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Easy Living (Universal Cinema Classics)x$7.48
    (21 reviews)
Best Price: $7.48
Jean Arthur and Ray Milland shine in this screwball comedy written by Academy Award® winner* Preston Sturges. Mary Smith (Arthur) is a poor working girl who literally has a fortune dropped in her lap when a wealthy financier (Edward Arnold) tosses a sable coat out a window and it lands on her. Everyone automatically assumes she's his mistress, and soon her fairytale-like rags-to-riches lifestyle threatens a very real romance with an inept waiter (Milland). It's a "delightful comedy" (Leonard Maltin's Classic Movie Guide) full of misunderstandings that showcases high-society slapstick at its best!
Of all the screenplays Preston Sturges wrote for Paramount before becoming the greatest comic director of his generation, 1937's Easy Living seems the most like something he would have filmed himself--a satirical fable about chance, class, and the absurdity of the American dream. Jean Arthur is a New York secretary riding to work atop a double-decker bus when a fur coat miraculously descends from the sky and settles on her shoulders. The fur, however, has not dropped from Olympus but from the hand of a millionaire (Edward Arnold) who has just tossed it from a nearby roof to punish his wife. But as if it were a magic fleece (the mythical reference is almost certainly intended by the erudite Sturges), it makes its wearer invincible, conferring an aura of prosperity, celebrity, and power on the previously average working girl. No folk tale is complete without a prince: Sturges's is the millionaire's son, Ray Milland, who is trying to pass as an apprentice stockbroker. Directed with a light, elegant touch by Mitchell Leisen, the film lacks the crazy energy it would have had under Sturges's own hand, but this remains one of the great screwball comedies (in a year that also saw The Awful Truth and Nothing Sacred). --Dave Kehr
MPN: MCAD61032991D - UPC: 025193299123
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Customer Reviews
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One of the great screwball comedies comes to DVD; more Jean Arthur, please!      By A1X0L2JLAWJVFM on 2008-01-12
Jean Arthur was one of the greatest screen actresses of the 1930s and early 1940s, but because she worked semi-independently (she had non-exclusive contracts with Paramount, RKO, Columbia and United Artists), her combined work has been little seen in these days of box sets. With a great Preston Sturges script, and expert direction by the much-underrated Mitchell Leisen, EASY LIVING is one of the best examples of her work: a working-class girl (Arthur) is sitting atop an open-air bus when a millionaire (the inimitable Edward Arnold) flings his wife's fur coat out the window and it lands on Arthur's head. Hilarious complications ensue, which include a young Ray Milland as the millionaire's son and the always-great Mary Nash (Hepburn's mother in THE PHILADELPHIA STORY) as the coat-less wife. But it is Jean Arthur, whose wonderful combination of dizziness and indomitablility, that make this spin merrily along, and it is a delight form start to finish. Columbia (Sony) has the bulk of the best Arthur titles in its library (MR. DEEDS, MR. SMITH, YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU, MORE THE MERRIER, TOO MANY HUSBANDS, TALK OF THE TOWN, ONLY ANGELS HAVE WINGS), but the MCA/Paramount titles are also pretty prime (A FOREIGN AFFAIR, THE PLAINSMAN, SHANE and EASY LIVING), and a mini-box set would be greatly anticipated. MCA has done extremely well by several of its great Paramount stars (Lombard, Dietrich) but we need more Colbert, more Stanwyck, deHavilland, Rogers, Russell, Goddard, Fontaine et al. The announcement of some other gems on their release schedule (the divine MIDNIGHT and THE MAJOR AND THE MINOR) is cause for celebration; let's hope this really is the beginning of a great trend!
