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  • Warning: Spoilers
    When Jessie was filming this movie she was at the studio from 7am until 6pm, then travelling to the Gaiety Theatre in London, where she was starring in the stage production of "Hold My Hand", getting home at midnight. Next morning she would be up at 6am to start over. Director Albert De Courville was an eccentric slave driver. So if Jessie Matthews was accused of over-acting she was probably close to hysterics.

    She was always grateful to De Courville for giving her a chance in "There Goes the Bride" because none of the studio bosses wanted her. When they saw the finished film that was another story - Victor Saville thought she was the find of the year.

    Jessie is a delight in this comedy of mistaken identity. She plays Annette Marquand, an heiress, who runs away on the day of her wedding. She meets Owen Nare (almost 20 years her senior) who mistakes her for a thief, after an incident on the train. She is mistaken for his fiancée by his friends and they host a party for her. Then his real fiancée turns up.

    It is a bright little comedy that Jessie runs away with.

    There are some musical numbers. "I'll Stay With You" - Jessie sings and dances at the apartment. At the party with the great Carroll Gibbons and His Savoy Orpheans providing the music Jessie sings "I'm Looking for You" and is a big hit. (David Niven can be glimpsed standing around the table at the party). I don't know why it was set in Paris when they are all so terribly British.
  • spj-427 November 2007
    Another enjoyable Jessie Matthews' movie!

    I didn't know she was in it till I started to watch it.

    I don't share the view she was over-acting.

    She's just got an impish effervescence about her contributions in light-hearted musicals & comic situations of farce & misunderstandings, near-misses & genuine harmless fun that she excelled herself in!

    I simply don't understand why she was not a more famous & more sought after talent! Probably it's because her movies were made in the 1930s & in black & white. This doesn't detract from quality cinema!

    All of her movies I've seen are enjoyable. This is no exception!
  • "There goes the Bride" is essentially and simply a farce (albeit one set -- for no very clear reason -- in France). As such, the plot makes about as much sense as in any other of the many films in which the heroine proves herself irresistible by making the leading man's life a complete misery; and it contrives to be considerably less irritating than most of them.

    As the pert and wilful Annette, Jessie Matthews is all big eyes and eloquent reaction; it is interesting to note that she has already established the character without any real dialogue to speak of until after the first few scenes. In fact, for an early sound film this shows a notable willingness to tell its story through visuals in addition to the laughs obtained by an often genuinely funny script; there were moments when the audience were literally shouting with laughter.

    It has to be said that Miss Matthews, in her first leading screen role, sometimes overacts. If she were not already in possession of top billing one might assume that she is doing her best here to steal the show! However, it is hard to say where the actress's cinematic inexperience begins and the impudent Annette's 'putting on an act' ends; certainly her charm is more than enough to excuse any exaggeration. Conversely, Owen Nares has been criticised for lack of charisma, although I couldn't see it -- I did notice one or two flat line readings on his part that sounded as if they should have gone for a retake.

    All in all I found this surprisingly good entertainment: undemanding fluff in a polished production that manages to be witty without being annoying, ridiculous without stupidity, and sneaks in a good deal of conscious naughtiness into the bargain. I'm frankly amazed that this apparently rated a 'U' rather than an 'A' ('Adult') certificate on release, as I'd have thought parts of it were quite risqué!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    There are obvious similarities between this and America's "It Happened One Night". Preparing to marry a pompous businessman she can't stand to cinch a deal for her father, Jessie Matthews looks at the picture of her fiancée, sticks her tongue out, and bolts. The groom is humiliated, the father is devastated, and she is robbed while hiding out on a train far away. Believing that the sleeping man (Owen Nares)opposite her has her purse (it's actually his briefcase), she tries to retrieve it, and he accuses her of robbing him. Holding her for the police, he can't keep her in his grasp (she slips away from him in a most clever way), yet ends up finding her in his car anyway. He is forced to take her back to his pad, has lots of explaining to do when his fiancée (Carol Goodner) shows up, and even more when his society pals arrive and think Matthews is the girl he's engaged to.

