Add a Review

  • Warning: Spoilers
    I had first read about this movie when I read an article on Buster Keaton in the encyclopedia of movie comedians called "The Funsters" nearly 35 years ago. It mentioned he was good as the bus driver and having now seen the whole thing on YouTube, I highly agree especially when he does his facial reactions and also when he smiles at his last scene! Edward Everett Horton is also good as the inventor with an adult daughter (Louise Allbritton) and many pre-teen boys who all drag him reluctantly from Waterville to the title place to get his invention of an inflatable raft approved for a patent. On the train going there, they run into a guy played by Jon Hall who proves important to them later on. There are a couple of players I have to mention that are also noteworthy: first, Irene Ryan-way before becoming Granny on "The Beverly Hillbillies"-is quite funny as a border who doesn't realize she's in the wrong place and Eric Blore-yes, the same one who's appeared with Horton in several of the Astaire/Rogers musicals-as the house-retained butler who never leaves the house they buy despite his constantly being fired! Okay, I think I've said enough so on that note, San Diego I Love You is highly recommended. P.S. This is the same Louise Allbritton who I just watched in This Is the Life which she made directly before this one.
  • And by Huttonesque I am talking about Betty Hutton, who, at the time this movie was made, was riding high over at Paramount as a bubbly blonde singing comedienne. Universal, with not nearly as much money as Paramount, has Louise Albritton in this role as Virginia McCooley, the oldest of five children - the rest are boys much younger than she - whose father is a widowed schoolteacher, Philip McCooley (Edward Everett Horton). Dad has invented a one man inflatable life raft, and he would like to sell it to the Navy, but is too afraid of leaving his safe teaching job. So Virginia quits dad's job for him, ends their lease, and moves their furniture to San Diego - without notifying dad first.

    So off this family goes to San Diego, at that time the headquarters of the Pacific Fleet, and during wartime there is practically a no vacancy sign at the city limits, it is so packed with sailors and government personnel. The McCooleys don't know any of this, they are just feeling their way through getting a place and getting dad's invention accepted by the navy. But there is another road block besides housing. On the train to San Diego the McCooleys managed to anger someone who happens to be a very important person - the owner of the railroad, the third richest person in the US, and the arbiter of what inventions get accepted by the Navy's civilian research branch. And this guy, a young eligible bachelor, does not trust women because he figures they are all after his fortune. So if Virginia hopes to make inroads with him she will have to tread carefully.

    With Buster Keaton as a bus driver who is in a rut, Irene Ryan as somebody who mistakes the McCooley home as a boarding house and is determined to hold on tight to what she thinks is her new room, and Eric Blore once again gets to make Horton's life miserable as an incompetent and unwanted gentleman's gentleman.

    It is funny independent of the time in which it is made, but it is also great as a history lesson about life on the homefront in 1944. Highly recommended.

    As for Louise Albritton, Universal's own Betty Hutton, you may have never heard of her before, but not because she hit the skids. She married in 1946 and eventually dropped out of show business to raise a family in the post war baby boom tradition, dying in 1979 after 33 years of marriage. A much happier ending to her tale than to poor Betty Hutton's tragic life.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Four young boys and one grown-up piece of female work. That is the issue of inventor Edward Everett Horton who is the zaniest of the lot, inventing a self-inflating life raft that sinks under the weight of human mass. The neighbors are relieved when they must go away so Horton can demonstrate the raft to the government. Poor Jon Hall is given the displeasure of sharing his compartment on the train to San Diego where Louise Albritton, as the dizzy daughter causes all sorts of calamity wherever she goes, eventually winning millionaire Hall over in spite of her ability to crate havoc wherever she goes.

    This deliciously funny farce takes on big city overcrowding in the face of war and what the war does not need is somebody like the well-meaning Albritton on its side. On a bike, she's dangerous on her own small town street and in a big city, she stirs up the populace everywhere she goes. A black eye received accidentally results in a public riot and a bus driver decides out of the blue to change his route after ten years thanks to her.

    The kids are very funny, annoying Hall on the train, we living neighbors wacky with their nonsense, and turning a large cashier's check into a paper airplane. Irene Ryan and Eric Blore add more comic misery, with Ryan going to the wrong address after renting a room, and Blore refusing to leave as the retained butler after Albritton buys a huge white elephant mansion Horton does not wish to move into. This is war era farce at its funniest, and if I would not want to encounter this family in person, they are adorable on screen.
  • Terrific little comedy from Universal. I didn't expect much and watched only to see the great Buster Keaton in a supporting role. But this is a solid and wacky little comedy about a pushy daughter (Louise Allbritton) and her inventor father (Edward Everett Horton) in their attempts to crash the corporate headquarters of a company in San Diego run by a reclusive millionaire (Jon Hall). The situations may be very TV but in 1945 this was fresh material. But the cast is tops and saves this one.

    Eric Blore is hilarious as the "family retainer." Irene Ryan as the wayward tenant is also very funny. I also spotted Almira Sessions, Florence Lake, Chester Clute, Hobart Cavanaugh, Esther Howard, Sara Selby, Dewey Robinson, Vernon Dent, and many other great character actors.

