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  • An enticing French girl (Danielle Darrieux) named Nicole has no employ and without rent . Then , she's helped by an ex-actress (Broderick) and a maitre of New York City Hotel (Mischa Auer). They are planning a plot for snare a rich hubby and catch the eyes on Bill (Louis Hayward ). The scheme works and the engagement is quickly publicized in the newspapers . But a Bill's friend (Douglas Fairbanks J.R) knows the true intentions and the plans may be thwarted .

    The movie is a well acted and fast-paced screwball comedy with several giggles , joyful , tongue-in-cheek and very entertaining . Besides , the sympathetic relationship between lovely Darrieux and gallant Fairbanks into the countryside house is similar to developed between Claudette Colbert and Clark Cable in ¨It happened one night¨ (Frank Capra) . Danielle Darrieux as the French young girl is top-notch , she's a fascinating comedian . Her playing as an attractive and enjoyable French young girl demonstrates experience as future first star , as happened in her unforgettable role as countess in ¨ Five fingers¨(Joseph L. Mankiewicz) . She nowadays follows acting even at ninety years old . The two partners -Douglas Fairbanks and Louis Hayward- are ordinary heroes of adventure cinema, here turned into a sympathetic comedian actors and both are awesome . The veteran Mischa Auer , as always , plays the relief comic role as a likable head-waiter. Furthermore , Mary Martin's film debut . The picture was well directed by Henry Koster . The movie will appeal to classic comedy moviegoers. Rating : Better than average and amusing .
  • French film star Danielle Darrieux made her American debut in The Rage in Paris. She plays a fortune seeking gal who's set her cap for Louis Hayward, but has Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. running interference for his good friend.

    She got good notices for The Rage in Paris and deservedly so. She made the decision however to go back to her own country and got to spend four years with some uninvited guests. Who knows what direction her career would have taken had she stayed here.

    Anyway, Danielle is pretty but broke, desperate for a job she grabs a ticket from an employment office for what she thinks is a modeling job and gets to Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.'s office and proceeds to take her clothes off. She beats a hasty retreat however when she realizes the big boo-boo she made with Fairbanks, somewhat amused.

    Later on gal pal Helen Broderick and her friend head waiter Mischa Auer set her up with a suite at a really swanky hotel to trap millionaire Louis Hayward. It works, but he's a friend of Fairbanks as well.

    I think you can see the complications and if you're a fan of Thirties screwball comedy you know how this one will turn out.

    Darrieux is fresh and appealing and who would't want to Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Louis Hayward chasing you albeit for different reasons. Broderick carries on with the gal pal's best friend part that later on Eve Arden would perfect.

    The film itself was photographed though in that sometimes annoying sepia tint process. Sometimes that serves in good stead, the best example is Errol Flynn's The Sea Hawk when Flynn and his pirate crew are in the Panamanian jungle. In The Rage of Paris it starts out in sepia than switches to regular black and white and then back to sepia for no discernible reason.

    Still though I think that even today's viewers will find the elegant world that Fairbanks and Hayward move in still quite appealing.
  • The title of this film, "The Rage of Paris," may seem to most viewers at first not to fit the plot. But with a premise that pops up occasionally in the movie, it soon dawns on one (this viewer, finally) that it refers to a theme of the film that a woman's drive in gay Paris should be to snag herself a wealthy husband. OK! So, that out of the way, we have here a very enjoyable comedy with some good early film stars. The plot is fun, the acting is very good, and the direction and sets are good.

    Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Louis Hayward are very good in their respective roles as Jim Trevor and Bill Duncan. Most moviegoers know about Fairbanks, but few people today probably remember the name Louis Hayward. He did have a short leading period in Hollywood and later moved to television, but his star never rose very high. Hayward was born in South Africa and educated in England. He came to the U. S. in 1935 for a Broadway play, and soon moved to Hollywood.

    This is also one of the few American-produced films that stars Danielle Darrieux. This demure and versatile star of stage and screen was the leading actress in France for much of the eight decades during which she acted. Darrieux flew to Hollywood to make "The Rage of Paris" in 1938, and returned to France after it was released. She stayed there during the war and made three films through 1942, but nothing after the Nazi occupation. All were comedies. She resumed work in 1946, and has played starring roles in drama, suspense-thrillers, romance and comedies.

