The Cat and the Canary


1h 12m 1939
The Cat and the Canary

Brief Synopsis

An attorney tries to protect the sole heir to a millionaire¿s creepy estate.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Adaptation
Release Date
Nov 10, 1939
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the play The Cat and the Canary by John Willard (New York, 7 Feb 1922).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 12m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
6,642ft (8 reels)

Synopsis

Ten years after the death of millionaire Cyrus Norman, his attorney, Crosby, and his six remaining relatives, Wally Campbell, Joyce Norman, Fred Blythe, Charlie Wilder, Aunt Susan and Cicily, arrive at his gothic mansion in the eerie bayous near New Orleans to hear the reading of the will. Although Crosby discovers that the will, which was to be read at midnight, has been opened, he begins the reading at the prescribed hour, but is interrupted as Miss Lu, Cyrus' housekeeper, who believes in spirits, predicts that someone will die before the night ends. The others are disappointed to learn that Joyce is the sole heir, but because a streak of insanity runs in the family, Cyrus has left a second will in case anything happens to her, thus placing Joyce's life in danger. More danger looms as Hendricks, a guard at a nearby sanitarium, appears with the news that "The Cat," a homicidal maniac, has escaped. The news puts everyone's nerves on edge, and as Crosby is about to warn Joyce of the danger, a hand appears from behind a panel and he vanishes. Later that night, Joyce and Wally follow Cyrus' clues to find a hidden diamond necklace that is later stolen when a hand appears from behind Joyce's bedroom wall. Because Joyce alone had been present when both Crosby disappeared and the hand appeared, everyone begins to think that she is going insane until they find Crosby's dead body behind a hidden panel. When a death knell is sounded, Wally becomes suspicious of Hendricks and Lu and goes to investigate. As Joyce waits alone in the library, a panel slides open, revealing a secret passage. Entering the passage, Joyce is trapped and chased by The Cat to a hut outside. Just as The Cat is about to attack, Wally appears and unmasks Charlie as The Cat and Lu shoots the intruder. As daylight arrives, danger dissipates and Joyce awards the house to Lu, then departs with Wally.

Photo Collections

The Cat and the Canary (1939) - Publicity Stills
The Cat and the Canary (1939) - Publicity Stills

Videos

Movie Clip

Cat And The Canary, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Psychology Of Fear Distant cousins Cicily (Nydia Westman) and actor Wally (Bob Hope) securing their ancestor's creepy bayou mansion, after learning that Joyce (Paulette Goddard), visited by the executor Crosby (George Zucco), got all his money, in the horror-comedy The Cat And The Canary, 1939.
Cat And The Canary, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Sleep With Those Pebbles Distant relatives Joyce (Paulette Goddard) and radio-actor Wally (Bob Hope), at the spooky bayou mansion where everyone has just learned that she's the sole heir of the owner, are on the trail of jewels said to be stashed on the premises, in The Cat And The Canary, 1939.
Cat And Canary, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Psychology Of Fear Actor Wally (Bob Hope) and Cicily (Nydia Westman) are among the distant cousins securing their ancestor's spooky bayou mansion, after learning that Joyce (Paulette Goddard), visited by executor Crosby (George Zucco) was his sole heir, in the horror spoof The Cat And The Canary, 1939.
Cat And The Canary, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) There Are Spirits All Around You Bob Hope as Wally joins fellow potential heirs at the spooky Louisiana mansion, George Zucco the lawyer, Gale Sondergaard the housekeeper, with Elizabeth Patterson, Nydia Westman, Douglass Montgomery and John Beal, then Paulette Goddard's entrance, in the horror-comedy The Cat And The Canary, 1939.
Cat And The Canary, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Is He A Dangerous Maniac? After the reading of their ancestor's will in his bayou home, Bob Hope as Wally, with Nydia Westman, George Zucco the lawyer, John Beal, Elizabeth Patterson, Paulette Goddard who got the money, Douglass Montgomery and John Wray, the guard bringing scary news, in the horror spoof The Cat And The Canary, 1939.

