By Ed Garea
My
Kingdom for a Cook (Columbia, 1943) – Director:
Richard Wallace. Writers: Andrew Solt (s/p, story), Lillian Hatvany
(story), Harold Goldman, Jack Henley, Joseph Hoffman (writers). Cast:
Charles Coburn, Marguerite Chapman, Bill Carter, Isobel Elsom, Edward
Gargan, Norma Varden, Almira Sessions, & Mary Wickes. (Working
title: Without Notice) B&W, 81 minutes.
Let
me begin by saying that Charles Coburn is one of my favorite actors.
Lauded by critics and historians like as one of the great supporting
actors, he’s livened every film he’s made, whether as Barbara
Stanwyck’s father (The Lady Eve), Bette Davis’ lecherous
old uncle (In This Our Life), a befuddled hypochondriac store
owner (The Devil and Miss Jones), or the matchmaking Benjamin
Dingle (The More the Merrier). His presence is always a
welcome one of me in a movie, and there are films I wouldn’t
otherwise watch save for his presence.
That
being said, not even Coburn can help this mess of a movie. I would
suppose that, being as he’s given so many good performances in
support, that Columbia should have given him top billing in an
entertaining B-movie. The only problem is that this film is not
entertaining.
Coburn
plays English author Rudyard Morley, a curmudgeonly type (what else?)
replete with monocle and obviously false beard; a sort of cross
between George Bernard Shaw and Sheridan Whiteside from The
Man Who Came to Dinner. He’s off to the States for a goodwill
lecture tour, but is distraught when he learns that his personal
cook, Margaret (Varden), is unable to accompany him, leaving him to
travel only with daughter-secretary Pamela (Chapman). When they
arrive in New York, they meet Morley’s publisher, who extols Morley
and his books while Pamela reads a list of those who sent
congratulatory telegrams. When she reads the name of Charles Coburn,
Morley says, “Who? Never heard of him.” That is the funniest line
in the movie, which should tell us something.
Morley
and Pamela are soon on a train to a small New England town named
Colcord, where the rest of the film will take place. Aboard the
train, Pamela is taken with young Army lieutenant Mike Scott
(Carter), but Morley’s cantankerous attitude insults the young man.
By now we all realize that the goodwill tour is going to be a total
disaster, only we don’t quite know just how total it will be. We
get our first inkling when we learn that the grand dame of Colcord’s
cultural activities is none other than Lucille Scott (Elsom), who
coincidentally happens to be Mike’s mother. From here on in it’s
pure boilerplate.
Morley
insults the entire town, and embarrasses Pamela, when he subs the
town’s welcoming party. But when he learns that Mrs. Scott’s
cook, Hattie (Sessions), is also a master chef, he finagles a dinner
invitation to the Scotts’. After dinner he steals Hattie away by
telling her, among other things, that she’s wasting her time and
talents catering to people who can’t fully appreciate her artistry.
This starts a battle between Mrs. Scott and Morley that soon reaches
the press, but Mike steps in and convinces Hattie to return to the
Scott kitchen. Ah, but Morley has an ally in Mrs. Scotts’
long-suffering secretary, Agnes (Wickes), who tells him that he can
get Hattie back by giving her no-good husband, Duke (Gargan), a job.
Now
really ticked off, Morley intends to retaliate by delivering an
insulting speech at the occasion of the 250th anniversary
of Colcord’s founding. Meanwhile, Pamela, who has fallen in love
with Mike, decides to thwart her father by staging an elopement with
Mike to Canada, knowing he will lose no time chasing after them. But
when Mike and Pamela arrive in Canada, they hear that Morley’s been
arrested and is cooling his heels in the local jail. It seems that he
went to a farm where Duke was helping with the harvest and became
embroiled in a fight, causing his arrest for disturbing the peace.
Mike
and Pamela come back to bail him out just before the official
proceedings are to start. Pamela also informs her father that she
intends to marry Mike in earnest, so he’d better get himself used
to the idea. As the proceedings begin, Morley ascends the stage to
deliver his speech to a cacophony of boos from the audience, but he
surprises everyone by changing gears and apologizing for being an old
fool, declaring he has come to celebrate the American people.
Naturally, he’s now the town’s sweetheart and even gets an
invitation from the president to visit him in Washington, which
provides us with the necessary finale. As he leaves from the station
with a royal send-off from the town, he departs in the company of his
new secretary, none other than Agnes, who he has lured away with the
same line that he used to steal Hattie.
Though
the film tries to be another The Man Who Came to Dinner,
it has none of the sharp humor of the former. Try as he might, Coburn
just can’t be as nasty as Monty Woolley. Neither does it helps
matters that Coburn’s supporting cast is bland – not a zany in
sight unlike The Man Who Came to Dinner. Then again, My
Kingdom for a Cook lacks the talented hand of a George
Kaufman and Moss Hart; if the film had such funny supporting
characters, it would not have known how to employ them. Co-star
Chapman, a fine actress in her own right, is also let down by the
script, saddled in a romance with someone with whom she has exactly
zero chemistry. In the end, My Kingdom for a Cook is
nothing but another B-boilerplate programmer, made to precede the
feature attraction and pleasant enough to the point where the
audience won’t leave before that main attraction is shown.
No comments:
Post a Comment