    She appeared is some other notable English films - made in Great Britain or on the continent, so Americans and others may have seen her in some of these. "Five Fingers" was a great 20th Century Fox espionage thriller filmed around Europe. In 2002, at age 85, she won honors for her role in "8 Women," a musical comedy produced in French and English. Darrieux continued acting until 2010, at age 93.

    One aspect of this film that stands out and is most enjoyable is the acting of the support cast. Mischa Auer played Mike, the head waiter. He was a Russian-born actor who had a distinguished film career, mostly in Europe, but with some films in the U. S. His English was quite good, and his accent was a natural for the many different supporting and leading roles he played as a man of various nationalities. He did mostly comedy films, but was equally good in serious roles.

    Helen Broderick played Gloria Patterson. This long-time comedienne acted with some top stars over the years. She was best as the wisecracking sidekick of the lead female star - as in this film. Broderick was married to another vaudeville and stage performer, Lester Crawford. They were the parents of Oscar-winning actor Broderick Crawford (her last name and her husband's last name), who was born in 1911.

    Here are the best comedy lines from this film.

    Nicole de Cortillion, " Why are you always so good to me?" Gloria Patterson, "Oh, I suppose you have to be good for something, and my dog died a week before you moved in here."

    Mike - The Head Waiter, "Uh, Uh, young lady in your party forgot her wrap." Jim Trevor, "It wasn't my party, and she's not a lady." Mike, "Oh, I'm sorry, sir. But I'm sure you know your friends better than I do."

    Nicole, "He meant I was dishonest." Gloria, "Darling, all women are dishonest. If they weren't, the world would be divided into two classes of people - old maids and bachelors."

    Mike, "I started out to get a restaurant and I'll be lucky if I wind up with a ham sandwich."

    Jim Trevor, "Did you hear that, Rigley?" Rigley, "Did you want me to, sir?" Trevor, "I do." Rigley, "I did." Trevor, "Good."

    Jim Trevor, "Rigley!" Rigley, "Yes, sir?" Trevor, "If this young lady is not here when I get back, you're fired." Rigley, "Thank you, sir."

    Trevor, "Now, you do as you're told. You're on borrowed time anyway. I should have fired you last Tuesday." Rigley, "Well, why don't you fire me now, sir?" Trevor, "Well, if you do a good job tonight, perhaps I will." Rigley, "Oh, thank you very much, sir."
  • Petey-1024 October 2000
    Danielle Darrieux plays a French woman called Nicole who is desperately looking for a job to get some cash.Without any luck. But she finds a better way to get rich.Nicole gets a rich man called Bill Duncan (Louis Hayward).Bill's friend Jim Trevor (Douglas Fairbanks Jr.) knows Nicole's nasty little plan and tries to stop it.The Rage of Paris from 1938 is nice comedy with good actors.Beautiful Danielle Darrieux is perfect in her role.Same thing with Douglas Fairbanks Jr.Mr. Fairbanks died last May at the age of 90.If you want to see a good old Hollywood comedy this is a movie for you to see.The movie has a happy ending and I'm a nuts for happy endings.
  • After becoming an international sensation in "Mayerling" (1936), pretty French Danielle Darrieux (as Nicole de Cortillion) arrives in America. Mistaken for a nude model, Ms. Darrieux gets caught in the middle of undress by debonair Douglas Fairbanks Jr. (as Jim Trevor), who gets to utter the amusing line "I'm all ears" (while looking his Gable best). How director Henry Koster gets Mr. Fairbanks to keep his eyes glued upon Darrieux' face after she takes her shirt off is good acting.

    When Darrieux is about to be evicted from her room, she "adopted" as a "niece" by matronly Helen Broderick (as Gloria Patterson). "The only job for a woman is marriage," Ms. Broderick tells Darrieux, "There's nothing wrong with you that a nice rich husband couldn't cure." Broderick conspires to marry Darrieux and millionaire Louis Hayward (as Bill Duncan), with the help of busboy turned head waiter Mischa Auger (as Mike). But, Fairbanks has other plans for the French beauty.

    ****** The Rage of Paris (6/9/38) Henry Koster ~ Danielle Darrieux, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Helen Broderick, Louis Hayward
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is a very enjoyable and slight comedy. While I hardly agree with some reviews who see it as the ultimate "screwball comedy" (it doesn't even come close), it it certainly a fun little move worth your time.