    Quick moving comedy with a few snappy songs, this is a rare glimpse into what American audiences were missing in areas that did not get these British imports. Matthews would later gain some exposure with classics like "Evergreen", "First a Girl" and "It's Love Again", but outside of New York City, pretty much nobody in the United States even knew who she was. She has a sparkling personality, yet unlike other British actresses who made it big here, never had an interest in crossing over to Hollywood. Fortunately, we're getting to discover her now, and it is obvious that she is worth discovering. Some of the men may seem a bit pompous, or their levels of humor like something from outer space, but with a renewed interest in British culture (thanks to the Merchant Ivory films of the 1980's and 1990's and the BBC series "Downton Abbey"), us Yanks are taking pleasure in seeing sides of British society we hadn't been interested in before. Oh, and by the way, I think this is much more entertaining than the somewhat overlong "It Happened One Night", even with the manly Gable and the leg-exposing Colbert.
  • There Goes the Bride is a story about a rich, young woman who runs away from her father and her fiancé; then when she's on a train, she gets robbed and is forced to seek refuge with a perfect stranger, with whom she bickers and subsequently falls in love. Does that sound familiar? Too bad for Henry Koster, Wolfgang Wilhelm, and W.P. Lipscomb, because their movie went completely unnoticed, and two years later, It Happened One Night swept the Academy Awards!

    It's a very similar movie, except this one has British actors in it and a side plot involving a misidentify instead of a hitchhiking scene. Jessie Matthews is the adorable lead, and she sings the song "I'll Stay with You", whose theme is repeated throughout the film, making it a delightful old movie to watch. I happen to think It Happened One Night is overrated, as there were dozens of romantic comedies at that time which were just as cute if not cuter.

    I only came across this forgotten film because it was David Niven's first movie, and it's become a bit of a challenge to watch his early films and try to spot him among the extras. I wasn't successful, since the movie's loaded with crowd scenes. Still, I'm glad I watched it, and if you like watching obscure very old movies, you might want to give this one a try, too.
  • How times have changed: probably nobody back then batted an eyelid at Jessie Matthews and Owen Nares getting together even though he was old enough to be her father - and looked like he could be her grandfather! Owen Nares was certainly a man of his time - he seems so natural with the rest of the cast who all seem to be members of the English (or inexplicably in the film, French) upper echelons of society. With the exception of the late Queen Elizabeth, these people along with their bizarre accents mysteriously ceased to exist after the war.

    Nares is definitely not someone you think you'd warm to but he's surprisingly perfect in this. Were this an American film, one could imagine Carey Grant playing his character who's ordered life is turned upside down by the arrival of the whirlwind that is Miss Matthews. Again, were this an American film she'd be Katherine Hepburn - I could imagine these two in BRINGING UP BABY, very similar humour.

    This film gives a beautiful glimpse into a long-gone world inhabited by a species who looked a bit like us but behaved, thought, spoke and indeed loved very differently. It's not however just a fascinating snapshot into a distant far away planet, it's actually a really fun film. Honesty, I was not expecting this to be as entertaining and enjoyable as it was. OK, it's not Monty Python or even Will Hay but it is genuinely funny - I have to confess to succumbing to a couple of laugh out loud moments as well.

    Gaumont-British were one of the classier studios of the 30s but even so I was surprised at just how well made this picture was. Absolutely first rate acting - even from the minor characters, good direction, camerawork and lighting - it's even got a full musical score running through it which wasn't that common in 1932 - not just here but in the US as well. Besides being well made, what elevates this to something special is that it does magic to you!

    Somehow by some strange magic, this picture makes you smile from beginning to end, you cannot help it. Well it's not magic, what makes you smile is simply the presence of Jessie Matthews - I have no idea how she does it, she just does. In her later Victor Saville musicals in the mid-30s, she is considerably more glamorous and very sexy. In this however she's as un-sexy as anyone can be and yet (even with the weird accent) she's utterly adorable and simply lovely. She's just so likeable that she makes this whole film likeable as well - you will enjoy this.
  • The perky and thoroughly charming Jessie Matthews is being sold off in marriage by her parents to Basil Radford, so the sensible French girl runs off to Paris, where everyone speaks like stage English people. Her purse is stolen and she winds up in the hands of a suspicious Owen Nares, who has a suspicious fiancée, for whom Miss Matthews is naturally mistaken by his gullible and mostly drunken friends.

    Miss Matthews sings two songs, dances almost not at all. Like many of Miss Matthews' leading men, Mr. Nares seems frightened of women. David Niven is credited as an extra in what is supposed to be his first appearance onscreen, but I didn't spot him. Henry Koster is co-credited with the script in which the idiot plotting is barely justified and then ignored. I enjoyed it.
  • Jessie Matthews was a very talented actress, singer, dancer and comedienne whose career in the limelight of films was short. She made 14 movies in the 1930s, most of which were very good and showcased her diverse talents. The rest of her 33 film and TV credits are spread out and spaced over five decades. For some reason for which I have yet to read a reasonable explanation, her popularity ended with World War II, and she never had another comedy or musical vehicle to star in or even have a significant part in.

