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Ball of Fire

Ball of Fire

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Stanwyck masterpiece
Review: Barbara Stanwyck and Gary Cooper are perfectly cast as Sugarpuss O'Shea and Professor Bertram Potts. Potts and seven other erudite, academically entrenched professors are creating a new encyclopedia. Their residence is the perfect hiding place for Sugarpuss, when her gangster boy friend (played by Dana Andrews) forces her to go on the lam in order to avoid a subpoena. Using subterfuge and feminine wiles, she easily convinces the professors to let her stay with them. Her pretence being that linguist Potts will benefit from her expertise with modern (1941) slang. After a lifetime of academic isolation, Potts is attracted by her worldly sophistication and insouciance. This attraction rapidly turns into love, and this feeling becomes mutual. "Ball of Fire" is an exceptional movie. Let's not spoil it by revealing too much. If you haven't seen "Ball of Fire", it's well worth seeing. It's so outstanding that one viewing is not enough.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: BARBARA STANWYCK AS SUGARPUSS O'SHEA!
Review: Directed by the brilliant Howard Hawks, BALL OF FIRE combines excellent acting, screenwriting and directing to produce a delightful comedy (Hawks even directed the glossy Technicolor remake A SONG IS BORN in 1948; he didn't much care for it) The biggest delight of this film is the performance of Barbara Stanwyck as Sugarpuss O'Shea, the worldly wise nightclub singer who easily manipulates the scholars but does not realize that she is falling in love. Although she is appropriately flippant and cynical in her early dealings with Potts and other scholars, she also makes the romantic scenes near the end of the film very moving. The DVD is astonishingly clear and this movie is highly recommended!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Snow White and the Seven Dwarves was never like this!
Review: Director Howard Hawks' ingenious take on the tale of Snow White and the Seven Dwarves has screen legends Gary Cooper and Barbara Stanwyck taking on gangsters, grammar, and some of the greatest lines ever filmed. A classic screwball comedy!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great 40's comedy
Review: For anyone who only associates Barbara Stanwyck with television's "The Big Valley" series, this movie should provide some good insight into just how talented this actress was. Barbara Stanwyck was a top star during the forties, and her versatility was amazing. "Ball of Fire" showcases her marvelous comedic talents. It also gives viewers a glimpse of just how wonderful these "old" movies really are. Gary Cooper and Stanwyck had a great on-screen chemistry. But the most surprising thing is how sexy Barbara Stanwyck was on that screen. She was positively luminous. See this movie and judge for yourself. Today's movies are positively sordid by comparison.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: One of Stanwyck's Best
Review: For me, the highlight of this terrific comedy is the perfect performance by Barbara Stanwyck. Although not a conventional beauty by Hollywood standards, she is very sexy and funny as nightclub singer Sugarpuss O'Shea, who ends up hiding out with eight stuffy professors writing up a new encyclopaedia. She needs to hide to protect her crook boyfriend Dana Andrews, and the professors want her there because she can explain to them the meanings behind modern slang, since the professors are anything but hip and modern. Gary Cooper plays the professor responsible for the language sections of the encyclopaedia, and he quickly falls in love with her. Of course, numerous complications arise. Stanwyck, one of classic film's most versatile actresses, is terrific, and all of the professors (including Cooper) deliver warm, affectionate performances. The scene where Stanwyck gets them dancing is hilarious. This is classic comedy has been somewhat overlooked, but don't miss a chance to watch it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: One of Stanwyck's Best
Review: For me, the highlight of this terrific comedy is the perfect performance by Barbara Stanwyck. Although not a conventional beauty by Hollywood standards, she is very sexy and funny as nightclub singer Sugarpuss O'Shea, who ends up hiding out with eight stuffy professors writing up a new encyclopaedia. She needs to hide to protect her crook boyfriend Dana Andrews, and the professors want her there because she can explain to them the meanings behind modern slang, since the professors are anything but hip and modern. Gary Cooper plays the professor responsible for the language sections of the encyclopaedia, and he quickly falls in love with her. Of course, numerous complications arise. Stanwyck, one of classic film's most versatile actresses, is terrific, and all of the professors (including Cooper) deliver warm, affectionate performances. The scene where Stanwyck gets them dancing is hilarious. This is classic comedy has been somewhat overlooked, but don't miss a chance to watch it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great movie
Review: I heard a lot about this film and I had to see it, since I'm Gary Cooper's biggest fan. As usual, he portrays the ever-popular sweet guy (this time in the form of a professor) and co-colleague of seven other professors who all room together on their college's campus who are reserching to write an encyclopedia and are stuck on "s" for slang. Coop goes all around the city observing others but then he meets the perfect "slang teacher"-Barbara Stanwyk (in an Oscar-nominated role) as the spitfire-tough Sugarpuss O'Shea. She eventually cooperates with him and the other professors and becomes a great friend to all. But their is bound to be trouble sonner or later. See it and find out. I gurentee it's a great film. Coop and Barb are dynamite

