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	<title>Brandon&#039;s movie memory &#187; Norman Taurog</title>
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	<description>Deeper Into Movies</description>
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		<title>You&#8217;re Never Too Young (1955, Norman Taurog)</title>
		<link>http://deeperintomovies.net/journal/archives/556</link>
		<comments>http://deeperintomovies.net/journal/archives/556#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Apr 2008 02:13:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brandon</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Movie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[children]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dean Martin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jerry Lewis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Norman Taurog]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://deeperintomovies.net/journal/?p=556</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;Dig that crazy homework.&#8221; I appreciate that none of Lewis&#8217;s movies have even vaguely believable plots. Plausibility is an unnecessary weight on the shoulders of comedy. This one has Jerry playing an aspiring barber in a fancy hotel who gets caught up in a jewel-heist plot along with haircut customer Dean and Dean&#8217;s girl Nancy [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;Dig that crazy homework.&#8221;</p>
<p>I appreciate that none of Lewis&#8217;s movies have even vaguely believable plots.  Plausibility is an unnecessary weight on the shoulders of comedy.  This one has Jerry playing an aspiring barber in a fancy hotel who gets caught up in a jewel-heist plot along with haircut customer Dean and Dean&#8217;s girl Nancy (both teachers at a girls school in a distant town).  Jerry mugs an oversized 11-year-old and steals his sailor outfit in order to get a half-price ticket home, but hiding out from the gun-toting jewel thief he bunks with Nancy.  Once discovered, he has to keep pretending to be 11 so Nancy won&#8217;t be exposed for having a man in her private room.  Of course he falls in love with her (and has to fight off teenage girls at the school), but Nancy still marries Dean, awww.</p>
<p>Besides playing the romantic straight-man, Dean sings five dreamy but unmemorable songs.  I always think it must be hard to be the woman in those scenes, having to smile through a whole song without attracting attention away from Dean or looking too vacant.</p>
<p>Remake of Ginger Rogers/Ray Milland-starring Billy Wilder-directed <em>The Major and The Minor</em>, in which it&#8217;s the girl pretending to be a kid.  Hmmm, it&#8217;s on TCM tonight.  Bosley Crowther&#8217;s original New York Times review calls Lewis &#8220;noisy and ungraceful&#8221; and says the film is &#8220;on a mental level that will not demand an exertion from anyone.&#8221;  Thankfully, Crowther didn&#8217;t live to see Neil Marshall&#8217;s <em>Doomsday</em>, but yeah, nobody would call <em>You&#8217;re Never Too Young</em> challenging.  I just found it a cute comedy with Lewis actually at his most likeable and everyone else (Dean included) pleasant enough to watch without adding anything very distinctive.</p>
<p>Good DVD quality.  I put this on while paying bills, expecting it to be the lesser of the <em>Artists &#038; Models</em> double-feature disc, so I didn&#8217;t pay strict attention but it gradually roped me in.  Perfectly fine cinematography by Daniel Fapp (<em>Lord Love a Duck</em>, <em>Let&#8217;s Make Love</em>, <em>West Side Story</em>) and direction by Taurog (everything from <em>Andy Gump for President</em> in 1924 to <em>Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine</em> in 1965).  Written by Sidney Sheldon, screenwriter of <em>Anything Goes</em> and creator of <em>I Dream of Jeannie</em>.  IMDB says his family can expect a big royalty check in 2010.</p>
<p>Look at these two.  Hard to believe they were involved in a sinister bisexual mafia prostitute murder conspiracy.  Oh wait, they weren&#8217;t&#8230; that was an Atom Egoyan movie.<br />
<img src="http://deeperintomovies.net/journal/image08/yourenevertooyoung4.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p>Dean&#8217;s girl Nancy was Diana Lynn, the youngest brother&#8217;s girlfriend Gwen in <em>Track of the Cat</em>, went straight to television after this and died of a stroke sixteen years later.<img src="http://deeperintomovies.net/journal/image08/yourenevertooyoung7.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p>Nancy&#8217;s uptight co-teacher (not pictured here, since I haven&#8217;t forgiven her for being a nosy, moralistic tattletale) is Nina Foch of a buncha period films like <em>Spartacus</em>, <em>The Ten Commandments</em> and <em>Scaramouche</em>.</p>
<p>Not the first time that American Hans Conried (left) played a Frenchman named Francois &#8211; and he was also Dr. T in <em>The 5,000 Fingers</em>.<br />
<img src="http://deeperintomovies.net/journal/image08/yourenevertooyoung1.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p>The very sinister Raymond Burr (center), fresh from playing the bad guy in <em>Rear Window</em>, is the jewel thief.  Veda Ann Borg (left), vamped as the thief&#8217;s wife in this scene.  Besides having a very awesome name, she costarred in the 1940 serial <em>The Shadow</em> and appeared in <em>Guys &#038; Dolls</em> and <em>Mildred Pierce</em>.<br />
<img src="http://deeperintomovies.net/journal/image08/yourenevertooyoung2.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p>Orpheus!  Don&#8217;t look back!<br />
<img src="http://deeperintomovies.net/journal/image08/yourenevertooyoung5.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p>Appropriate that in the water-skiing stunt-double chase scene, Lewis says &#8220;I don&#8217;t know how to do this!&#8221; against a rear-projection screen.  It&#8217;s a great comic action scene, but I preferred the music performance that preceded it, with Jerry as conductor of Dean and the women&#8217;s choir.  Similar to a section near the beginning when Jerry leads the girls at a march, only now instead of aping his spastic movements, they vocalize them.</p>
<p>All the &#8220;young high school kids&#8221; look to be in their twenties.  IMDB says they were indeed.  Gags involve a milk-shooting water gun, eating cigars, drinking disgusting liquids, falling into a swan pond, and other slapstick stunts, but it&#8217;s not over-the-top physical comedy.  Or maybe in this post-<em>Dumb and Dumber</em> America, Jerry Lewis humor seems subtle.  One of the gags, when Jerry pretends to be a gangster towards the end to escape the school, is referencing 1940&#8242;s William Castle movie series <em>The Whistler</em>.  Weird how the happy ending involves the girl being left alone as Martin goes back on active army duty, which he&#8217;s been hoping to do all movie long.  It&#8217;s the anti-<em>Stop-Loss</em>.</p>
<p><img src="http://deeperintomovies.net/journal/image08/yourenevertooyoung6.jpg" alt="image"></p>
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