    Danielle Darrieux stars in one of her only American films as a poor girl desperately looking for a job. In a cute scene, she sneaks into a modeling agency and grabs a slip of paper indicating where a modeling job is--but she accidentally grabs the wrong one. The paper she got is NOT the address of a photographer, but nice guy Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. The job she wanted involved undressing and Fairbanks was VERY surprised when she entered his office and started taking off her clothes! After a moment, he called in his employees to watch the show and Darrieux finally realizes this is NOT the photographer's studio! Louis Hayward is the nice rich guy she sets her sights on, but the plan begins to come apart when she meets Hayward's best friend,...Fairbanks! He immediately recognizes that she is the poor lady looking for a modeling job and NOT the rich Parisian lady Hayward thinks she is. But, Hayward is so smitten that he won't believe Fairbanks. So, Fairbanks kidnaps Darrieux to prevent him from marrying her.

    The scenes where Fairbanks and Darrieux spend time together in a secluded cabin are pretty cute. Their chemistry together improves and it's obvious to everyone in the audience that they are destined to wed. It takes about another 20 minutes for this to occur, but the film concludes with a predictable, yet satisfying conclusion.

    Darrieux is pretty enjoyable in the film--being extremely cute though hardly the vamp! About the only negative is that her accent was so heavy, it was occasionally difficult to understand all her lines. Fairbanks was, as usual, great and it is hard to understand why his Hollywood career didn't take off more than it did.

    The film gets points for originality, a breezy script and decent acting. The film, though, is not a laugh out loud comedy, but a mild farce worth seeing.

    A short time later, the poor and desperate Darrieux is taken in by Helen Broderick--who tells her to forget about the job and try to find a nice rich guy to marry instead. With the help of Mischa Auer, the devise a scheme to have Darrieux pose as a rich woman (thanks to Auer's money he's saved up to open a restaurant) and bag a rich fella.
  • This is basically a formulaic romcom with predictable beats, but sparkles from the start with Darrieux's unforced sexy comic energy. Her accidental strip-tease is both credible and hilarious; her slight embarrassment at the hustle she finds herself promoting makes her subsequent attempts to pull it off all the more endearing. She shares the screen here with Douglas Fairbanks Jr. but it's pretty much her film. Sweet and fun.
  • What a discovery! My wife and I were perusing a Madrid flea market and came across a few American films, released cheaply and given Spanish subtitles. This one had Douglas Fairbanks Jr and neither of us could make out what film it was. It turned out this was not because of the Spanish title translation but because this seems to be a genuinely forgotten film. Goodness knows why because it is an absolute gem and the perfect screwball comedy. Fairbanks is fine but the gorgeous Danielle Darrieux is amazing, a sheer delight throughout. The dialogue sparkles as much as she does and the only reason few will know her name is that this is one of the very few non French films she made, even though she is still making a contribution to French film, even now. The story of a pretty young thing wanting to marry rich is hardly original but take my word for it this is one of the very best.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This Danielle Darrieux/Junior Fairbanks vehicle emerges as a passably pleasing but very lightweight romantic comedy, unevenly acted by some of the players, particularly DD herself, who always seems to be playing at half steam, even when she is the focus of attention. In fact, she actually seems to figure in just about every scene, but she signally lacks most of the sparkle she brought to her French films. Although the movie engenders a fair amount of interest, the actual laughs are few and far between. Also some of the plot twists are too artificially contrived. Henry Koster's uneven direction doesn't help. Some scenes, especially at the beginning are paced too slowly. Henry was obviously waiting for late-comers to take their seats, but why should the rest of the audience have to suffer for the tardiness of the few? This one is available on a very good Alpha DVD.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Danielle Darrieux was just 21 years old with 27 films behind her when she went to Hollywood for the first time. She or her connections chose well and she lights up the screen in this charming screwball comedy which cast her opposite Douglas Fairbanks Junior and Louis Hayward with outstanding comic support from Helen Broderick, Mischa Auer and Harry Davenport in a smaller but significant role. Screwball comedy did, of course, have its own rules and was not designed to stand up to scrutiny under a strong light but if we accept improbabilities as gospel then this is one of the most deft examples of the genre and a personal triumph for Darrieux who proved she could carry a Hollywood movie as well as she could a French - and in that same year she shot Abuse de Confiance with her then husband Henri Decoin (the third of nine films they would make together both during and after their marriage). At 21 she had still to develop from the delightful ingenue to the fine dramatic actress she became; in France she churned out stuff like this by the yard, all of the highest quality and in her first At Bat in Hollywood she showed non-French moviegoers just what they had been missing. A near-great movie. Catch it if you can.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    While leading actors Danielle Darrieux, Louis Hayward and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. are all excellent, I can't decide who I preferred between the two best actors in the film, Helen Broderick and Mischa Auer. They are basically playing the same character they've always played in these type of films, but they are so funny and so likeable that it's hard to dismiss similarities in roles they played before and after.