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Worth the wait.....
Review: I never had the opportunity to watch this classic film, neither on tv, nor on vhs format....Having watched so many times Capra's "Meet John Doe", also starring Cooper and Stanwyck, which I love....I had always wanted to see this second and last pairing of this wonderful screen couple.

When I bought my dvd player, three years ago, this one was of the first movies I wanted to buy....but when I tried to, the dvd edition was already out of stock or out of print....and sadly for us, this HBO 1998 dvd edition, is being sold at very high prices at Internet Stores. So... I had lost all hopes when I had the luck of finding it at a very convenient price in an unknown small store in Raleigh, North Carolina, while on vacation there.

This wonderful, classic comedy...deserved the long wait....'cos Stanwyck is really fantastic as cabaret stripper and singer Sugarpuss O'Shea, at first using Gary Cooper for her own selfish purposes, but in the process (not unexpectedly), falling for his naive, clumsy Professor Potts ("Pottsy" for her).

By the way, professor Potts works on an encyclopedia project with seven fellow experts, on different areas of knowledge, all of them bachelors or widowers, living by themselves in a big house...with the only female presence of the elderly housekeeper, Miss Bragg (played by Kathleen Howard), who doesn't live there (she wouldn't dare to!!).

While researching more information on current slang (for their encyclopedia project), Cooper meets Stanwyck at a nightclub, where she sings with legendary Gene Krupa! (nothing less!!) immediately trying to persuade her to meet him at his home (with other fellow "users" of slang: the garbage man, the newspaper boy et al), in order to try get all of the existing slang words into the encyclopedia.

His seven fellow -much older than Cooper- co-workers and professors, are sort of like the seven dwarfs kind of characters, trying to play matchmaker between sexy-woman-of-the world Sugarpuss O'Shea and reluctant, prudish Professor Bertram Potts. Some of them are played by the best of character actors: Richard Haydn (his debut on screen), S.Z. Sakall, Henry Travers, Oscar Homolka, Tully Marshal, et al.

Also, noteworthy performances by Dana Andrews (as Stanwyck's underworld boyfriend) and Dan Duryea, as one of his "boys".

Hilarious scenes, very funny moments and witty dialogue, thanks to a great script by the Charles Brackett-Billy Wilder team, and Howard Hawks' deft direction.

The dvd edition is good, pretty crisp and sharp...featuring the original mono audio and a remastered-stereophonic one.

1941 was an excellent year for both actors, besides this one and "Meet John Doe", Stanwyck starred in the very, very funny Preston Sturges' movie "The Lady Eve", with Henry Fonda, and Cooper starred in Hawks' "Sergeant York", and Oscar winning role.

