Bride by Mistake (1944) Poster

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7/10
Pleasant little film
Majuro14 January 2005
After Norman Krasna's Oscar-winning script for Princess O'Rourke turned into a box-office hit for Warners in 1943, RKO rehashed his similar rich-girl-masquerading-as-poor-girl story "Richest Girl in the World" for this film in 1944. The result is mixed, but Day is so lovely, supporting cast is lively, that it makes for a pleasant hour and a half. Day plays an heiress who's boyfriend dumps her because she's too rich (yeah, right.) Day switches places with her secretary, hoping to find true love that way, and complications ensue. Marsha Hunt and Allen Joslyn are particularly appealing as Day's Secretary and her new husband, forced to carry the charade to the point of breaking. A nice 40's wartime romantic comedy, not too taxing on the mind.
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7/10
Simple love story plot, but entertaining.
MountainMan13 October 2003
There certainly weren't any surprises in this fun movie, and you could practically predict the plot all the way through. Then bring in the absolutely gorgeous Laraine Day and the movie really has some energy in it. I love old movies and hadn't watched much of her, but I can see why she was so popular in her days. I have to say that I think Marsha Hunt is great too.
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7/10
Sweet-Natured Chestnut of Rich Girl's Search for Love...
cariart13 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
"Bride by Mistake", while having the pedigree of a story by Norman Krasna, and an updated (to wartime) screenplay by Henry and Phoebe Ephron, is ultimately light-hearted romantic fluff, a 'B' feature that wartime audiences loved, but seems quaint and dated, today. This isn't a put-down of the film; I enjoyed it, and star Laraine Day has a timeless, fresh-scrubbed beauty that can still win hearts, in our more jaded times, but don't expect it to be released on DVD anytime in the near future...

The story is an oft-told one; rich girl, not wanting to marry a 'gold-digger', has her friend/secretary pose as her, and looks for someone to 'fall' for her as an 'average' girl, instead of a wealthy one (of course, when the girl is Day, 'average' just doesn't really apply!) She almost immediately meets handsome AAF Captain Anthony Travis (Aussie actor Alan Marshal, working hard to affect an American accent), who is attracted to her...but she decides to test his affection, by thrusting him at the bogus rich girl, again and again...until, surprise, he finally proposes to the 'rich' one!

This being a comedy, things DO work out, and Day and Marshal head for a motel (after MARRYING, of course!)

The film features a terrific supporting cast, including ageless Edgar Buchanan as Day's guardian, beautiful Marsha Hunt (who never achieved major stardom, but SHOULD have) as her secretary, ever-reliable Allyn Joslyn, hilarious as the mid-western Mideast linguist secretly married to the secretary, and especially Slim Summerville, in a small but memorable role of the caretaker observing all the monkey business.

Not a 'classic', but enjoyable on it's own terms, "Bride by Mistake" is a happy little time-passer...
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Classy Remake of "The Richest Girl in the World"
wireshock22 October 2003
This Norman Krasna story -- with one of his typical fairytale-like plots -- was filmed in '34 as "The Richest Girl in the World" with Miriam Hopkins and Joel McCrea. And this one works as well as the first one did because Laraine Day is just as perfect for this role as Miriam Hopkins was. Hopkins played the role a bit dowdier -- or maybe it's just that Laraine Day can't help shining like an incandescent bulb on camera!

Poor little rich girl Norah Hunter can't find a man who will love her just for herself, as opposed to her vast wealth. Used to allowing her personal assistant to pose as herself in public she decides to try out this "prince and the pauper" style switch in her private life as well and see if the man she's falling for can love her for herself alone.

In both films it's a tightwalk characters and audience tread as the "he loves me--he loves me not" twists and turns wrench us gently this way and that like an old fashioned roller coaster. The supporting cast in this later film have more fleshed out roles -- and comic bits -- than the original and play them with verve.

The plot was made contemporary for the WWII era by making the love interest a pilot and surrounding the radiant Day with handsome enlisted men who have both manners and dispositions which practically no one in our culture seems to carry anymore.

