It with Clara Bow: DVD Cover

    It Director: Clarence G. Badger, Josef von Sternberg Cast: Clara Bow, Antonio Moreno, William Austin, Jacqueline Gadsden

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    • DVD Release Date: 03/02/2004
    • Original Release: 1927
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 37,430

    Viewer Rating: (3 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Plot" See All

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    DVD - Black & White$29.99
     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
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    Scenes

    Features

    Audio commentary by Jeanine Basinger, Corwin-Fuller professor of Film Studies, Wesleyan University; Still gallery; DVD-ROM feature (Adobe Acrobat Reader required): Rare article by director Clarence Badger on the making of the film

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    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    1. Main Title [2:00]
    2. Finding "It" [10:15]
    3. Gashouse Gables [4:49]
    4. Dining Out [10:56]
    5. The Shopgirl's Day [4:14]
    6. To the Beach [3:59]
    7. Saving the Baby [14:00]
    8. Unemployed [4:54]
    9. Yachting [8:42]
    10. The Seduction [6:48]
    11. The Rescue [5:15]
    12. End Credits [:52]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Contrary to popular belief, Clara Bow was already Paramount's biggest box-office draw when she starred in this delightful rags-to-riches comedy. But It, from the fertile mind of bizarre best-selling author Elinor Glyn, remains perhaps the quintessential Bow picture. Not that the story of a poor shopgirl falling for her rich employer was anything new (by 1927, Bow could play that role in her sleep), but It came complete with one of the best publicity campaigns in Hollywood history. Glyn herself publicly pointed to Bow as the personification of It, "that quality possessed by some which draws all others with its magnetic force." Paramount made sure that Glyn's lofty description of the word sunk in and even convinced the author to explain It in the film to leading man Antonio Moreno (who, according to Glyn, simply oozed It as well). The lightweight comedy behind all this hoopla centered on little Betty Lou Spence, a vivacious salesgirl invited to dinner at the Ritz by foppish wastrel and self-described "old fruit" "Monty" Montgomery (William Austin in one of those roles later personified by Edward Everett Horton). Betty is not paying attention to her dinner companion, however, but is ogling department store heir Cyrus Waltham (Moreno). He notices her too, and takes the salesgirl on a whirlwind tour of Coney Island. But when Betty is mistakenly assumed to be the unmarried mother of an infant (actually her roommate Molly's), stern Cyrus no longer sees her as proper marriage material. Betty, of course, gets her man in the end and Waltham's snooty girlfriend ("other woman" specialist Jacqueline Gadsden) ends up in the drink. Delivering all the vivacious punch expected of a Bow comedy, It takes time out for a couple of rather poignant scenes. With the hindsight that Brooklyn's own Bow was never fully accepted by Hollywood society despite her stardom, it is touching to watch Betty being ostracized at the snobbish Ritz; and Bow is never more affecting than when she realizes that Moreno is offering diamonds and pearls instead of marriage. Priscilla Bonner, as Bow's drab, single-mother roommate, adds a touch of realism to her brief role, enviously observing Betty's frivolity. If It only added to Bow's brilliant success, the film did little for the intelligent Bonner. To the end of her life, Bonner maintained that accepting featured billing in It lost her any chance of true stardom. A very young Gary Cooper, has a bit as a reporter and director Josef Von Sternberg reputedly took over for Clarence Badger during a brief illness. Despite its rather trite Cinderella plot, It magnificently demonstrates why Bow's guileless flapper came to define an entire decade. It is heartbreaking to realize that her decline had already set in, and Bow's very public troubles and eventual career destruction were lurking right around the corner! Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

    Customer Reviews

    Clara Bow is Magnificentby Bayadere

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    April 27, 2009: This is a truly silly story. Clara Bow invests It with an importance it would otherwise not deserve. She doesn't deserve to be forgotten. I cannot think of a single other star who had her kind of appeal. She all but jumps off the screen to grab our lapels to make us pay attention. Brilliant!

    This review was written about the DVD Black & White edition.

    Clara Bow at her most adorableby SilentClown22

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    March 16, 2009: This film is thoroughly entertaining from beginning to end. Ms. Bow, the original "It Girl", uses a lot of sex appeal (that IS what "it" is, after all!)and cunning as she goes after the man she wants. This charming little masterpiece also documents Gary Cooper's first time on film! Keep your eyes open, he plays the newspaper man somewhere in the middle of the flick ;).

    This review was written about the DVD Black & White edition.


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