6/10
Crazy Story, Hammy Acting, Impressive Music
15 October 2019
I watched this on TCM because I am a huge Van Johnson fan and I hadn't seen it. The convoluted story is silly and the chemistry between Johnson and Kathryn Grayson is non-existent so it doesn't come off, but there are a few merits to make it worth watching anyway.

Dr. Bartlett AKA Link (Johnson) is engaged to socialite Agnes Oglethorpe-Young (Paula Raymond), and life is peachy. However, his divorce from his first wife, opera-singer Ina Massine (Grayson), has only just gone through, and it has prompted her flame for him to reignite. She is an eccentric woman and decides she will stop at nothing, including breaking and entering, to get Link back. Against doctor's orders, she performs in La Boheme, and afterward loses her voice. Oglethorpe-Young's father (Lewis Stone) is a doctor and suggests Massine's ailment is mental and a result of her desire for Link. Therefore, Link takes it upon himself to court her with the help of his brother (Barry Sullivan) in hopes she will fall for his brother instead and be cured, solving both his and her problem in one fell swoop.

This film is dated in many ways, especially in an exchange with a taxi driver. "Hey bud, take my advice. Stick to this chick. She can't scream!"

If you're a fan of classic Hollywood, Grounds for Marriage features quite a cast. The music is also impressive. It varies between classical pieces to jazz in a memorable cameo of the Firehouse Five Plus Two. Johnson dances the Charleston in an amusing way that hearkens back to his days on the musical stage prior to appearing in films. Although he was a tall man, he achieves a certain amount of grace in this scene, and a lightheartedness that encompasses his appeal on the screen. His acting in the scene where he catches a cold is hammy and overdone, but I can't help but love him anyway.
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