Hosted Intro

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Adaptation
Release Date
Nov 10, 1939
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the play The Cat and the Canary by John Willard (New York, 7 Feb 1922).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 12m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
6,642ft (8 reels)

Articles

The Cat and the Canary (1939)


A seasoned vet of the waning days of music-hall vaudeville by the time he was 30 and had made his way to Hollywood (in 1934), Bob Hope spent very little time in the lower ranks before becoming a full-on star. There was something simply bewitching about him then, a mixture of wide-eyed guilelessness, quick-tongued sarcasm, and a bumbling honesty about his own cowardice and stupidity, that made him addictive. When he was still young, the persona was still unjaundiced and effortlessly entertaining. He was never not an American institution; he averaged three movies a year in the decades before television, and at the start finished a total of seven between his first feature, The Big Broadcast of 1938 (1938), and 1939's The Cat and the Canary, by which time he was a major star.

You can't say he didn't earn it - there was nobody quite like Hope in Hollywood, a savvy hipster wracked by his own insecurities and the bully-beaten knowledge of how little use the world has for him. Naturally, his yin matched perfectly with Bing Crosby's supercool yang, but Hope in his heyday (before he became just a TV-culture set of schtick one-liners) could zip through nearly any scenario, working it with his fast eyes and mouth, and always make his co-stars, even Martha Raye and Dorothy Lamour, seem deft and in the moment. The Cat and the Canary was in many ways a perfect fit for Hope - a classic, semi-self-mocking thriller-mystery chestnut into which Hope could cower and quip to his heart's content, giving his personality nervous juice while allowing his wit to update what would've otherwise been an antique.

The results are exactly what you'd foresee, complete with an early Jack Benny joke - and also very different from the classic original production, from 1927. The first true trapped-in-a-haunted-mansion-on-a-rainy-night-to-read-the-will story John Willard's 1922 play always had a modicum of winking irony to it, but the silent version directed by German Expressionist-emigre Paul Leni, as hokey as it may be, emphasizes the Gothic atmospherics and musty architecture, making it a lovely, nightened place to visit, especially on Halloween. (It's also perfectly suited for, and seductive to, children.) Naturally, it was quickly remade as a talkie, as 1930's The Cat Creeps, but the modern era was already proving too sophisticated for its gambits and 19th-century conventions. When Hope became huge, Paramount saw a way to make the mothballed property new again, as a madly old-fashioned thriller plot that Hope, portraying essentially a show-biz version of himself, is thrust into and recognizes for the menacing but familiar hokum that it is. Much like the characters in Scream (1996), almost six decades later, Hope's Wally Campbell bounces through Willard's scenario as if he'd seen it, and acted in it, a hundred times before, and knows more or less exactly what will happen.

Not that Wally is emboldened or aided in any way by this knowledge, of course. Directed by Elliot Nugent and adapted by Walter Deleon and Lynn Sterling, all three experienced veterans of the Hope studio unit, The Cat and the Canary became one of the first old-dark-house comedies, marking the way for a popular subgenre subsequently exploited by other Hope films, Abbott & Costello, Kay Kyser and the Bowery Boys. (Of course, Laurel & Hardy, with 1930's The Laurel-Hardy Murder Case, and the Little Rascals, with 1938's Hide and Shriek, were pure-bred comedy precedents.) Willard's spooky mansion has been transplanted into the Louisiana bayou, accessible only by dingy, but otherwise the plot remains the same: a pack of contentious cousins summoned for the reading of the will, an officious and doomed lawyer (named Crosby, in every version), a budding romance, news of a psychotic mental patient loose outside, disappearances and bodies and the specter of a killer manifesting and then disappearing from a network of hidden passageways...

The cast around Hope, often receiving his acidic one-liners with open disdain, are a varied lot, with horsefaced pretty boy Douglass Montgomery being the direst, and George Zucco, as the suspicious lawyer, maintaining such an air of world-weary acumen that you half-wish the film wasn't a comedy at all, but the grimly serious Gothic melodrama Zucco seems to think he's in. Hope shares the spotlight with Paulette Goddard, who as the stalked heiress is as bright as a new penny but whose dazzling comic capacities are more or less unutilized. It's all up to Hope, and he's more than up to both sniveling-chicken farce and leading-man gravity, to a degree he wasn't later, as he aged and became "Bob Hope" and hardly ever a character you could happily follow through a genre film's storyline.