Krasna was always trying out variations on the "no one knows I'm really rich or a princess or a star or whatever -- and will they love me just the same??" theme. But there's something perfectly simple and charming about this particular variation. So much so that two delightful romantic comedies were made of it. And why not -- it's great fun!
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6/10
the one about the rich girl pretending to be poor
blanche-212 July 2015
Laraine Day stars with Alan Marshal, Marsha Hunt, and Allyn Joslyn in "Bride by Mistake," from 1944. This is a rehash of "The Richest Girl in the World" and maybe a few other films.

Day plays the world-famous heiress Norah Hunter, but no one sees her. Her secretary Sylvia (Hunt) poses at her at ship christenings, etc.

Sylvia is engaged to Phil Vernon (Joslyn), and she gives her notice so that she can be with him, as he is changing jobs and leaving town. Norah is due to marry soon and decides to move up the wedding so that Sylvia and Phil can attend. It doesn't work out because that night, her boyfriend dumps her. She's too rich. Like I suppose that happens.

When Norah meets Captain Anthony Travis, she's interested, but she doesn't want him knowing who she is - he might fall for her because she has money. She tests him by throwing Sylvia at him. And it turns into a big mess.

Pleasant comedy, with Day totally radiant and beautiful. I don't know why MGM couldn't come up with more for her to do - instead she was constantly loaned out. Marsha Hunt is delightful as Sylvia, and the rest of the cast is very good.

Enjoyable.
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7/10
A nice diversion.
planktonrules26 August 2010
Soon after this film began, I had remembered seeing this story before in the form of "The Richest Girl in the World" with Miriam Hopkins and Joel McCrea. Aside from a few updates here and there (such as making the leading man an Army Air Corps flier recuperating from some unnamed illness or injury), the story is the same. There is a super-mega-rich lady (Laraine Day) who is a bit of a recluse. And, to shield her identity, her personal assistant (Marsha Hunt) poses as the rich heiress. However, when a dashing officer (Alan Marshall) begins to show attention to both Day and Hunt, Day is smitten--but unsure who he will choose--the one with the money or her (who actually has all the money). It's all very slight plot-wise and I still think the original is better--and more original! But the actors all do a good job (particularly Edgar Buchanan in a supporting role) and it's a nice pleasant diversion--a decent romantic comedy with some nice laughs and a very game cast.

By the way, while Alan Marshall looked quite nice in the film, he was an inexplicable choice as he was an Australian. Why this guy would be in the US military and not the Australian one is a puzzler...though the same could be said for many of Errol Flynn's films as well!
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6/10
Too Much Money
boblipton11 December 2020
Laraine Day is so rich that her fiance walks out on her; he can't stand living in a goldfish bowl. When she falls for pilot Alan Marshall (who gives a performance suggesting that Errol Flynn was intended for the role), she switches roles with Marsha Hunt, who is her public-appearance double.

It's a wartime remake of THE RICHEST GIRL IN THE WORLD, and pretty good. The supporting cast all hit their marks, including Allyn Joslyn as Miss Hunt's husband, Edgar Buchanan as Miss Day's mother-henning advisor, and Slim Summerville as Miss Day's perpetually bemused factotum. Under the direction of Richard Wallace, the situations strain the bounds of credibility without ever quite breaking them, and a couple of the gag sequences, like when Miss Day sets off the watering system to drench Marshall and Miss Hunt, are quite funny.

Marsha Hunt never quite achieved stardom. Between a turn on the Blacklist, and, in her own words, "I never learned how to sell Marsha Hunt," she has had a long, if not stellar career. Still, she's still alive at 103 as I write this, one of the few survivors of wartime Hollywood.
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2/10
Produced by Mistake!
mark.waltz13 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This is cinematic proof that fast moving action and sarcastic dialog does not make for a good comedy. In this case, it's the story of mistaken identity that may have seemed funny on paper, but is dull on screen. Marsha Hunt is wealthy Laraine Day's secretary, but assumes Day's identity to help her boss avoid the press and keep her anonymity. This creates romantic complications that has an affect on the men around them and ultimately their working relationship. The problem is the two women seem to actually despise each other in spite of the fact that neither woman is really nasty. Jealous Day tries to soak Hunt and soldier Alan Marshal with her sprinkler system but gets soaked herself. This scene is actually pretty funny, but the maliciousness in which Day acts at this moment comes out of nowhere and out of character. Poor Edgar Buchannan spends so much time on the phone throughout the film complaining about the situation going on that his ears must have been numb for a week after he completed shooting. With comics Allyn Joslyn and Slim Summerville thrown in, you'd expect more, but this is like a cake that has all the ingredients except the yeast to make it rise. Skip this one and take in the original version instead, the 1934 Miriam Hopkins/Joel McCrea comedy/drama "The Richest Girl in the World" which is all the better from its late depression era setting, not World War II.
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8/10
An original, stateside Homefront comedy during WW II
SimonJack27 August 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This may be the only movie ever made that concerns the U. S. Army Redistribution program of World War II. For that reason, it has some historical value as well. But, mostly this is a very good comedy with an original plot - and one that could have been still better with an improved script. And, just maybe one cast change.