    Matthews did entertain Allied troops at home during the war, and she continued stage and local performances after the war. In the 1970s, she found some success in TV series and shows. But that was mostly in acting and voice work that didn't use her many talents.

    I have watched several of the films that Matthews made, and she is very good in each one - superb in some. But not all of the films themselves have been that good. "There Goes the Bride" is one of those. Without Matthews, this would be a total flop. The plot is very simple, but the screenplay is very weak and the rest of the entire cast are poor. Owen Nares, who plays the male lead, Max, is so wooden that he often seems to be walking on stilts in the slightly jerky motion when he moves. His character is so indecisive most of the time, that one looks to Matthews' Annette Marquand for the sparkle and life in any and every scene.

    While the movie is clearly meant to be a comedy, it has dark overtones in its stagy appearance. So much of the story takes place in Max's home, and with just the two characters, that the mostly despondent-acting Max drags the film down. The rest of the cast are mostly forgettable. Carol Goodner plays Cora, Max's fiancé. Jerry Verno plays Clark, his chauffeur. Winifred Oughton is the housekeeper, and Lawrence Hanray plays the police chief. David Niven, Basil Radford and George Zucco have bit or uncredited parts such that I didn't notice or recognize them.

    Matthews has a couple of good songs, including one toward the end with full orchestra, that liven the film up some. But for her, this film wouldn't rate more than three stars. Nor would it be a comedy. About the only people who would stay with this film very long would be fans of Jessie Matthews and die-hard old-time movie buffs (such as me, in both instances).

    Here are the best of very few lines of any consequence in this film.

    Max, "Well, if you're a thief, I'm a fool." Annette, "You could be a fool without my being a thief." (The very next line spoken by Max is an example of the poor script for this film - it should end with her comment there, but instead, Max has another lame line.) Max, "That's very, very true. But I don't want to be one."

    Annette, "What are you doing?" Max, "Now, you're going to remain in here. I'm not going to let you loose again. I have a moral responsibility - to the public."

    Cora, to the police chief, "She stole my dress." Police Chief, "Where is it now?" Cora, "Where I left it." Police Chief, "Where you left it?" Cora, "She stole my fiancé." Police Chief, "Well, that's not a crime. That's a woman's business."
  • This is Jessie Matthews second sound film.Whilst she exhibits much gusto and enthusiasm she rather overacts at time and her technique is lacking.I was fortunate enough to see her give a lecture with Michael Balcon at the NFT some 40 years ago.She explained that it was Victor Saville who had helped to give her the confidence to appear in front of the cameras.Anyway having said that she is rather oddly matched with a rather stuffy Owen Nares who was 17 years her senior at the time.Nares was a popular leading man of the 20s and 30s and who was by this time heading into the twilight of his screen career.There are some enjoyable,if unmemorable musical numbers.There is only one brief dance from Jessie.This film was issued as part of the "British Classics Collection" some years ago,and is still to be purchased second hand.If you are a fan of Jessie Matthews or of 30s films it is worth seeing,if only to observe a talent in embryo
  • Jessie Matthews has a couple of nice songs to sing and she dances briefly, but There Goes The Bride can hardly be considered one of her better films.

    Jessie is cast as a young bride who runs away on the eve of her wedding, a wedding that she's being hammerlocked into by her father because she's marrying some guy her dad does business with. More of a merger than a marriage.

    She runs off to the continent, but has her bag and money stolen and worse is accused of being a thief herself. Her accuser is Owen Nares and with that old Matthews charm worms her way into his house. That part gets rather silly and unreal. Topping it all off everybody thinks she's Nares intended and Carol Goodner who is the intended isn't at all pleased with that.

    It all gets sillier and sillier. I wish they had given Jessie Matthews a few more songs and dances, that might have made the film better.

    David Niven is supposed to be in this film, more than likely in the party scene. Tried to spot him and thought I might have.

    There Goes The Bride isn't a horrible film, but Jessie Matthews had much better to come.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Jessie Matthews made one wonderful film (Evergreen) and several lightweight, moderately amusing ones. But this is an utter atrocity. She is given very little opportunity to dance (she was a nice enough singer, but an exquisite dancer), and no dancing partner.