It's a confection, this movie, all of 72 minutes long and as effortless buoyant as a carnival balloon. Photographed by the estimable silversmith Charles Lang, the movie doesn't really have a single DNA strand of creepiness or menace to it; the scenario's Gothic tension has been completely sublimated by studio gloss and comic irreverence. And so it was for 1939 audiences, for whom the dread delivered by horror films earlier in the decade had been overshadowed by real international concerns elsewhere, and economic devastation at home.

By Michael Atkinson
The Cat And The Canary (1939)

The Cat and the Canary (1939)

A seasoned vet of the waning days of music-hall vaudeville by the time he was 30 and had made his way to Hollywood (in 1934), Bob Hope spent very little time in the lower ranks before becoming a full-on star. There was something simply bewitching about him then, a mixture of wide-eyed guilelessness, quick-tongued sarcasm, and a bumbling honesty about his own cowardice and stupidity, that made him addictive. When he was still young, the persona was still unjaundiced and effortlessly entertaining. He was never not an American institution; he averaged three movies a year in the decades before television, and at the start finished a total of seven between his first feature, The Big Broadcast of 1938 (1938), and 1939's The Cat and the Canary, by which time he was a major star. You can't say he didn't earn it - there was nobody quite like Hope in Hollywood, a savvy hipster wracked by his own insecurities and the bully-beaten knowledge of how little use the world has for him. Naturally, his yin matched perfectly with Bing Crosby's supercool yang, but Hope in his heyday (before he became just a TV-culture set of schtick one-liners) could zip through nearly any scenario, working it with his fast eyes and mouth, and always make his co-stars, even Martha Raye and Dorothy Lamour, seem deft and in the moment. The Cat and the Canary was in many ways a perfect fit for Hope - a classic, semi-self-mocking thriller-mystery chestnut into which Hope could cower and quip to his heart's content, giving his personality nervous juice while allowing his wit to update what would've otherwise been an antique. The results are exactly what you'd foresee, complete with an early Jack Benny joke - and also very different from the classic original production, from 1927. The first true trapped-in-a-haunted-mansion-on-a-rainy-night-to-read-the-will story John Willard's 1922 play always had a modicum of winking irony to it, but the silent version directed by German Expressionist-emigre Paul Leni, as hokey as it may be, emphasizes the Gothic atmospherics and musty architecture, making it a lovely, nightened place to visit, especially on Halloween. (It's also perfectly suited for, and seductive to, children.) Naturally, it was quickly remade as a talkie, as 1930's The Cat Creeps, but the modern era was already proving too sophisticated for its gambits and 19th-century conventions. When Hope became huge, Paramount saw a way to make the mothballed property new again, as a madly old-fashioned thriller plot that Hope, portraying essentially a show-biz version of himself, is thrust into and recognizes for the menacing but familiar hokum that it is. Much like the characters in Scream (1996), almost six decades later, Hope's Wally Campbell bounces through Willard's scenario as if he'd seen it, and acted in it, a hundred times before, and knows more or less exactly what will happen. Not that Wally is emboldened or aided in any way by this knowledge, of course. Directed by Elliot Nugent and adapted by Walter Deleon and Lynn Sterling, all three experienced veterans of the Hope studio unit, The Cat and the Canary became one of the first old-dark-house comedies, marking the way for a popular subgenre subsequently exploited by other Hope films, Abbott & Costello, Kay Kyser and the Bowery Boys. (Of course, Laurel & Hardy, with 1930's The Laurel-Hardy Murder Case, and the Little Rascals, with 1938's Hide and Shriek, were pure-bred comedy precedents.) Willard's spooky mansion has been transplanted into the Louisiana bayou, accessible only by dingy, but otherwise the plot remains the same: a pack of contentious cousins summoned for the reading of the will, an officious and doomed lawyer (named Crosby, in every version), a budding romance, news of a psychotic mental patient loose outside, disappearances and bodies and the specter of a killer manifesting and then disappearing from a network of hidden passageways... The cast around Hope, often receiving his acidic one-liners with open disdain, are a varied lot, with horsefaced pretty boy Douglass Montgomery being the direst, and George Zucco, as the suspicious lawyer, maintaining such an air of world-weary acumen that you half-wish the film wasn't a comedy at all, but the grimly serious Gothic melodrama Zucco seems to think he's in. Hope shares the spotlight with Paulette Goddard, who as the stalked heiress is as bright as a new penny but whose dazzling comic capacities are more or less unutilized. It's all up to Hope, and he's more than up to both sniveling-chicken farce and leading-man gravity, to a degree he wasn't later, as he aged and became "Bob Hope" and hardly ever a character you could happily follow through a genre film's storyline. It's a confection, this movie, all of 72 minutes long and as effortless buoyant as a carnival balloon. Photographed by the estimable silversmith Charles Lang, the movie doesn't really have a single DNA strand of creepiness or menace to it; the scenario's Gothic tension has been completely sublimated by studio gloss and comic irreverence. And so it was for 1939 audiences, for whom the dread delivered by horror films earlier in the decade had been overshadowed by real international concerns elsewhere, and economic devastation at home. By Michael Atkinson

