In Defense Of Urban
Flight-Cary Grant and Myra Loy’s “Mr. Blanding Builds His Dream House” (1948)-A
Film Review
DVD Review
By Sandy Salmon
Mr. Blanding Builds His
Dream House, starring Cary Grant, Myrna Loy,
[As of December 1, 2017
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Nowadays the great flight
from the big cities started in the immediate post-World War II period with the
construction of Levitttown-type suburbs has run its course and there is a creep
back to the cities by the non-auto hungry Generation X. Maybe it is the
economics of purchase but I have listened in disbelief as father after father
of my acquaintance has told me that their young charges do not own, do not lust
after their won automobile. In some cases do not have a driver’s license at
twenty-something. Heresy, sheer heresy to our generation hitting the road at
sixteen and at least pining for an owned automobile around the same time. That strange
sociology phenomenon aside back then every even marginally prosperous family
was itching to join the exodus. (And maybe from smaller town too when you
remember back to the days when places like downtown Mill Valley outside of
Trenton, New Jersey where I grew up in the 1950s used to be thriving places
where you would spent plenty of time doing this and that before the big malls
sucked the life out of basically Mom and Pop Main Street operations.) That is the working premise of the film under
review, Mr. Blanding Builds His Dream
House, as Cary Grant and Myra Loy go through their paces trying to make the
damn thing come true without bankrupting them and not without seemingly every
pitfall known to house-building man (and woman).
Mad man, you know
Madison Avenue, New York City upwardly mobile advertising man fresh for the
war, World War II, Mr. Blanding, played by versatile Cary Grant who could play
for laughs or suspense at the flip of a coin, is sick and tired of his cramped
quarters in an apartment in the city and dreams of getting out in the great
fresh suburban, or what will be suburban air of Connecticut. Housewife and good
mother Mrs. Blanding, played by equally versatile Myra Loy couldn’t agree more,
as long as the operation doesn’t set them “underwater” as the more recent
expression post-2008 housing bubble burst would have it. The problem, serious
problem is that these city slickers don’t know from nothing about such things
as old time Victorian houses and farms, allegedly cheap ones to fix up, which
is what they have their ignorant little hearts set on to be able to bring up
their two precocious young daughters in a non-city environment.
Naturally not knowing
anything about rural real estate markets they grab a nice old place on the
cheap. No, not on the cheap when the hi-jinx are through since this place is a
“lemon,” a dead-end which has to be torn down and another mighty dwelling put
in its place which really does almost bankrupt the pair especially when Mad man
Mr. Balnding can’t come up with some hammy slogan to sell, well, hams in order
to keep his job and keep from going under water like a million other people
before and after them. Not Cary or Myra’s best work which has to do with the
limits of the story-line after all how many pratfalls and exasperating
experiences can you work out, or get worked up about, over your so-called dream
house before you simply don’t care anymore. Or we in that Saturday movie
audience or now DVD home watching crowd either.
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