A RARE COMEDY DELIGHT.      By A3BSS2M2DPPV4T on 2002-08-30
In retrospect, this little 1937 flick holds up as one of the funniest screwball comedies of the thirties. Loud millionaire J.B. Ball tells his extravagantly aggressive wife (Mary Nash) that she cannot keep her $58,000 Sable coat. Ball throws it out of the upper window of their mansion where it happens to fall right on top of bewildered Mary Smith (Arthur), who's travelling on an open-air bus. Mary's a poor gal who works for a magazine similar to BOY'S LIFE. Arnold is seen buying Mary a new hat by pussy-cat faced gossip Franklin Pangborn and soon she gets more than just a hat: practically all of New York is at her feet. The scene where she and Milland wreak havoc at the now-obsolete automat is truly inspired and hilarious, as is Luis Alberni - as Louis Louis - when he shows Mary her new "quarters" -- i.e. "And make it snappa...Thaank Yewww". The rather offbeat cast works wonders with the great Preston Sturges script: Milland and Nash make a weird son and wife to the always good (and always loud) Edward Arnold, but somehow it makes for better screwball; the whacko cast helps push the one-joke material through to a happy finish, and the movie helped establish Jean Arthur as a comedienne of the first rank. P.S. While listening to Arthur's wonderfully off-beat voice, I realised it reminded me a little of Julie Harris (!).
a movie for today      By on 1999-08-21
Day-traders alert. Cut yourself on every line of this witty, fast-paced and knowing movie that glories in the talents of Jean Arthur, et al. As tight as a fist, construction-wise, it traverses ostentation, banking (and ostentation), stock market manipulation (and ostentation) and that thing called real-honest-to-goodness, in-the-belly hunger. Arnold, Milland and the (forgive me) unnamed actor who plays the hotel proprietor (should have stayed cook) to hilarious effect are all wonderful. But Jean Arthur demonstrates yet again what an underrated talent she was: energy, sweet timing and mercurial delights - poured into the camera.
A fine, early screenplay by Preston Sturges!      By on 1998-12-26
Jean Arthur, Edward Arnold, a baby Ray Milland, and the beginnings of what became known as the Sturges Players combine for a tight little screwball comedy. This was not available on video until just recently, but if you enjoy the old madcap comedies, ala MY MAN GODFREY, NOTHING SACRED, and Preston Sturges romps like PALM BEACH STORY, THE LADY EVE, etc, I'm confident in recommending EASY LIVING. I didn't notice Sturges wrote it until the final credits, but that didn't alter my feelings. This is an under-appreciated jewel!
Great Depression Era Screwball Comedy      By A2JYIDH7JIG48H on 2005-10-13
Easy Living is one of the best screwball comedies of the depression era. Jean Arthur (Talk Of The Town, Shane) is a poor working girl who comes into sundry luxuries coincidentally, causing the loss of her job and apartment. Edward Arnold (Meet John Doe, Mr. Smith Goes To Washington), is her anonymous benefactor, a well-intentioned but cantankerous prominent banker who throws his wife's extravagant fur coat out the window of their skyscraper. It lands on Arthur, who tries to return it, but he makes a gift of it to her, and insists on replacing her damaged hat with an expensive one as well, making her late for work, causing the job loss which in turn costs her to miss paying rent.
But the hat store proprietor (Franklin Pangborn) recognized Arnold and spreads the misinformation that Arthur is his mistress. One thing leads to another, and she finds herself put up rent free in a grand hotel suite. Meanwhile, she meets Arnold's son (Ray Milland, of Lost Weekend, Panic In Year Zero, etc.) by coincidence. He's trying to make it on his own as a waiter in an automat, so she has no idea of his connection with Arnold, and vice versa. Milland's character having the same last name, of course, as his father, reinforces the misinformation propogated by hotel clerks, stock brokers, and others, resulting in an interesting situation exploited for plenty of laughs.
The script was written by Preston Sturges and while I think the story could have been improved, the performances by Arthur and Arnold make it pleasant and funny. Arthur is cute and funny as ever, and Arnold is funnier than expected due to his disagreeable and argumentative - though honest and generous - character, which his performance makes work.
- An overlooked masterpiece
     By A215P85W653CZV on 2005-01-02
I'm so glad this is finally coming out on DVD....I can hardly wait for April 22, 2008, when it's due to be released, & I've got my advance order in. I tripped over "Easy Living" one afternoon on AMC(back before they had more commercials than HSN), and absolutely loved it. With Ray Milland as an unhappy rich young man & Jean Arthur as a working girl who helps him when he's down, plus the always steady Edward Albert, a sparkling & urbane script by Preston Sturges, if you love "Madcaps", "Easy Living" is right down up your parkway and down your boulevard. And, to quote Scarecrow Video in Seattle, Jean Arthur was one of Hollywood's great little "hotties". She was cute as a button, sassy, and sweet as honeydew vinewater. Heck, Ray Milland is at least as funny here as he was in "Lost Weekend" & in "X-The Man With The X-Ray Eyes". BTW, I'm sorry I had mis-listed Ralph Bellamy in the Ray Milland role when I first hung out this review....call it a senior moment.
