Harman Patil (Editor)

Ladies' Man (1947 film)

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Directed by
  
William D. Russell

Production company
  
Paramount Pictures

Director
  
William D. Russell

Cinematography
  
Stuart Thompson

6.8/10
IMDb

Produced by
  
Daniel Dare

Initial release
  
1947

Production company
  
Paramount Pictures

Written by
  
Jack Rose, Lewis Meltzer

Ladies' Man (1947 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters55227p55227

Screenplay by
  
Edmund Beloin Jack Rose Lewis Meltzer

Starring
  
Eddie Bracken Cass Daley Virginia Welles Spike Jones Johnny Coy Virginia Field

Edited by
  
Everett Douglas Doane Harrison

Cast
  
Cass Daley, Eddie Bracken, Spike Jones, Virginia Field

Similar
  
Happy Go Lucky, Many Happy Returns, Thrill of a Lifetime, You Can't Ration Love, Crazy House

Ladies' Man is a 1947 American comedy film directed by William D. Russell and written by Edmund Beloin, Jack Rose and Lewis Meltzer. The film stars Eddie Bracken, Cass Daley, Virginia Welles, Spike Jones, Johnny Coy and Virginia Field. The film was released on February 7, 1947, by Paramount Pictures.

Contents

Cast

  • Eddie Bracken as Henry Haskell
  • Cass Daley as Geraldine Ryan
  • Virginia Welles as Jean Mitchell
  • Spike Jones as Spike Jones
  • Johnny Coy as Johnny O'Connor
  • Virginia Field as Gladys Hayden
  • Lewis Russell as David Harmon
  • Georges Renavent as Mr. Jones
  • Roberta Jonay as Miss Miller
  • The City Slickers as Spike Jones' Band
  • Reception

    A. W. of The New York Times said, "Whatever may be one's opinion about Ladies Man, it cannot be said that Eddie Bracken, its star, is miscast. For this singularly simple little item from Paramount, which began a stand at the Gotham on Saturday, makes full use of Mr. Bracken's cherubic appearance. As a bumpkin from Badger, Okla., who suddenly becomes an oil millionaire and comes to New York for the inevitable fling, Mr. Bracken is to the manner born. He is a reluctant Romeo—shy, gullible and frustrated. But the ensuing yarn about his involvements with a radio program and several predatory females, is corn from the bottom of the crib. The chuckles in this comedy are widely spaced and hardly keep pace with its tedium."

    References

    Ladies' Man (1947 film) Wikipedia