Bob Hope: Thanks for the Memories - THE CAT AND THE CANARY Among the 6 Films Featured in BOB HOPE: THANKS FOR THE MEMORY


Bob Hope was the snappy urban wiseguy with an easy line of smart remarks and a comic cowardice behind the confident front, a one-liner comic whose timing, self-effacing demeanor and audience rapport took him from stage to radio to screen. This collection opens on the younger Hope, before he hit the road with Bing Crosby and slid into a more cynical byplay, with Bob and Bing constantly double-crossing one another in matters of love and money. Hope is funny in those "Road" movies-he defined his career with those exotic farces of urban wiseguys in paradise fighting over Dorothy Lamour and lobbing self-aware cracks to an audience savvy to Hope's show-biz credentials-but he's not a guy you'd necessarily want to pal around with. He's much more relatable in a quartet of earlier films featured in this set, starting with Thanks for the Memory (1938). Adapted from a Broadway comedy by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett (most famous for scripting The Thin Man and It's A Wonderful Life) and named after the Oscar winning song that Bob Hope introduced in the film The Big Broadcast of 1938, the film reunites him with co-star Shirley Ross. Hope is an ad man and aspiring novelist and Ross his fashion model wife, who returns to work so he can devote himself to his writing. It's a slim little comedy of the idle class in depression-era New York, co-starring Charles Butterworth and Hedda Hopper as two of the amiable moochers who keep crashing their apartment for all-night parties. The film never concerns itself with how this struggling couple manages to support these high-society vagrants and bounce back from a night of drinking for a day of work and is simply content to let us enjoy their company and Hope's easy banter. Along with the title song, Hope and Ross perform the lovely duet "Two Sleepy People," singing each other to sleep as dawn breaks after another party.

The heart of the set belongs to three films Hope made with Paulette Goddard. The young beauty starred opposite Charles Chaplin (whom she secretly married) in Modern Times and famously was a front-runner for the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind, but it was The Women that showed off her talents as a sly comic actress with a sassy edge, and she became a leading lady in her own right opposite Hope in their version of the oft-filmed haunted house chestnut The Cat and the Canary (1939). Originally filmed in 1927 by Paul Leni (in a version that has yet to be topped), it's a familiar story if only for the all the clichés that it spoofs. The family of the deceased gather in a spooky old mansion (here located in the middle of a bayou swamp) of an eccentric millionaire for the reading of the will and must spend the night in the place to meet the terms of the will. Goddard is the bubbly heroine who is named sole beneficiary (and thus a target for the relative next in line), a spooky servant goes around predicting things like "One will die tonight" and there's an escaped patient from the nearby asylum (in the middle of this swamp?) running around, but never fear. The family's resident celebrity Wally (Hope) is on hand to kid the spirits away. "Don't big old empty houses scare you?" asks one relative (Nydia Westman doing a Zasu Pitts kind of goofy comic relief). "No me," quips Hope, "I've played vaudeville." It's hokey stuff with hidden doors and secret passages and a hidden treasure, which director Elliot Nugent stages with all the style and tension of a sitcom. But Hope and Goddard have marvelous chemistry and Hope is completely amiable, using wisecracks to cover up his discomfort and fear. "I always joke when I'm scared," he confesses to heroine Goddard. "I kind of kid myself into being brave." Hope's delivery makes this less a laugh line than a confession and a promise he's got integrity and the courage to both reveal his vulnerabilities and overcome them. Goddard, meanwhile, is a spunky beauty with crack timing, a born comedienne too often called upon to play the straight man and provide the sex appeal. She does both admirably here and, when the film became a hit, was rewarded with a return engagement with Hope.

