Take Her, She's Mine

Take Her, She's Mine

1963 "There comes a time in every father's life when his baby becomes a 'babe'... THAT'S WHEN THE FUN BEGINS!"
Take Her, She's Mine
Take Her, She's Mine

Take Her, She's Mine

6.2 | 1h38m | NR | en | Comedy

After reluctantly packing up his daughter, Mollie, and sending her away to study art at a Paris college, Frank Michaelson gives new meaning to the term "concerned parent." Reading Mollie's letters describing her counter-culture experiences and beatnik friends, Frank eventually grows so paranoid that he boards a plane to Paris to see firsthand the kind of lessons his daughter is learning with her new artist amour.

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6.2 | 1h38m | NR | en | Comedy | More Info
Released: November. 13,1963 | Released Producted By: 20th Century Fox , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

After reluctantly packing up his daughter, Mollie, and sending her away to study art at a Paris college, Frank Michaelson gives new meaning to the term "concerned parent." Reading Mollie's letters describing her counter-culture experiences and beatnik friends, Frank eventually grows so paranoid that he boards a plane to Paris to see firsthand the kind of lessons his daughter is learning with her new artist amour.

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Cast

James Stewart , Sandra Dee , Audrey Meadows

Director

Malcolm Brown

Producted By

20th Century Fox ,

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Reviews

Robert J. Maxwell I usually get a laugh out of this cornball material because the Ephrons have done such a good job on the script, Jimmy Stewart is in his element as the perplexed and grouchy father, and, as his daughter, Sandra Dee was a 1950s icon, with her magnificent bosom and fruity New Jersey voice.The story, briefly: Dee leaves her bourgeois home in Pacific Palisades and goes to a fancy woman's college in New England to study art. He letters home indicate that she has met boys and a mysterious telegram arrives at 2:30 in the morning explaining that all charges have been dropped and she's been released. Puzzled and irritated, Stewart flies East where he's introduced to Beatnik coffee houses and sit ins for free speech.Dee flunks out and gets an art scholarship to Paris, where she hooks up with a young man who must be handsome because he resembles Warren Beatty. Of course, he's an aristocrat and terribly wealthy too, so we know the movie will end expectably. Before that happens, Stewart flies to Paris to check on her, gets arrested in a French whore house, and is photographed jumping in his underwear from a tourist boat on the Seine.It was about this time that Stewart made a couple of family comedies -- this one, "Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation," and "Dear Bridget." This is the best of the three, by far. Stewart's appeal was fading because he was getting older, as all of us are. He had some good movies ahead of him but few involved romance. Cast as a naive lover, as in "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence," he seemed out of place, not because of anything in his performances.He plays the same role here, essentially, as in "Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation" -- the pompous, self-righteous, thoroughly conventional father who is unable to cope with the social changes taking place around him. He can't bring himself to use the word "virgin" in front of his post-pubescent daughter. He's the guy who querulously demands to know why Dee's mother, Audrey Meadows, hasn't had one of those "talks" with her daughter to explain the birds and the bees. I swear I'm not making that up.The script is a lot funnier than the other attempts at comedy, which were pretty low brow. I'll give an example. Stewart visits a coffee shop in which Dee is employed as a singer and dishwasher. It's all very innocent but Stewart has reason to believe that Dee is a stripper. Peeved but sly, he asks the waiter if the girls take off their clothes. "No -- if they did, who would look at them? I'd rather look at my Aunt Minnie." Now Stewart is piqued. He collars the young kid and demands an apology. "Why? What's it to you if I don't look at them?" Stewart explains he's Dee's father. "You mean you WANT me to look at them?" Absolutely not! Stewart replies that he doesn't want the waiter to look at his daughter naked but he resents the implication that his daughter isn't worth looking at naked. It sounds silly, but the exchange is really amusing and Stewart and Bob Denver handle it perfectly.I find it curious, too, the way the film balances itself so delicately on the old-fashioned values of the 1950s and the revolution of youth in the 1960s. Stewart represents the former and Dee gradually changes from complacency to independence.Nice job.
JasparLamarCrabb Featherweight comedy starring James Stewart as a harried dad who goes to Paris to bring back coed daughter Sandra Dee after she's fallen for a Frenchman. That's it. Stewart tries mightily as he gets into one embarrassing (albiet harmless) predicament after another while taking kooky advice from loony Brit Robert Morley. Morley gets most of the film's laughs. Director Henry Koster keeps things at a mostly sitcom level and though at least some this was presumably filmed on location, it's mostly studio bound, high gloss stuff. There is a colorful supporting cast including Irene Tsu, Audrey Meadows and, briefly, Bob Denver and top notch cinematography by Lucien Ballard. Based on a play that somehow ran for a year on Broadway.
bkoganbing It's been commented on by many critics that James Stewart has been the actor most partnered with top directors. His films with Alfred Hitchcock, John Ford, and Frank Capra have been studied over and over again. But it would surprise many to learn that after the eight he did with Anthony Mann, the second place finisher is Henry Koster with five films with James Stewart.The five films are Harvey, No Highway, Mr. Hobbs Goes On a Vacation, Dear Brigitte and Take Her She's Mine. And then they further subdivide as Stewart plays three types of character. He's the absent minded professor in No Highway and Dear Brigitte and the harassed father of girls in Mr. Hobbs and Take Her She's Mine. Both of which he plays to perfection. And of course there is Harvey in a class all by itself.Father is the last to know that his daughter has grown up to be a "dish." But that is in fact what Sandra Dee has done. Apparently just hanging around has put all the boys' hormones into an exponential overdrive. Poor Stewart is walking innocently into all kinds of grief trying to protect Dee's virtue. The California based Stewart's concern has taken him to New England and then to Paris.Some pretty funny things happen to poor Jimmy. But I think you'll like best the way his costume falls apart on a chartered boat in the Seine due to some bad advice that he gets from a fellow hotel guest Robert Morley. Still cracks me up 43 years after first seeing it.Audrey Meadows plays the patient wife and mother to Stewart and Dee borrowing a little from Alice Kramden. And I think today's audience will appreciate seeing Bob Denver essentially reprising his role as a Maynard G. Krebs type beatnik. Look for James Brolin in a tiny role as one of the hormonally charged college kids.Koster and Stewart work well together. Maybe at some point his partnership with Stewart will get some study as well.
Coxer99 A naive teen provides plenty of excitement for her well intentioned Dad, who tries keeping her on an even keel. Fun for die hard fans of Jimmy Stewart, like me. Originally, a play which starred Art Carney and Elizabeth Ashley, who won a Tony for her performance.