Preston Sturges made RomComs that are funny, sexy, glamorous, clever and sophisticated. The Lady Eve proves the point. It still works three quarters of a century later, especially with the proto-modern Barbara Stanwyck as the minx in the middle of a screwball con-game extraordinaire.
Modern audiences shouldn’t shy away. Funny, sexy, glamorous, clever and sophisticated never go out of style.
Barbara Stanwyck’s clear, unsentimental delivery works perfectly for her con queen, an evil minx with occasional flashes of humanity. Influential film critic Pauline Kael once noted “Stanwyck’s remarkable modernism,” a trait bracingly evident in The Lady Eve.
Henry Fonda’s mannish boy seems younger than 35, Fonda’s age when the movie was made. Still, the great Fonda is a wonderful screen presence: endearing, upright and capable of playing comedy.
They are supported by several legendary character actors.
Preston Sturges wrote and directed this gem during a furious five-year burst of activity from `39 to `43.
Sturges deals confidently in extreme cultural archetypes, starting with a rich heir, the ultimate catch from when catching a substantial man was the unquestioned goal of most any woman.
Being mildly risqué went a long way in 1941.
Imagine what a Lady Eve character would do today to get over on a rich guy. Wardrobe malfunctions, bikinis and an oral fixation would only begin to tell the tale. Ya feel me.
Screwball comedy scores highest on Circumstantial Reality, though the incomparable Preston Sturges didn’t need to go too high. Midway into the Surreal was enough for him.
The Lady Eve was made during the Great Depression, when wealth was ridiculed, not reviled. Today it’s reviled, though times aren’t nearly as dire as they were right before World War II put everybody to work.