Swing High Swing Low ~ 1937 -BW

QUICKIE: Lame-O loser is made a celebrity by his girl and when she leaves his world crashes.

PLOT: (from IMDB): In Panama, Maggie King (Carole Lombard) meets soldier Skid Johnson (Fred MacMurray) on his last day in the army and reluctantly agrees to a date to celebrate. The two become involved in a nightclub brawl which causes Maggie to miss her ship back to the States. Now stranded, she's forced to move in with Skid and his pal Harry (Charles Butterworth). She soon falls in love with Skid. Skid gets a job playing the trumpet at a local club and becomes a big success. Fame and fortune go to his head which eventually destroys his relationship with Maggie and his career.

SUMMARY: God help us, it's another Fred MacMurrary movie. Remarkably though, MacMurray is somewhat tolerable in this film. I think it's the genius of Carole Lombard that makes him raise his game and actually act a little bit. He's usually so deadpan that all I can think about is what a rotten actor he is instead of getting lost in the story.

The story is good, although I don't understand why his character Skid, who is such a cockey braggart, won't admit that he has talent at playing the trumpet? He's tooting his horn about everything else about himself. Ugh, sorry for that.

So, Skid gets Maggie stuck in Panama and she returns the favor by getting him a job playing his horn at a local club. His career takes off and he goes to New York ahead of his girl to "get things set". Now, what kind of dummy lets her man move to a big city to work at a club where his ex just happens to be the main attraction? I'd be stuck like glue to my dude, not waiting it out in Panama wondering if he's being faithfull. And Maggie has a rich fiance waiting for her in California as well too. Why she gives him up for a loser like Skid is beyond sensible. But, love makes one do stupid things. Maggie gets tired of waiting in Panama and goes to New York to surprise Skid and catches him in a compromising situation, and of course, instead of letting him explain and trusting her man, she files for divorce and plans to marry her ex-fiance.

Having lost his girl, Skid hits the skids, and Maggie bails him out once again leaving her rich boyfriend for the loser one more time. The story is good enough, although not very buyable. Carole Lombard gives a good performance and I was impressed with MacMurrays' trumpet playing. Having played coronet as a kid, I can spot fake horn blowing a mile away, and his looked legit. I was amazed that he could do anything well.

1 comment:

VP81955 said...

I am pretty sure MacMurray's playing was dubbed...which is sort of ironic because before breaking into movies, Fred was a musician, but a saxophonist, and he was a member of several top West Coast orchestras.

OTOH, Lombard wasn't dubbed, and in her fairly brief singing sequences comes off pretty well. (Her voice was dubbed in a previous Paramount film, "White Woman.")

Believe it or not, "Swing High, Swing Low" was Paramount's top money-maker of 1937. Unfortunately, no first-rate print of this is available.

For more on this movie, and Lombard's "singing" appearances during her career, visit my entry on the topic at community.livejournal.com/carole_and_co/11870.html