The Ghost Breakers (1940) is pretty much a rehash of the same formula, this time with the haunted mansion relocated to Cuba. While Goddard is repeatedly warned away from the place by the suspicious executor of the will, radio celebrity and gossip monger Hope is on the run from New York gangsters. Like Cat, it's based on a stage play that spoofs haunted house stories and ghost story conventions, this one tossing in a zombie (Noble Johnson, doing the traditional Caribbean-style catatonic sleepwalker of a zombie), an animated suit of armor and more hidden rooms and passages. It's even less convincing than Cat but director George Marshall makes an effort to construct the proper atmosphere around these city folk on a haunted safari in voodooland. Both films manage to repeatedly get Goddard down to slips and negligees before the half hour mark and The Ghost Breakers goes one better by putting her in a swimsuit (logical attire for midnight to a spooky island) and a flimsy dress which gets torn off in a monster chase. A very young Anthony Quinn appears in two roles (a New York gangster and his twin brother!) and Richard Carlson co-stars.

Nothing But the Truth (1941) spins another gimmick-Hope is stock broker who bets $10,000 that he can tell the truth for 24 hours-into a familiar web of misunderstandings, mistaken identities and romantic antics. It plays as a more sardonic No, No Nanette with an earnest Hope at the center of the bet and a trio of conniving, lying, borderline criminal business associates (Edward Arnold, Leif Erickson and Glenn Anders) springing every dirty trick in the book on him in a string of public humiliations and private ruses. Goddard has much more fun in this one as a dizzy heiress who rattles a blue streak while falling for the hapless Hope, who can't tell anyone about the bet. It's pure stage farce, all contrivance and coincidence, blandly directed by Elliot Nugent, who just seems to let things happen as the camera rolls. Luckily there's plenty going on as the characters go sneaking around on a private houseboat, slipping in and out of bedrooms and dressing gowns while Hope wraps himself in a flouncy nightgown to escape his rivals. Not only does Hope get the girl like a real leading man, it's the rare film where Hope is the most honest man on screen. Edward Arnold, who played his share of big screen fat cats, embraces the cynical side of the persona as he tries to sell worthless stock to his customers (which doesn't seem quite as funny in light of recent real-life financial shenanigans) and Glenn Anders is almost too sleazy for the film (you may recognize him as the boozy George Grizby from The Lady From Shanghai). It's fascinating how the film manages to strike a happy ending while letting its scheming supporting cast get away with stock fraud and infidelity, winking at the audience the whole time as if we're complicit in the whole sordid business.

The four films feature Bob Hope in a role we're not used to seeing: a light romantic lead with a quick wit. His wisecracks cover up nervousness and fear but are harmless and self-effacing. Where he schemed for a kiss from the leading lady in the "Road" films, he's a genuinely nice guy here. And Goddard makes for a spunky leading lady, holding her own against opposite Hope and, in Nothing But the Truth, showing her own skills as an underrated comedienne. Both are better than their material. They also include the worst stereotypes available to African American performers, with Eddie 'Rochester' Anderson as a comic janitor in Thanks for the Memory and Willie Best as Hope's manservant, a quivering, drawling caricature who gets called "boy" by most everyone except Hope and made the butt of countless jokes (not all of them offensive), in The Ghost Breakers and Nothing But the Truth. Best establishes a natural rapport with Hope while swapping wisecracks (and often getting the better of Hope), but it's a demeaning stereotype.