- Brilliant Screwball comedy from Preston Sturges
     By A3SELPQRFQG2J4 on 2008-01-31
Jean Arthur shines in this brilliant screwball comedy from 1937. Preston Sturges wrote the brilliantly funny screenplay and Mitchell Leisen directed. All the jewelry and furs Arthur wears in the film are REAL. They had to have security guards posted on the set!
The premise; excitable Wall Street banker, Edward Arnold has a fight with his wife and throws her new fur coat down from the top of their 5th Avenue mansion. What happens to the person it lands on is the story (poor Jean Arthur going to work sitting on the top of an open-air bus).
Brilliant performances from all; Jean Arthur, Edward Arnold, Ray Milland, Esther Dale, Franklin Pangborn, Luis Albeti and others are letter-perfect.
Many wild comedies of the 1930's are grouped in as being 'Screwball'. This one IS screwball and Sturges practically invented the artform.
Now...if some of Arthur's other great films would be released; "If You Could Only Cook", "The Devil and Miss Jones", "The Whole Town's Talking".
This is absolutely a must-have.
Also released with this brilliant comedy are three other must-haves; "The Major and The Minor", "Midnight" and "She Done Him Wrong".
By the way, the other reviewer had it wrong; from 1935 through 1944, Arthur had an exclusive contract with Columbia Pictures and many of her best movies were done as loan-outs. She did not have a 'non-exclusive' contract.
- Funny,romantic...witty and a treasure.
     By AGFHXW64TMCWA on 2005-08-29
I could tell you how the movie runs the gamut from touching down and out scenes of a poor working girl to the luxurious farce that is played,but the dialougue is so sharp and sassy,witty and clever that all the characters seem to carry this film into the arena of great madcap screwball comedies.My 15 year old daughter loves this film so much she took it from my 25 film collection of Jean Arthur into her own...she has only one film in her collection.
- Piggy Bank Blindfolds, Confusing Installment Plans and Starving Secretaries Are Here ComicallyKismetted
     By A39VT91VD5N5ZZ on 2008-06-11
Jean Arthur never made a better comedy, and that's saying something! With a surfeit of superb set-pieces, and unequalled writing, Easy Living sashays giddily along the avenues of depression American, spewing forth hilarity like so many wildcat strikes. So miraculous is Sturges' touch he almost seems a comic rhabdomancist, as gushers of comedy break forth in a supernormal even surrealist display of the most ribald imagination possible. Backed with the underrated Mitch Leisen's stylish direction this gem of a film just get's better with age.
Heroine Jean Arthur, down to her last dime, decides to break open her piggybank - but soft-hearted Jean can't do it - she has to first tie a blindfold around the piggy's eyes before smashing it open! Every math teacher in the world will crack up as Edward Arnold, in his usual role as the great man of business, this time as a prominent banker, spends a fruitless five minutes in the backseat of his limo trying to explain the trap of compound interest payments to shopgirl Jean, who insists she knows arithmetic better than he does and drives him half-crazy when she can't follow his reasoning.
And on and on all leading up to the legendary Automat scene with Ray Milland and Jean Arthur creating utter chaos at the food automat.
If you like Jean Arthur, or Preston Sturges, and you haven't yet seen this doozy of a screwball comedy - now you can! Don't miss it!
- Delightful comedy
     By A19U5RYULZ0Z72 on 2008-05-10
Written by Preston Sturges and with smooth direction by Mitchell Liesen, "Easy Living" is a charming cinderella comedy starring Jean Arthur, one of those memorable warm comediennes from American films of the thirties (the others include Carole Lombard, Irene Dunne, Claudette Colbert and Myrna Loy). The merits of the film include:
- a funny screenplay with the usual nutty Sturges scenes of screwball comedy and cracks at capitalism
- Ray Milland emerging as an expert and handsome leading man
- bright lighting and lush sets, typical of director Liesen
- Arthur herself, giving the film a warm and glowing core, combining her winning smile with a persistent look of bewilderment. She is charming and credible.