It's a bit of a stretch that the female lead, Norah Hunter, shies away from the pubic eye and has a friend, Sylvia Lockwood, impersonate her at Christening of ships from the Hunter shipyard, and other functions. But then, anyone who knows history may recall the reclusive aviation magnate, Howard Hughes (1905-1976). Although he didn't have someone impersonate or stand in for him, after he became famous for his flying, Hughes went into hiding from the public. So, in this story it's a female industrial magnate, and one whose picture isn't even known in the public.

That's part of the setting. The other is the Army Redistribution center next door to her mansion. The two come together when she throws a party for the Army pilots - it was the Army Air Corps then, which would become the U. S. Air Force after the war. The party was Sylvia's idea, so that Norah might find the right man among the officers, and then she, Sylvia, can go off to Washington D. C. with her man. Husband Phil Vernon is a crackerjack Middle-Eastern analyst and linguist with the State Department. For some more background, Norah was raised since around age eight after both of her parents had died and Jonathan Connors had been named her ward and guardian to bring her up.

All of the cast are good in their roles - Laraine Day as Norah, impersonating her secretary Sylvia, and Marsha Hunt the secretary impersonating Norah. Edgar Buchanan plays Connors. And in the male lead is Alan Marshal as Capt. Anthony Travis. He's the one who will ultimately be for Norah. Australian-born Marshal had some leading roles and second roles in a variety of films but he didn't have the flair for comedy that some actors had. This would have been a perfect role for Brian Aherne who was hilarious in "The Great Garrick" of 1937, "Merrily We Live" of 1938, and several other comedies.

The best performance in this film is by Allyn Joslyn. His scenes as a frustrated husband with angst are great as he fumes inwardly and occasionally outwardly over the attention other men are paying his wife who is playing Norah. With some more work on the script, this could have been a great comedy. Still, it is a very good one.

Another possible first in this film is the scene of surf-fishing on the Pacific Coast. Anyone who has ever surf-fished before will get a chuckle or two out of this scene. The first is with the novice Capt. Travis trying his first cast that plunks right in front him. But, less obvious except for real fishers, is the whole party standing on dry, very flat and level beach, and casting into the incoming small waves. I surf-fished several years on the Atlantaic Coast, where a narrow trough follows along the shoreline of beaches from Florida to New Jersey. I have also surf-fished for flounder inside the mouth of the Columbia River in Oregon; and I have fished from shore with spinning tackle off rocks into surf that has some depth. But, I have not surf-fished on the Pacific as shown in this film. At the very least, these people would have to have waded into knee-deep water to make long casts into water deep enough to contain fish.

For a little more history - the Army had a number of redistribution stations in the U. S. for GIs returning to the States form combat duty overseas. The centers had multiple purposes. They were to rehabilitate GIs to civil life in the U. S., to update their personnel records for service experiences and skills, to prepare and process them for their next assignments, and to provide R & R (Rest and Relaxation). The latter was a big part of the centers and helped many combat veterans deal with combat fatigue or stress. Today, those terms have been replaced with PTSD - Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

"Bride by Mistake" is a comedy that centers around an Army Air Corps Redistribution Center. In the film, it is at the La Playa Hotel in Santa Barbara, California. The humor is set right away in the opening scenes and brief prologue that reads, "Due to military precautions, the exact locale of our story must remain a secret." Then, from the driver's seat of a small Army truck (a three-quarter ton) the audience sees a billboard welcoming visitors to Santa Barbara. That's followed by a service van that passes our vehicle, with ads painted on it acclaiming the best painting company in Santa Barabara. Then, the audience sees one after another roadside billboard advertising the best this and that in Santa Barbara.