    Certainly worth a look.....
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This frivolous World War II era screwball comedy features future "Ramar of the Jungle" (1952-54) TV star Jon Hall with a mustache as John Thompson Crawford IV, the third wealthiest millionaire in America, and Louise Allbritton as Virginia McCooley, the daffy daughter of Waterville, California, high school teacher Philip McCooley (Edward Everett Horton) a widower who also has four sons. Philip has invented a portable, self-inflating life raft and overzealous Louise contacts a private wartime investment firm that funds inventions. Louise believes that Philip's invention will make them rich beyond their dreams. The first obstacle that she encounters is that the firm is located in San Diego. Instead of doing the sensible thing and taking a few days off to visit San Diego, Virginia figures out a way to give the high school her father's resignation notice so that she, she, and her four adolescent brothers uproot themselves and pack it off for San Diego. During their trip south by rail, the McCooley clan occupy Crawford's railway compartment while he is out trying to get a meal. Later, they meet him again at the agency, and he argues that Philip's life raft is defective. That doesn't keep our hearty heroine from pursuing Crawford in an effort to change his mind. Made in 1944, "San Diego, I Love You" is just the kind of fluff that audiences went for in those days after the fortunes of war had turned in favor of the Allies. Seen out of its World War II context, this lightweight nonsense might appear to be just another potboiler with a happy ending.

    "San Diego, I Love You" illustrates another example of World War II propaganda. Everything is sunny and funny, and the wealthy mingle with the masses. Where else would you expect to see a millionaire sink in a life raft in front of the press and the entire episode be treated as a joke. This wacky little comedy celebrates America's creative spirit and its fear of regimentation. In another scene, Virginia and Crawford take a bus ride and she convinces the driver, none other than comic genius Buster Keaton to deviate from the usual route with its many eyesores and take the passengers for scenic ride down the beach. There is a hilarious scene in a motel where a crowded lobby filled with customers try to get a room. During W.W. II, finding a hotel room was often out of the question because accommodations were always filled up. Jon Hall is good as the frustrated bachelor nabob who struggles to elude the clutches of gold-digging women trying to mine his fortune. Edward Everett Horton is terrific as the inventor whose initial invention proves defective. Although his life raft doesn't work, it turns out that another component of his invention wins Crawford's support. Another superfluous subplot has the McCooley clan taking in a boarder at the rambling mansion that Louise winds up buying after they arrive in San Diego. The female boarder is desperate for a room and she has nowhere else to turn. As it turns out, she goes to the wrong residence, not the house next door to the McCooley's and even more hilarity followers. The boarder who claims that she will sue the McCooley's if they try to run her off is played by none other than Irene Ryan who later became famous as Granny on CBS-TV's "The Beverly Hillbillies." Harmless fluff and lots of fun.
  • "San Diego I Love You" is a light and silly family comedy. This is a Universal film in the days when that studio was not among the Big Five. Along with Columbia and United Artists, it made up a second tier of studios. The Big Five were marked by large theater chains and big studio lots to support them. They also could pay more and sought out and got the best actors and actresses. Of course, with more studios their actors became more familiar to the public. The stars of the various studios might appear in occasional films with other studios by loan outs or other deals.

    The leads in this film are Louise Allbritton and Jon Hall. They were a couple of the leading performers of Universal at the time. Allbritton was in a number of films with other big name stars, either filmed by Universal with trades, or on loan out herself to another studio. By 1950 she moved almost exclusively into TV series and films. Jon Hall had been a leading man at Universal since 1935. He appeared in a number of swashbuckler and adventure films. Most of those are forgotten or little known in the 21st century, although a few were very good films. Hall's star began to fade in the early 1950s, and by the end of that decade his movie career was all but ended.

    One nice attribute of this film is the supporting cast. It includes Edward Everett Horton, Eric Blore and Buster Keaton.

    The date of this film is 1944, so World War II was still going strong. There's no mention of the war and no sign of it at all in this film. Considering that it takes place in San Diego, it was strange that it doesn't have scenes with many men and women in uniform. Especially the Navy, since San Diego was and is a major naval base.

    A strange scene is the bus driving on the shore. There aren't many spots where a vehicle could get onto the beach at or near San Diego. If it was filmed there and not somewhere else along the coast, it probably was Dog Beach in the NW corner of the city where the San Diego River runs through Mission valley and empties into the ocean. It's just south of the Mission Bay Channel entrance. A beach access parking lot has been there since the late 20th century, but I don't know if it was there in 1944.

    Allbritton plays a cheerful and chipper Virginia McCooley in this film. Horton is her dad, Philip, who was a high school science teacher until he came up with an invention that might have takers. Hall plays John Thompson Caldwell, the wealthy chairman of a large company that may be interested in the invention. But his character is very wooden in this film. Blore plays Nelson, the butler and handyman who goes with the house that the McCooley's buy in San Diego. Keaton plays a bus driver who has driven the exact same boring route for more than 20 years.