    When Auer makes a funny face or reacts to the scheme that he's involved in with Broderick I choose him, but then Broderick makes a statement on the phoniness of humanity and how all of humans are liars, and her examples of how threatens to take her up to that spot.

    The film deals with a poor French girl (Darrieux) who is desperately trying to get a job as a model, after nearly being house she's living at begins to scheme with Broderick and Auer to pretend to be a wealthy French socialite. living in luxury at a top hotel, she meets wealthy Hayward protect her to the symphony. While there, she sees him Greek his friend Fairbanks whom she had earlier had an unsuccessful modeling audition with.

    Before long, the two men are fighting for her affections, and well it's pretty obvious who she will choose, you can tell it's going to be a tough decision because both men are good pics. Fortunately, she does fall in love with both at one point so it's obvious that she is not your common screwball comedy gold digger.

    Filmed on the vacant sets obviously from a Deanna durbin musical, this is universal best screwball comedy after "My Man Godfrey". The charming Darrieux isn't flighty like Carole Lombard or wisecracking like Jean Harlow or calculating like Jean Arthur, but just a lovely young lady looking for a chance in life and ending up in a screwy situation.

    Fairbanks and Hayward are both handsome, and in a smaller part, Henry Davenport is lovable as the caretaker of Fairbanks' country home. But Broderick and Auer are so commanding and steel the film with little effort. Excellent art direction, beautiful gowns and a lovely musical score aide the film greatly. This is one that I can see myself returning to fairly regularly as it has every element that makes great screwball comedies stand the test of time.
  • Danielle Darrieux and friend Helen Broderick are jobless and have plans on marrying men with money. At least Danielle does. Helen tells her "that ship has sailed for me, dearie." But in trying to get a job as a model, Danielle discovers she has to wear nothing but drapes. No, she says. But when someone else has no qualms about it, she reconsiders and snatches the company card off the executive's desk. The only trouble is she picked up the wrong card in her haste. She goes to Douglas Fairbanks' work and thinks she's in the right place and starts to undress! When Douglas sees this, we find that his character has none and that's he's no gentleman. He's only loving this and gazes on and on… She eventually leaves and she and Helen find a name in the news who's scandalously rich. They set their sights on him with some financial assistance from waiter and friend Mischa Auer. Posing as a rich socialite from Paris, she innocently meets Louis Hayward, who just so happens to know Doug. The rest of the film is about Doug warning Louis about the kind of woman Danielle is, because he knows better. Or, does he? Right from the very beginning, this film is flamboyantly funny and tres, tres chic. I found this off Amazon and am so glad I did. How could I not know about such a fun and entertaining film as this, which is worthy of being compared to "The Awful Truth"! It was sweet and romantic one moment and then uproariously funny the next. I don't have to tell you what happens. Can't you guess? Can't you? With zippy one-liners and a great cast, including Charles Coleman, who made a career of being a man's man in films and Harry Davenport, this is one screwball comedy to discover today.
  • kelly-gaudreau29 July 2021
    6/10
    Dated
    Of course, the film is dated. However, I could imagine myself sitting on the couch as a kid and watching this and enjoying it. We didn't have cable back then.
  • What can you say about a movie that has so little to offer that you got so distracted that you don't remember anything but the unusual lack of humor from Mischa Auer, or the older comic relief woman not being funny,

    I really like Douglas Fairbanks Jr. When he's not buclking swash. He still hasn't topped his performances in Union Depot or Little Cesar.

    The rest of the cast are complete ciphers.

    Now I have 200 characters to use up. The sets were OK. It's hard to go wrong with DECO, especially back when it was just "new furniture". There's something about women's clothes of the early 30s that is lacking here. I have no idea what it is.
  • Although it is rarely cited by critics, The Rage of Paris is one of the breeziest and most charming of all of Hollywood's screwball comedies. It stars the lovely French superstar Danielle Darrieux in her greatest American role and second-generation Hollywood legend Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Screwball films are famous for their attempts to push the censors to the limit. And The Rage of Paris does this amazingly. This type of comedy came about as a result of the Production Code, and the screenwriters and directors tried to go as far towards risqué as possible in them.