The biggest disappointment with the set is its haphazard approach to Hope's career. After a quartet of films that captures Hope in his first leading roles, it's filled out with two forties films that not only feel like they've been plucked from the catalogue at random, but are already available DVD. Road to Morocco (1942) is the second of the "Road" movies that Hope made with Bing Crosby and Dorothy Lamour and has previously been released both individually and in an earlier set of "Road" comedies. The Paleface (1948) is a very funny cowboy spoof with tenderfoot Easterner Hope as a would-be "painless" dentist who gets lassoed into marrying shapely outlaw Jane Russell. While The Ghost Breakers has also been previously available, it makes a good match with the two other Hope-Goddard pairings, but these's no real purpose to these films, not with so many other films-Hope's feature debut in The Big Broadcast of 1938, for instance, or his Dorothy Lamour pairings-that could have been included. (While The Cat and the Canary was briefly available in a public domain edition of dubious legitimacy and quality, this is the first studio release of the film.)

The six films are collected in a three-disc digipak that also includes featurettes celebrating Hope's decades-long work with the USO. It includes a pair of mini-documentaries-"Bob Hope and the Road to Success" and "Entertaining the Troops" (featuring exclusive footage of Hope's USO tours)-and the archival shorts "Command Performance 1944" and "Command Performance 1944" (which are newsreel-style recordings of the Hope-hosted radio show produced by the Army-Navy Screen Magazine) and the all-star WWII short Hollywood Victory Caravan. They spotlight yet another side of Hope, the public comedian and tireless entertainer who gave up so much time not just to entertain the troops but to take charge of the USO program and bring other Hollywood celebrities and entertainers into the fold. They make a worthy companion to these films.

For more information about Bob Hope: Thanks for the Memories, visit Universal Home Entertainment. To order Bob Hope: Thanks for the Memories, go to TCM Shopping.

by Sean Axmaker

Bob Hope: Thanks for the Memories - THE CAT AND THE CANARY Among the 6 Films Featured in BOB HOPE: THANKS FOR THE MEMORY