    The leading man, Owen Nares, looks and acts like a stuffed shirt, and the plot is not just lightweight but so ridiculous that one becomes irritated by its contempt for the audience. Jessie plays a bride who runs away on the day of her wedding because she never wanted to marry the groom (a wedding would help her father financially). She has to dodge people who are looking for her and will forcibly make her return and go through with the wedding. What kind of sense does this make? A forced marriage is invalid, and forcibly taking someone from where they are is kidnaping. And why would the groom want to marry a woman who doesn't want him? Owen Nares at first mistake her for a thief and threatens to call the police, then decides to keep her with him, in his home (he has no sexual designs on her, and is insulted when she suggests he might). This makes as little sense as the rest.

    Despite what the other commenters say, there are no funny lines. The script is as dull as it is inane. The whole thing seems to come from the world of very primitive musical comedy in which people would act in a silly or naughty way, even if it made no sense, and men would get excited by seeing girls show their legs.
  • skiddoo16 August 2016
    Warning: Spoilers
    It wasn't perfect, and the print I saw even less so however I didn't count it down for that, but I wouldn't mind watching it again some time soon. I particularly liked the silliness of the explanations to the fiancée about who the runaway bride was and why she was in the kitchen. Another choice moment was one woman wearing the other woman's dress, and what better way to usurp her place! This movie had some very inventive comedic ideas.

    It was most definitely a farce and many of the plot points were therefore ridiculous. Yes, of course, she could just have said she wasn't going to be married, but clearly she wasn't the type to face the music and do the mature thing. He could have either turned her over to the police or walked on and ignored her but clearly he was intrigued by her and loved to rescue a damsel in distress, whether on a train or in the Alps. We saw the same in It Happened One Night when a spoiled, disruptive woman met a man with a hidden yen for romantic adventure.

    The movie appeared more modern to me in its look than many from its year, perhaps because it was British and the main characters and set were not extremely fashionable, in a Hollywood sense--this wasn't a movie draped in cinema satin starring a platinum blonde with penciled brows. (The big exception to that was her dancing which struck me as Charleston via Josephine Baker. The hands near waist, elbows forward, was apparently very popular in modeling and was shown in many movies of the period but I'd never seen it used quite this way in dance before and frankly I'm not entirely sure how she moved like that.) The French setting gave it a difference from the usual US fare, too, with a French maid who could actually have done the work rather than being employed to merely look pretty.

    The British view of the French as people who were willing to "sell" their offspring in a business deal was also used in The Forsyte Saga, published from 1906 through 1921. That aspect didn't appear in It Happened One Night for the same reason that reviewers of this movie thought it made no sense. In that era you only saw an American woman in a movie pressured into marrying a rich man she despised if there was a threat to her loved ones if she refused to go along with it: bankruptcy, disgrace, jail, or all three.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This British film begins with a father practically selling his daughter to a man in order to make a big business deal take place. Not too surprisingly, the bride soon runs away—after all, there appears to be no romance whatsoever—just a sleazy business deal.

    Shortly after this interesting start, the film falls apart for me. That's because the runaway bride is now on a train and it sure looks as if she's trying to rob a man. So what does the man do when he awakens? Does he call the police? Well, considering she refuses to account for what she was doing or who she was, his actual course of action in the film makes absolutely no sense—none. Instead of turning her in, he takes her with him and gives her 24 hours to tell him who she is! When she does tell him the truth, she inexplicably gets him to agree not only NOT to turn her in but hide her for 24 hours—at which point, he new husband will be on his way to South America. Who thought this was a viable plot for a movie?! Certainly not any sane person and the film completely lost me at this point. A radical rewrite was needed, as the plot simply made no sense at all and the film was a waste of time.
  • josephemeryprank28 February 2024
    Although this is a talkie it has some silent film stars in it and it still has a very silent movie feel to it. The music, for one, and the overacting.

    It would have worked much better if it had been a silent.

    Never seen Jessie Matthews in anything before and she looks really cute, is built like Olive Oyl, and can clearly dance.

    But that voice. Horrors! So plummy she makes Joyce Grenfell sound like something off EastEnders. It's absolutely unbearable and adds to the fact that, at least in this film, she just can't act. Overacting like in a silent film. It really is excruciating.

    Owen Nares as the male lead reminds me of Basil Fawlty and everyone has those unbearable cut-glass accents.

    The one bright spot was. Roland Culver as a drunk Jacques - an absolute delight.

    One of the songs rips off 'Makin' Whoopee'.