    This picture begins with a young wanna-be model, Nicole (Darrieux). She is given an assignment to pose for a photographer, but she objects to the clothing (actually the lack of clothing) she is being asked to pose with. So the boss asks another model to come into his office to offer her the job. Nicole overhears the salary the model is going to get, and she changes her mind. While the boss and the new model discuss the job, Nicole sneaks over to the boss' desk and grabs what she thinks is the address of the photographer. But, she grabs the wrong address. Instead, she winds up at the office of Mr. Trevor (Fairbanks). Told by his secretary to "make herself comfortable" until Mr. Trevor arrives, she misconstrues and is in the process of undressing when he enters. It is perhaps the finest "meet-cute" in film history. When she finally realizes she got the wrong address, she leaves the office and returns to her dump-of-a boarding house, where her best friend Gloria lives.

    Both desperate for money, Gloria and Nicole enlist the help of a head-waiter, Mike, to help them out. He has been saving some money to open his own restaurant, and he has $3,000 in the bank. Gloria proposes a scheme: use that money to buy Nicole some nice clothes, put her up in the hotel, and try to set her up with a rich husband; then, if they succeed, they will return his $3,000 and throw in the extra $2,000 he needs to open his restaurant. Reluctantly, Mike goes along with it.

    The man they decide to "catch" with their beautiful bait is Bill Duncan, who "has ten million dollars and owns half of Canada." In a hilarious meeting, Nicole "accidentally" mistakes Bill for her old next-door neighbor. She runs up to him, kisses him, and talks excitedly in French. He tells her she is mistaken, and, embarrassed, she drops a glove and runs back to her room. Bill picks up the glove and begins to follow Nicole...the scheme has worked, and the next thing they know, Bill takes Nicole to the opera. It looks as though everything is going according to plan.

    At the opera, Bill sees his best friend whom he hasn't met in a long time. He brings him back to his box, anxious to introduce him to his French aristocratic girlfriend. But it just so happens that his best friend is James Trevor, the same man Nicole was accidentally stripping for three weeks earlier. Instead of revealing her secret to his friend, James decides to see how the situation plays out.

    Eventually, he tries to tell Bill about Nicole, but Bill believes James is lying and only wants the beauty for himself. In haste, Bill agrees to marry the girl. At their engagement-announcement dinner, however, James 'kidnaps' her. He takes her to his secluded country home, and the two fall in love.

    She hitch-hikes back to the city, where Bill has found out the truth about her. And since he will no longer marry her, the door is open for James!

    The story is typical of the times. Once Nicole is disrobed in front of Mr. Trevor, the audience knows they will fall in love. It's inevitable. But it is also so much fun watching it happen!

    Furthermore, the entire cast is sensational. In fact, it is one of the most perfectly cast films of all time. Towering above all is the delectable Danielle Darrieux! She is absolutely ideal, using her continental French personality to drive men mad. The way she dictates to Gloria what she wants to eat for breakfast is lovely. It is such a simple moment, yet the actress manages to turn it into one of the most memorable parts of the film. Still, the highlight is her pouty foibles at the home of James Trevor. Her facial expressions when she sees the two-sided photograph and her experience with the troublesome window are totally captivating.

    Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. is the quintessential debonair leading man. His performance here is one of his finest. His concern for his friend, as well as his slow albeit sure fall into Nicole's charms, make the character quite memorable. As Gloria, Helen Broderick is the cynical sidekick par excellence. And Mischa Auer suits the role of the headwaiter, Mike, so well, that it's hard to imagine another actor doing the part. Louis Hayward, playing Bill Trevor, gives one of the film's finest performances. And Harry Davenport has a part in the funniest portion of the movie, as the eccentric caretaker of James' country house.

    The sets are art deco dreams, particularly the hotel rooms and the hotel room doors. Darrieux's magnificent wardrobe accents the star's unbelievable figure, too. Quite honestly, Danielle Darrieux might be the most beautiful woman who has ever lived, and this film, made when she was a young and glorious twenty years old, captures her joie de vivre for all time. The direction is swift and deft, but it's the script that really provides the basis for the film's charm. The writing and scenario are both perfect, and at about 78 minutes, the film is fast and fun.