Bob Hope was the snappy urban wiseguy with an easy line of smart remarks and a comic cowardice behind the confident front, a one-liner comic whose timing, self-effacing demeanor and audience rapport took him from stage to radio to screen. This collection opens on the younger Hope, before he hit the road with Bing Crosby and slid into a more cynical byplay, with Bob and Bing constantly double-crossing one another in matters of love and money. Hope is funny in those "Road" movies-he defined his career with those exotic farces of urban wiseguys in paradise fighting over Dorothy Lamour and lobbing self-aware cracks to an audience savvy to Hope's show-biz credentials-but he's not a guy you'd necessarily want to pal around with. He's much more relatable in a quartet of earlier films featured in this set, starting with Thanks for the Memory (1938). Adapted from a Broadway comedy by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett (most famous for scripting The Thin Man and It's A Wonderful Life) and named after the Oscar winning song that Bob Hope introduced in the film The Big Broadcast of 1938, the film reunites him with co-star Shirley Ross. Hope is an ad man and aspiring novelist and Ross his fashion model wife, who returns to work so he can devote himself to his writing. It's a slim little comedy of the idle class in depression-era New York, co-starring Charles Butterworth and Hedda Hopper as two of the amiable moochers who keep crashing their apartment for all-night parties. The film never concerns itself with how this struggling couple manages to support these high-society vagrants and bounce back from a night of drinking for a day of work and is simply content to let us enjoy their company and Hope's easy banter. Along with the title song, Hope and Ross perform the lovely duet "Two Sleepy People," singing each other to sleep as dawn breaks after another party. The heart of the set belongs to three films Hope made with Paulette Goddard. The young beauty starred opposite Charles Chaplin (whom she secretly married) in Modern Times and famously was a front-runner for the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind, but it was The Women that showed off her talents as a sly comic actress with a sassy edge, and she became a leading lady in her own right opposite Hope in their version of the oft-filmed haunted house chestnut The Cat and the Canary (1939). Originally filmed in 1927 by Paul Leni (in a version that has yet to be topped), it's a familiar story if only for the all the clichés that it spoofs. The family of the deceased gather in a spooky old mansion (here located in the middle of a bayou swamp) of an eccentric millionaire for the reading of the will and must spend the night in the place to meet the terms of the will. Goddard is the bubbly heroine who is named sole beneficiary (and thus a target for the relative next in line), a spooky servant goes around predicting things like "One will die tonight" and there's an escaped patient from the nearby asylum (in the middle of this swamp?) running around, but never fear. The family's resident celebrity Wally (Hope) is on hand to kid the spirits away. "Don't big old empty houses scare you?" asks one relative (Nydia Westman doing a Zasu Pitts kind of goofy comic relief). "No me," quips Hope, "I've played vaudeville." It's hokey stuff with hidden doors and secret passages and a hidden treasure, which director Elliot Nugent stages with all the style and tension of a sitcom. But Hope and Goddard have marvelous chemistry and Hope is completely amiable, using wisecracks to cover up his discomfort and fear. "I always joke when I'm scared," he confesses to heroine Goddard. "I kind of kid myself into being brave." Hope's delivery makes this less a laugh line than a confession and a promise he's got integrity and the courage to both reveal his vulnerabilities and overcome them. Goddard, meanwhile, is a spunky beauty with crack timing, a born comedienne too often called upon to play the straight man and provide the sex appeal. She does both admirably here and, when the film became a hit, was rewarded with a return engagement with Hope. The Ghost Breakers (1940) is pretty much a rehash of the same formula, this time with the haunted mansion relocated to Cuba. While Goddard is repeatedly warned away from the place by the suspicious executor of the will, radio celebrity and gossip monger Hope is on the run from New York gangsters. Like Cat, it's based on a stage play that spoofs haunted house stories and ghost story conventions, this one tossing in a zombie (Noble Johnson, doing the traditional Caribbean-style catatonic sleepwalker of a zombie), an animated suit of armor and more hidden rooms and passages. It's even less convincing than Cat but director George Marshall makes an effort to construct the proper atmosphere around these city folk on a haunted safari in voodooland. Both films manage to repeatedly get Goddard down to slips and negligees before the half hour mark and The Ghost Breakers goes one better by putting her in a swimsuit (logical attire for midnight to a spooky island) and a flimsy dress which gets torn off in a monster chase. A very young Anthony Quinn appears in two roles (a New York gangster and his twin brother!) and Richard Carlson co-stars. Nothing But the Truth (1941) spins another gimmick-Hope is stock broker who bets $10,000 that he can tell the truth for 24 hours-into a familiar web of misunderstandings, mistaken identities and romantic antics. It plays as a more sardonic No, No Nanette with an earnest Hope at the center of the bet and a trio of conniving, lying, borderline criminal business associates (Edward Arnold, Leif Erickson and Glenn Anders) springing every dirty trick in the book on him in a string of public humiliations and private ruses. Goddard has much more fun in this one as a dizzy heiress who rattles a blue streak while falling for the hapless Hope, who can't tell anyone about the bet. It's pure stage farce, all contrivance and coincidence, blandly directed by Elliot Nugent, who just seems to let things happen as the camera rolls. Luckily there's plenty going on as the characters go sneaking around on a private houseboat, slipping in and out of bedrooms and dressing gowns while Hope wraps himself in a flouncy nightgown to escape his rivals. Not only does Hope get the girl like a real leading man, it's the rare film where Hope is the most honest man on screen. Edward Arnold, who played his share of big screen fat cats, embraces the cynical side of the persona as he tries to sell worthless stock to his customers (which doesn't seem quite as funny in light of recent real-life financial shenanigans) and Glenn Anders is almost too sleazy for the film (you may recognize him as the boozy George Grizby from The Lady From Shanghai). It's fascinating how the film manages to strike a happy ending while letting its scheming supporting cast get away with stock fraud and infidelity, winking at the audience the whole time as if we're complicit in the whole sordid business. The four films feature Bob Hope in a role we're not used to seeing: a light romantic lead with a quick wit. His wisecracks cover up nervousness and fear but are harmless and self-effacing. Where he schemed for a kiss from the leading lady in the "Road" films, he's a genuinely nice guy here. And Goddard makes for a spunky leading lady, holding her own against opposite Hope and, in Nothing But the Truth, showing her own skills as an underrated comedienne. Both are better than their material. They also include the worst stereotypes available to African American performers, with Eddie 'Rochester' Anderson as a comic janitor in Thanks for the Memory and Willie Best as Hope's manservant, a quivering, drawling caricature who gets called "boy" by most everyone except Hope and made the butt of countless jokes (not all of them offensive), in The Ghost Breakers and Nothing But the Truth. Best establishes a natural rapport with Hope while swapping wisecracks (and often getting the better of Hope), but it's a demeaning stereotype. The biggest disappointment with the set is its haphazard approach to Hope's career. After a quartet of films that captures Hope in his first leading roles, it's filled out with two forties films that not only feel like they've been plucked from the catalogue at random, but are already available DVD. Road to Morocco (1942) is the second of the "Road" movies that Hope made with Bing Crosby and Dorothy Lamour and has previously been released both individually and in an earlier set of "Road" comedies. The Paleface (1948) is a very funny cowboy spoof with tenderfoot Easterner Hope as a would-be "painless" dentist who gets lassoed into marrying shapely outlaw Jane Russell. While The Ghost Breakers has also been previously available, it makes a good match with the two other Hope-Goddard pairings, but these's no real purpose to these films, not with so many other films-Hope's feature debut in The Big Broadcast of 1938, for instance, or his Dorothy Lamour pairings-that could have been included. (While The Cat and the Canary was briefly available in a public domain edition of dubious legitimacy and quality, this is the first studio release of the film.) The six films are collected in a three-disc digipak that also includes featurettes celebrating Hope's decades-long work with the USO. It includes a pair of mini-documentaries-"Bob Hope and the Road to Success" and "Entertaining the Troops" (featuring exclusive footage of Hope's USO tours)-and the archival shorts "Command Performance 1944" and "Command Performance 1944" (which are newsreel-style recordings of the Hope-hosted radio show produced by the Army-Navy Screen Magazine) and the all-star WWII short Hollywood Victory Caravan. They spotlight yet another side of Hope, the public comedian and tireless entertainer who gave up so much time not just to entertain the troops but to take charge of the USO program and bring other Hollywood celebrities and entertainers into the fold. They make a worthy companion to these films. For more information about Bob Hope: Thanks for the Memories, visit Universal Home Entertainment. To order Bob Hope: Thanks for the Memories, go to TCM Shopping. by Sean Axmaker