The print of the film is excellent but there are no extras except a cursory introduction by TCM host Robert Osborne. Not even a scene selection option is provided. The DVD is expensive.
- Goofy Screwball Treat!
     By A33VLGWSPBOWJK on 2008-05-31
This is a delight of the genre with a story allowing for characters that the audience can heartily enjoy. Other reviewers have described it well. I prefer it to most of the better known screwball comedies as it's a little less predictable than I expected.
- Jean Arthur, Preston Sturges and Mitchell Leisen make a fine, funny screwball comedy
     By A2GCHG6U8HTVIT on 2008-06-03
When an expensive sable coat, thrown from a penthouse balcony by Wall Street tycoon J. B. Ball (Edward Arnold), lands on the head of office clerk Mary Smith (Jean Arthur) while she's riding to work on the top deck of a city bus, we're off on a fine screwball comedy that nails class assumptions to the wall. (The wall being a fabulous suite of the Hotel Louis.) Ball, known as the Bull of Broad Street, threw the coat to spite his extravagant wife. Although it was a mistake, as soon as word gets around that Mary Smith has a coat from J. B. Ball, it's not long before people begin to assume that Mary must be the Bull's mistress. And although she loses her job, almost instantly all those who want a piece of the Bull are falling over themselves to make Mary happy. She winds up in the Hotel Louis in a suite that could only have been dreamed up by Hollywood designers. Clothes and jewels are delivered; a car and chauffeur show up. Mary is mystified by all this, but happily accepts. When she meets a young man who works at the automat, well...we know, of course, that the young man is Johnnie Ball (Ray Milland), son of J. B. Ball, and that he earlier had stormed out of the family mansion determined to prove he could be his own man. It all gets sorted out, but only after a new Depression may get started fueled by more loony assumptions.
Preston Sturges, who wrote the script, brings all the social satire and clever dialogue to Easy Living that he brought to the films he directed and wrote later. Mitchell Leisen, the director, gives the movie a sweet speed. The slapstick moments are like the whipped cream on top of the ice cream sundae. There is a food fight in the automat that is so witty and filled with pratfalls that it makes Animal House look like the work of...hmmm...juveniles.
Jean Arthur and Edward Arnold take above-the-title billing, and they make a compelling set of screwball actors. That Arnold's J. B. Ball is irascible is putting it gently. Yet Arnold makes the tycoon funny and human, and there's no doubt that he really cares for that wife of his. Jean Arthur, of course, makes the movie work. What a one-of-a-kind actress she was, with that air of surprised innocence and that vaguely husky voice with the hint of a squeak now and then. It's worth remembering that Jean Arthur, who was born in 1900, paid her dues in more than 50 silent films, movies with titles like Biff Bang Buddy, Bigger and Better Blondes, and Twisted Triggers. She was 35 when she hit major stardom and stayed at the top through her last movie, Shane, in 1953. That innocent sexiness, acting skill, instant likeability and that voice allowed her to consistently play 10 to 20 years younger than her age. For me, Jean Arthur at 53 and playing Marian Starrett, a woman probably 20 years younger, is the real center of Shane. She gives a deep reality to what all those homesteaders stand for. And she, without saying a word, is what motivates Ladd as Shane to do what he must do. In my opinion, Arthur gives the best performance in the movie. That's something you can say about almost every movie Jean Arthur was in.
And let's not forget some fine character actors who help make Easy Living as funny as it is. Among them is Mary Nash as the Bull's wife, who really does love J. B. (as he does her). By the end of the movie we like them both a lot; Luis Alberni as Mr. Louis Louis of the Hotel Louis, who is energetically ethnic; Franklin Pangborn as Van Buren, the prissy (of course) proprietor of an exclusive hat shop; William Demarest as Wallace Whistling, gossip reporter; Esther Dale as the Bull's unimpressed and decidedly matronly secretary; and Robert Greig as Graves, the portly, imperturbable butler in the Ball household. They all have a chance to shine, and shine they do.