    Go to the ends of the earth to find this film. Buy it, watch it over and over again, and pass it on to everyone you know. It is the one film that will turn just about anybody on to classic films, and it ranks up top with Bringing Up Baby, The Awful Truth, It Happened One Night, and The Lady Eve as one of the five greatest screwball comedies of all time.
  • Henry Koster, a director I know about less than I should, has HARVEY, THE BISHOP'S WIFE among his credits, but THE RAGE OF PARIS is the best work I have seen from him yet.

    He keeps a steady hand over a screwball comedy that could easily spiral out of control by juggling the extraordinarily beautiful and sexy Danielle Darrieux opposite handsome Douglas Fairbanks Jr., with Louis Hayward, Mischa Auer, Harry Davenport and Helen Broderick also in top form. Excellent zany script by Bruce Manning and Felix Jackson fuels a polished final product that also boasts above average cinematography by ever reliable Joseph Valentine.

    In all honesty, I loved every minute of THE RAGE OF PARIS just as I have always loved Danielle Darrieux, one of the most enticing women I have ever watched on the silver screen. In real life, she would soon go through a period of relationships with Gestapo and other German military officers in Paris that had the French resistance label her a Nazi collaborator and target her for execution.

    Thankfully, that did not happen and she would rise to acting of the loftiest quality in MADAME DE, Lady Chatterley's Lover, LE SEPTIÉME CIEL, LES YEUX DE L'AMOUR, 5 FINGERS, and more.

    Recommended viewing for any lover of comedy. 9/10.
  • A classic comedy about a girl whose scheme to marry into money is thwarted. Danielle Darrieux is lovely and Douglas Fairbanks Jr his usual charming self, but the whole thing just lacks oomph. It's one I won't watch again.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    What's great about THE RAGE OF Paris is how effortlessly Fairbanks and Darrieux play off each other. In their first scene together, she takes off her blouse (yes, it's that kind of classic film)– she's a model and thinks he might be interested in using her for a photo shoot. He has no intention of hiring her, but since she's begun to expose herself to him, he allows her to continue. And he lets a few other men in the office look on. It's not as sexist as it may seem. It's all done very tastefully, and the point is that she's charming and naive in a world of wolves, I mean men.

    Of course, we know these two characters are fated to fall in love with each other. But there are complications that get in the way of their blossoming relationship. Since she does not get hired to model, she must try to find another way to pay her rent and survive. Two older friends, played by Helen Broderick and Mischa Auer, help her snare a rich husband in the form of Louis Hayward. And this scheme seems to be succeeding, until Fairbanks re- enters her life and tries to stop her gold digging. Is it because he doesn't want Hayward to be screwed over, or is it because he wants the girl for himself?
  • Danielle Darrieux is "Nicole".. trying to get a job in a model agency. (This seems to be about the first film Darrieux did in the US... her earlier films were in France. ) The awesome Helen Broderick is in here as Nicole's roommate "Gloria". Broderick was so amazing as the sarcastic, married best-friend in all the 1930s films, like Top Hat. Then up pops Doug Fairbanks as "Jim", who had known Nicole before, and might spoil everything. There's a funny scene where the head waiter (Mischa Auer) double-talks into the menu as he works in a conversation with Gloria while talking about the nightly specials. This is just "okay". a long, boring scene with the butler, while she does a few magic tricks. the plot kind of goes all over the place, and doesn't flow as smoothly as most of the films from this period. the whole second half is just annoying. Shows on Moonlight Movies channel, if you really want to see it. A disappointment, since i usually enjoy films with Broderick and Fairbanks. Directed by Henry Koster, who had worked with many greats.
  • A decent enough screwball comedy, Rage owes more than a little to The Awful Truth. Danielle Darieux wants a modeling job and accidentally winds up stripping for businessman Douglas Fairbanks Jr (thinking he's a photographer; he's not). She then gets involved in a complex ploy to marry rich Canadian Louis Hayward, in the process helping head waiter Mischa Auer get his own restaurant. Turns out that Hayward and Fairbanks are friends and Fairbanks thinks she's a cheap trollop and so tries to stop it all from happening with decent enough comic results. A few decent French jokes but terrible last minute romance between Darrieux and Fairbanks leaves a bad taste in the mouth of the discerning viewer. Helen Broderick's role as Darrieux's protector comes off as endearing at first but eventually feels pathetic, as she remains uncoupled at the end of this comic work, never a particularly fortunate place to be.