So, with the "secret" out - and, there was nothing secret about these centers, as the film shows, the film follows an original plot that has potential for great comedy. It is a very good comedy, but the script needed some work to bring out its full potential.

When this movie came out in late June of 1944, the newspapers of the day, and the theater newsreels, were filled with the latest news about the Allied advance against the Germans in Europe, since the D-Day landings in northern France on June 6. Had RKO known of the precise date by the time "Bride by Mistake" was filmed, it would certainly have had some notice of it in the film. But, that was a situation that faced all of Hollywood during WW II, especially around major offenses and changes in the war.
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5/10
Not as Good
Homeric26 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
as it should or could have been.

I really enjoy watching lovely Laraine Day and bought this movie basically because she's in it.

The movie fails on two accounts: first there is no chemistry between Alan Marshall and Laraine Day therefore their 'romance' seems unbelievable, secondly, Marshall's character pursues someone else during the whole film and does not appear to have any interest in Day's character therefore the ending when they get together seems rather bizarre.

Had the two actors been more compatible and the script had him actually chasing her and her playing hard to get, the film could have been much much better.

However I still love watching Laraine Day and for that reason I am not disappointed that I bought the DVD. Just don't buy it thinking its going to be a forgotten gem. It is average at best.
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Great film
high-life1 September 2010
I have been watching a lot of old movies recently on TMC and this is one of the best movies I have seen in a long time Yes its old Yes its Sortof Campy but i really enjoyed it, i first saw Alan Marshal in "Married and in love" and something about his cheesy charming act was entertaining, So i watched this film also. I am of an entirely different generation born in the 80's there is something timeless about this film, Screwing up everything with love is relatable, i wont give away the ending because the film keeps you guessing till the end and from what I've seen from that era that uncertainty of the plot for the audience is a rarity.

Well this is a good one i recommend it to anyone
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5/10
Dissatisfying Comedy That Misuses The Talents Of The Cast
atlasmb13 October 2014
After looking at the other reviews here, I guess I am the dissenting vote. I found this film to be disappointing. I think the script creates some wonderful characters, I just wish they had been in another film.

The story revolves around a wealthy woman, Norah Hunter (Laraine Day) who has her secretary stand in for her during official ceremonies. She wishes to meet and marry a man who appreciates her for herself, not for her money. She gets the bright idea of having her secretary, Sylvia (Marsha Hunt), pose as her during a social event. By throwing the faux Norah at any who show her attention, she can weed out the unworthy.

The problem is the potential suitor, Tony Travis (Alan Marshal), who is a lunkhead with ambiguous intentions. He is drawn to the money like a fly to honey. I won't mention how the story resolves, but Tony is not worthy of Norah regardless, so any tension is dissipated.

The story feels like the product of various writers who resolved their differences of opinion by flipping a coin. Too bad; it could have been funnier and more engaging.
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5/10
How can I know?
bkoganbing11 December 2020
The Richest Girl In The World is given a remake and a slight update to reflect wartime conditions. Tycoon Laraine Day with her trusty Noah Dietrich type Edgar Buchanan is busy dedicating a new Liberty ship from one of her yards. But it ain't Laraine Day. It's Marsha Hunt pretending to be Laraine Day. One wonders why Howard Hughes never thought of this. Having someone double as him for all public appearances. Not that he couldn't have afforded it, even affording the plastic surgery if that was necessary.

Day has Barbara Hutton like worries. Can I ever know if I'm loved for me or my megabucks? Marsha Hunt might not be available any more for the deception as she wants to get married to Allyn Joslyn..

A flier played by Alan Marshal might be the answer.; She met him at a USO hall under an alias. I think you can figure the rest out.

Bride By Mistake is a good comedy product from the MGM B picture unit where the films come out like they had bigger budgets and bigger stars than they do. The film is impeccably cast and good performances all around.

To only have the problems of a Howard Hughes.
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