Quotes

Let's all drink gin and make wry faces.
- Wally Campbell
I'm so scared, even my goose pimples have goose pimples.
- Wally Campbell
Don't big empty houses scare you?
- Cicily
Not me, I used to be in vaudeville.
- Wally Campbell
Do you believe people come back from the dead?
- Cicily
You mean like Republicans?
- Wally Campbell

Trivia

Notes

According to pre-production news items in Hollywood Reporter, Shirley Ross, Martha Raye, Ellen Drew and Willard Robertson were slated to appear in this film and Frank Ryan, a cartoonist for The New Yorker and Esquire was to write visual gags for the film. Other news items in Hollywood Reporter note that Ted Tetzlaff temporarily took over for photographer Charles Lang. Another news item in Hollywood Reporter adds that Paramount closed the set so the identity of the murderer would remain a secret. Among the many films based on the John Willard play are Universal's 1927 silent version starring Laura LaPlant and directed by Paul Leni; the 1930 Universal film The Cat Creeps starring Helen Twelvetrees and Raymond Hackett and directed by Rupert Julian (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1921-30; F2.0797 and F2.0798); and a 1978 British version directed by Radley Metzger and starring Honor Blackman.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1939

Shown at Pacific Film Archive (Surrealism and Cinema) September 12, 1990.

Released in United States 1939