Hope you all had a great Thanksgiving weekend. My mom and I went to visit family, spending about three hours on the road. I haven’t been taking long drives lately, so I really felt it and came home exhausted. Later we watched a Hallmark Christmas movie with Bruce Campbell, but this isn’t about that.
Because the next night I started another movie that’s much more remarkable.
For some reason Amazon Prime Video has become the dumping ground all sorts of forgotten bargain bin b-movies. You won’t find a lot of these on best-of lists, if you find them at all. Some of the movies look pretty rough, not having the luxury of restoration. Why bother? No one remembers them anyway. Many of them aren’t worth your time.
Slightly Honorable (1939) is worth your time. It’s even worth your money for a physical copy.
The average movie fan won’t recognize any of the cast, though classic television devotees may know Eve Arden (Our Miss Brooks, from radio and TV), who has a small roll here. Pat O’Brien plays lawyer John Webb, playboy. Webb is involved in a case surrounding poor road construction, which has made him enemies. At some swanky party he falls for young Ann Seymour (Ruth Terry, born in Benton Harbor, Mich.) and is a little put off when he realizes the age gap. But she’s not shy.
A pre-Code gag has her taking off her dress at every opportunity!
But soon the bodies are stacking up, and Webb is being framed for them. At first he manages to avoid the attempts, but when his secretary (poor Miss Brooks!) gets a knife in the back the hook is nearly set. Rounding out the trio is Webb’s law partner and comedic foil, Russ Sampson (Broderick Crawford), who remains loyal to the very end.
The dialog sparkles and jokes hold up well.
“Let’s you and me have a heart-to-heart talk, huh?” “What would you use?” is probably the best line, among many. It’s a comedy (until the end, when it isn’t), but even the drunk’s antics and the slapstick are kept within a reasonable range. Terry really leans into the ditzy young girl routine, somehow maintaining a sweet naiveness that keeps her appealing. Even with her clothes on.
Spoiler: everything works out in the end.
Through all the twists and turns, lies and backstabbing, and a very dark turn in the final act, Slightly Honorable never ceases to entertain. It’s probably that tonal shift towards the end that has kept it from being a big hit. Yet unlike recent films, the story never subverts itself or cheats the audience. Any social commentary that may have existed at the time has long since worn off, leaving us with something silly and fun.