Tripti Joshi (Editor)

If You Could Only Cook

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Director
  
William A. Seiter

Produced by
  
Everett Riskin

Language
  
English

7/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy, Romance

Duration
  

Country
  
USA

If You Could Only Cook movie poster

Writer
  
F. Hugh Herbert
,
Howard J. Green
,
Gertrude Purcell

Release date
  
December 30, 1935

Cast
  
Herbert Marshall
(Jim Buchanan),
Jean Arthur
(Joan Hawthorne),
Leo Carrillo
(Mike Rossini),
Lionel Stander
(Flash),
Alan Edwards
(Bob Reynolds),
Frieda Inescort
(Evelyn Fletcher)

Genres
  
Screwball comedy, Comedy, Romance Film, Black-and-white

Similar movies
  
There's Something About Mary
,
She’s Funny That Way
,
Bringing Up Baby
,
Harvey
,
The Onion Movie
,
Arsenic and Old Lace

Tagline
  
SHE GAVE UP HER PARK BENCH FOR HIM! HE GAVE UP MILLIONS FOR HER!

If You Could Only Cook (1935) is a screwball comedy of mistaken identity starring Herbert Marshall as a frustrated automobile executive and Jean Arthur as a young woman who talks him into posing as her husband so they can land jobs as a butler and a cook.

Contents

If You Could Only Cook movie scenes

Tcm butlers in love 2of4 if you could only cook intro


Plot

Jim Buchanan (Marshall), wealthy president of Buchanan Motor Company, is engaged to Evelyn Fletcher (Inescort), a henpecking aristocrat who is interested in Jim for his money. When Jim's fellow executives reject his plan to introduce a new automobile design, he decides to take a vacation.

Declaring himself "sick and tired of everything", Jim goes for a walk in the park, where he meets a young woman named Joan Hawthorne (Arthur). Joan is having trouble finding a job and has just been evicted from her apartment. Assuming he is also a job hunter, she asks Jim to pose as her husband so they can apply for a combined job opening for a butler and a cook. Without revealing his true identity, he agrees.

"Mr. and Mrs. Burns" are soon hired by Michael Rossini (Carrillo). She is a good cook; he improves his skills by sneaking away at night and taking lessons from his own butler. He also goes to his office and takes some of his automobile sketches to show to Joan. Impressed by his designs, on their day off she shows them to an executive with one of Buchanan's competitors, but he recognizes Buchanan's style, leading to her arrest for theft. Having fallen in love with Jim, she refuses to help the police find him.

Meanwhile, Jim has decided to tell Joan who he is. When she misses a lunch date while in jail, he writes her a letter, abandons his butler position, and returns to Evelyn and his life as a businessman. Rossini, who has just organized a bootlegging gang, learns of Jim's trip to the office from his assistant, Flash (Stander), who is suspicious of Jim and has been tailing him. Wanting Joan for himself, he has her bailed out and tells her the truth about Jim.

She reacts by raging against Jim, so Rossini promptly orders his henchmen to kill Jim at his wedding. To ingratiate himself with Joan, he tells her about this, but she declares that she loves Jim after all and begs Rossini to spare his life.

Rossini's men abduct Jim from his own wedding as he is about to take his vows, but Rossini arrives before they leave. He and his men take Jim home at gunpoint and fetch a justice of the peace to marry Jim and Joan. Joan refuses and locks herself in her room, but Jim embraces the plan. Since Rossini's men were seen kidnapping him, he blackmails the gang into persuading her to change her mind. Outside Joan's room, Rossini pretends to argue with Jim, Flash fires his gun in the air, and Jim collapses onto the floor, pretending to be hit. The deception works: Joan opens the door and rushes to his side.

Cast

  • Herbert Marshall as Jim Buchanan
  • Jean Arthur as Joan Hawthorne
  • Leo Carrillo as Mike Rossini
  • Lionel Stander as Flash, Rossini's right-hand man
  • Alan Edwards as Bob Reynolds
  • Frieda Inescort as Evelyn Fletcher
  • Gene Morgan as Al
  • Ralf Harolde as Swig
  • Matt McHugh as Pete
  • Richard Powell as Chesty
  • Lawsuit

    In England, Columbia promoted the film as a Frank Capra production. Capra, the top director at the studio—who had been feuding with studio head Harry Cohn over financial and artistic issues—sued Columbia for unlawful use of his name. The parties settled, with Capra returning to the studio while getting $100,000 (the number based on a separate dispute over salary) and having one film waived from a contractual five-film obligation.

    Reception

    The New York Times review was mixed, stating, "the texture of the production is too uneven. It has laughs but lacks pace." The critic praised the performances of Marshall, Carrillo and Stander, but felt that "... Jean Arthur, a genuinely versatile player, could not quite lend the sparkle to the role of the girl which it conceivably deserved."

    References

    If You Could Only Cook Wikipedia
    If You Could Only Cook IMDb If You Could Only Cook themoviedb.org