Easy Living doesn't have a pristine DVD transfer, but it looks fine. The only extra is a two-minute disposable introduction by Turner Classic Movie's Robert Osborne.
- Expensive Furs, Diamond Rings, and All Those Things
     By A37S3ACL57LN62 on 2007-11-28
Easy Living is your typical screwball comedy. The story is based on outrageous conincidence and fast paced action with plenty of larger-than-life characters. Mary Smith (Jean Arthur) is a secretary at a boy's magazine. Her life is typical, until one day a sable coat falls on her head while riding the bus. J. B. Ball (Edward Arnold) has just had a fight with his wife over the fur she bought without his permission, so in his anger, he tossed the coat off the roof. Mary runs into Mr. Ball and tries to return the coat, but he tells her it is a gift. The coat causes more trouble than it is worth for Mary, who promptly loses her job and has her reputation sullied when the locals misinterpret the gift and believe Mary has become Ball's mistress.
There are several memorable scenes in this film, namely the automat scene. Not only does it preserve an era in history-- early fast food, but it garners the biggest laughs.
Arthur is great here, as she always is in her screwball films. It is difficult not to have that warbling voice and sweet smile grow on you; she might not be the first actress on your mind, but she'll certainly leave an impression.
- Great Movie
     By A30YCJYOAPWMST on 2008-05-16
The movie arrived well before expected. The movie is in great condition and has been a joy to watch. no skips or scratches
- Jean Arthur in Easy Living
     By A1WXO1LU9O7Q2O on 2008-05-18
Though I doubt it, movie critics at least pretend to be totally objective. I am not when it comes to Jean Arthur. Any movie she is in I enjoy, even if the script is predictable, the lighting bad, the speech more machinegun-like than conversational. If you're looking for a perfect movie, forget this one. If you delight in watching an actress expecially skilled in her profession, by all means add this to your collection. Oh, yes, Edward Arnold also gives a commendable performance.
- finally!
     By A3F7JKLYAAS5XW on 2008-06-26
I've been waiting for years for this movie to come out in DVD. It's one of the best classic screwball comedies ever. Jean Arthur, sparkling as always, and a very young Ray Milland are marvelous as is Edward Arnold as the mink-tossing father. The Automat scene is unforgettable. Crammed full of the best character actors of the studio, it's a delight from beginning to end. Plus you have a nice satiric take on the very rich and those that live off of them.
- Easy Living
     By AM4TGN2HXHNA0 on 2008-07-14
Easy LIving is a fun and unconventional film that is typical of Jean Arthur. I love her.
- Easing Living
     By A3PCBCOQMQEK85 on 2008-08-09
Fun movie - enjoyed it greatly. What a fun way to spend a weekend morning, listening / seeing an older movie that was just a delightful escape. Glad I purchase it!
- "Say What's The Big Deal Anyway?"
     By A141HP4LYPWMSR on 2008-08-10
"Easy Living" is a light-hearted comedy romance ala '37 that is sure to provide an enjoyable diversion for anyone who loves the classic oldies. It's certainly not one of the more well-known feature films of that era but it still delivers the naïve and innocent charm that we all like to harken back to now and then.
Footnote: If you like foreign films you might want to pick-up a copy of 'Kis Kis Ki Kismat' a Hindi film released within the last couple of years. It's a remake of this one only Bollywood style starring the stunning Mallika Sherawat.
- The bull of broad street... with a girl... in the sable-est sable coat they ever sabled!
     By A3943KDQAJM85A on 2008-08-31
Easy Living is a screwball adaptation on the classic fairy-tale of Cinderella, Jean Arthur style!
Luck smiles on Mary Smith(Jean Arthur) when the fanciest of all fur coats flies right into her lap, and the owner insists on her keeping it! To top it all off he buys her a brand new hat to go with it, and soon insanity follows!
Mary gets let go from her job and she's got nowhere to turn! At the automat she meets the handsome John Ball, Jr.(Ray Milland) whose eager to lend her a helping hand, that is until he too leaves his job for helping her! They both seem to be in a bit of trouble; that is until people start making guesses and think Mary is having an affair with J. B. Ball-The bull of Broad St!
A very enjoyable, classic 30's Paramount Feature!
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