    Most people would probably enjoy this film. It's not raucous comedy or a barrel of laughs. It has humorous situations and a sprinkling of funny lines. Mostly, it has warmth and a light-hearted feel for a family on a new adventure.

    Here are some favorite lines.

    Philip McCooley, "You mean to tell me that you resigned for me over the telephone to the principal of the high school?" Virginia McCooley, "He thought it was a little unusual too, at first. Then I told him you were just too bashful to admit the reason."

    Philip McCooley, "What are you doing with that piece of furniture?" Moving Man, "Why, I'm growing mushrooms in it. One side, buddy."

    Virginia McCooley, "Well, why all the fuss? What does San Diego think it is - Washington, D.C.?" Hotel clerk, "Lady, we pride ourselves on having more confusion per square inch in San Diego than Washington ever heard of."
  • tacox-217 February 2007
    I watched this recently by chance- absolutely charming! Clever writing, excellent timing and completely family friendly- without seeming dated. This movie has influenced me to take more chances, enjoy life more and recommend it to my three children-ranging in age from 11 to 27. Draws attention to the coincidences in life that may not be concidences and the opportunities that we may miss if we're not watching! One of the best of its genre and generation, in my opinion. I had forgotten how clever the writing could be in some of these old classics. If this is not counted as one of the classics, it should be and certainly is in my book. I will probably buy it!
  • I was happily surprised at the enjoyment this little film provided. It could be described as a screwball comedy, I suppose, but it never gets carried away with itself and stays committed to what really amounts to a mostly subtly comedic sequence of vignettes. There are so many opportunities for this film to become just a silly and hectic hodgepodge but admirably the fantasy-like story is made to seem enjoyably plausible.

    The players are just so engaging and the little moves and bits of business exhibited by the cast, especially Louise Allbritton, are admirable. She is gorgeous and her eyes are particularly fascinating. I was particularly impressed by the restrained and excellent performance by Edward Everett Horton...his is the effort that, if not held in check, could have sunk the picture. Luckily, too, the youngsters in the film were not allowed to run amok and bring the picture down. And what can be said of Buster Keaton's appearance... it is as affectingly priceless as the entire bus episode is affectingly unique.

    One reviewer found it odd that the story was set in San Diego during the War and that no sailors and soldiers are evident. But there are, for I actually looked for that very thing during a brief street scene and indeed there is a liberal peppering of sailors walking the street in the parade of passers-by. Whether on the street, in the office, or in the home, the sets are decked out appropriately. Additionally, the film's editing is crisp and continuity is wonderful.

    For sure this is a fantasy, including the curiosity that the third richest man in America would happily fall for the propellant of a small-town eccentric family. But this is a successfully comedic film from the World War II era and no doubt will be enjoyed by fans of movies from the era.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    There were eight postings on this title when I checked it out on imdb and all were more or less positive so that the almost inevitable result was that they oversold it and left me a tad disappointed when I finally watched it. It's heart is in the right place but the two bland leads are hopelessly outshone by the supporting cast of whom none are at their best. Maybe the fact that there is no mention of the war in a film set in 1) 1944, and 2) San Diego, a major naval base, had something to do with it. The highest profile is Buster Keaton, allotted ten minutes screen time as a bus driver, who both speaks AND smiles. Also on hand are Chester Clute, Irene Ryan plus, nine years after Top Hat, Eric Blore and Edward Everett Horton both seeming a little tired.
  • High school teacher Edward Everett Horton invents an all-in-one inflatable lifeboat, and tries to sell it to the advisory board run by Jon Hall, the third richest man in America. Through a series of situations impelled by his hair-brained daughter, Louise Allbritton, he finds himself buying a house in San Diego with his last money, and moving in with her and his four motherless sons, although the raft has been rejected. Miss Allbritton won't give up, and eventually charms Hall, although the raft remains rejected.

    It's larded with subplots, some of which work -- Miss Allbritton persuades bus driver Buster Keaton into leaving the route he's been driving for ten years, and instead driving along the seashore, for a charming excursion -- and some do not. Irene Ryan shows up as a boarder, even though the house is not accepting them; and Eric Blore is a butler attached to the house, who bursts into tears whenever he's fired. The romantic leads are not very appealing. Miss Allbritton is shrill, and Hall is stuffy. Still, the cast is filled with fine comics, including Clarence Muse, Florence Lake, Chester Clute, Brooks Benedict, Hobart Cavanaugh, Vernon Dent, and Esther Howard, and even Tom Keene as a reporter. If the reasons why this has been hard to find so long are apparent from a viewing, I'm still glad I saw it, if only for the Keaton sequence.
  • I saw this movie with my mother in 1944, and it made a lasting impression upon me. We lived in Buffalo and both of us agreed that San Diego would be a better place for us and decided that some day we would live there. Though this never came about, and I have never been to San Diego, it must have "put a bee in my bonnet" because eventually I came to Mexico where I have been living permanently since 1955. This is a motion picture I would like to see again.