to their roles. In fact, such veteran villains as Lon Chaney Jr., Sheldon Leonard, Francis L. Sullivan and Elisha Cook Jr. come off funnier than the stars! The film's best sequence occurs during the closing cast credits, so try to stick around after the "THE END" title. Behave Yourself was the first coproduction between Wald-Krasna Productions and RKO Radio. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Farley GrangerShelley Winters, (more)
Director(s):
George Beck
Format(s):
DVD
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Karl H.

Considering that this film is chock-full of some of the best character actors in the business it is amazing to see the finished mess this film became. It is all played very broadly. The situations are broad as well, but looking at it objectively after viewing, one can just barely see a glimmer of the potential of it all had it been in the hands of someone who could mine the potential of this farce. Poor Farley Granger's recitation of the truth of the situation to William Demerest near the end of the film would be funny because we the audience know that indeed Granger is speaking the truth, and yes officer, that/s the way it happened even if it sounds more absurd in the retelling than it did at the time. This is tricky stuff to pull off, and director George Beck is nowhere near equal to the task. This DVD looks to be a transfer from an old 16mm television print of the film. However, a pristine print would have made no difference.

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