This one was remade in 1948 by Hawks, as "A Song is Born" with Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo, a funny movie, but not up to the original.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sugarpuss and the Seven Dwarfs
Review: Rollicking satire is what is dished out in this superb 1941 valentine to 40's jive and slang. Rarely have written words and actors to deliver them ever experienced a happier marriage than here as the wonderful Barbara Stanwyck adds another triumph (and another Oscar nomination to boot!) to her list as the jive talking, flashy show girl come mobster's gal Sugarpuss O'Shea. Playing opposite her is frequent co star Gary Cooper as the upright and very proper Prof Bertram Potts in the Billy Wilder written, Oscar nominated screw ball comedy hit "Ball Of Fire".

Directed by veteran Howard Hawks this terrific screen confection is loosely based on the idea of Snow White and the Seven Dwarf's in its telling of a group of mostly elderly professors, led by the younger Cooper who have been hired to write a new encyclopedia containing all the up to date slang terms used in society. Into their tightly academic and isolated world waltzes the flashy woman of experience Sugarpuss O' Shea on the lam from the vice squad who needs a place to safely hide out in till the heat gets off her and her crooked fiance . In a delightful way she proceeds to turn the professors snug little world upside down with her gangster connections, sassy language loud music and free and easy manner with all of the professors who all become quite smitten with this rare bird who has flown into their nest.

Barbara Stanwyck was born to play Sugarpuss and had already teamed beautifully with the lanky Gary Cooper in "Meet John Doe". Barbara was as expert in comedy as she was in the hard hitting dramas she is probably better known for. In "Ball Of Fire" she has the perfect screen teaming with Cooper contrasting her tart and breezy mobster's moll character with Cooper's sound and respectable academic with no experience of the opposite sex. Of special delight are Sugarpuss's wonderful exchanges with the elderly professors (expert character actors like Henry Travers, S.Z. Sakall and Tully Marshall among them in truly delightful performances).By employing her considerable feminine wiles and smart talk she manages to not only convince them to let her stay with them in the house but also dupes them into literally becoming her personal bodyguards when her fiance (Dana Andrews in an early performance) starts to cause her trouble. Prof. Potts finds himself attracted to her worldly manner and proposes marriage with a minisule diamond ring that pales beside the vulgar nuckle duster given to her by her mobster fiance. Sugarpuss also finds herself falling for the prim Professor's sincerity and what ensures is a mad race to the altar complete with interfering mobsters, machine guns and the professors taking on the mobsters at their own game.

Under Hawk's breezy direction this madness all works beautifully and the film is unique in containing a very complete catalogue of all the early war time slang expressions which are a delight to listen to and are as fresh and funny today as they were back in the forties. Edith Head's designs for Stanwyck are wonderful as always and Cooper's shock at Barbara's gold lame show costume slit right up the sides in their first scene together is priceless.

"Ball Of Fire' is fast, sexy and great fun all round with the stars at their absolute peak. I always laugh at Barbara's reactions to the stuffy professors, the gem being when S.K Sakall is stroking her hand repeatedly and Barbara simply states "Do you mind if I have that back?" Great stuff delivered with relish and it's evident that they were all having as much fun filming this piece as the audience has watching it. Simple and extremely innocent it indeed is but what's wrong with that? It easily beats many of todays so called attempts at a heart warming comedy. Enjoy Barbara and her beloved Coop at their best in "Ball Of Fire".

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A delightful romantic comedy!
Review: They don't make them like this any more, the wit and rhythm of this film put recent films to shame. Very much in the vein of "The Lady Eve" (another one not to be missed). Stanwyck and Cooper are a beautifully mismatched couple surrounded by a dazzling array of wonderful character actors. The scene where she takes off her stockings is sexier than any ten love scenes from the 90's. The Billy Wilder touch is in evidence (he co-wrote this before his American directing career started) as is the fast paced ensamble Howard Hawks style. The DP, Gregg Toland, shot "Citizen Kane" the production design is by Perry Furgeson, who was also a "Kane" alumni. Do yourself a favor and see this film!


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