9/10
Dorothy Lamour in Nice Little Slice of Life Drama
29 December 2021
THE GIRL FROM MANHATTAN is the most obscure film in the filmographies of both Dorothy Lamour and Charles Laughton so I wasn't expecting much but surprise - this is a charming if modest little movie with a wonderful cast doing some of their best work. Lamour stars as a successful fashion model who returns to her hometown to visit the uncle who raised her, Ernest Truex, the proprietor of a run-down boarding house. Dottie knows he's not making much money so she's been sending him funds to keep the house going only to discover the soft-hearted uncle has been using the money to finance the pipe dreams of his elderly boarders who don't even have the dough to pay rent to him. As a result uncle has not been paying the mortgage and the house is now scheduled to be in foreclosure. Also back in town is Dorothy's childhood fame, former football star George Montgomery now about to start a career as a minister in the town's 150-year-old church, only to find the parishioners are ready to sell the old historic church to a local businessman who also owns the boarding house, the land on which he has promised to donate for.the new church. Bishop Charles Laughton is kindly guiding Montgomery in his new calling but a little concerned about him possibly getting tangled up with New York fashion model.

Dorothy is a vision in this movie in smart if conservative clothes and gives a nice performance. I was pleased to see the big cast of character actors directed into giving restrained performances and not hamming it up for laughs. It was also nice to see the obviously villainous property owner played with a light touch and not the cartoonish bad guy with horns often seem in these Capraesque dramas. Charles Laughton also nicely underplays his role. Director Alfred E. Green even gets Hugh Herbert to calm down (for the most part) and give a real performance, not just his stock schtick comedy. Constance Collier plays a faded actress with illusions of starting a late life career as a playwright in a role that recalls her famous work in STAGE DOOR and she's.charming as is Sara Allgood in one of her last roles as Laughton's housekeeper. Elderly character Adeline De Walt Reynolds has a moving scene as a very aged churchgoer (said to be 93 although Ms. Reynolds herself was only a babe of 85 at the time) who regularly visits the old church quite late at night for comfort. George Montgomery does some of his best work as the low-key preacher man and his and Dottie's romance is quite chaste but quite sweet. I enjoyed this little movie and it was pleasing to see so many nice people in one film.
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