Difference between revisions 106421853 and 106422388 on enwiki

{{Infobox Film
| name = Listen, Darling
| director = Edwin L. Marin
| producer = Jack Cummings
| writer = Katherine Brush, Elaine Ryan, Anne Morrison Chapin, [[Noel Langley]]
| starring = [[Judy Garland]], [[Freddie Bartholomew]], [[Mary Astor]], Walter Pidgeon
| music = William Axt
| cinematography = Charles Lawton Jr., Lester White
(contracted; show full)----

'''Pinkie''': "You know, I thought she did, but then when she cried I didn't know. But if that is why, she must like him even more than I thought."
'''Buzz''': "What are you talking about?"

<ref>''http://www.jgdb.com/darling.htm Qoutes borrowed from the JGDB yet again, from Jim Johnson</ref>


==Critical Responses==

By ''Frank Nugent'', [[The New York Times]], November 24, 1938:<ref>''http://www.jgdb.com/darling.htm Critical Response once again borrowed from the JGDB, by Jim Johnson</ref>

"An extremely pleasant - winsome would be a better word - picture about two youngsters who kidnap a matrimonially eligible widow, lock her in a trailer, and start touring the countryside in search of a suitable husband ... Freddie Bartholomew and Judy Garland - with little Scotty Beckett's unconscious assistance - conduct their matrimonial tour with charming unworldliness, despite the surface sophistication of their enterprise...

The comedy has been nicely turned out by Mary Astor, Walter Pidgeon, Alan Hale, Gene Lockhart and Charley Grapewin, among the adults, and by all three youngsters. Besides being a charming little miss, Judy Garland has a fresh young voice which she uses happily on "Zing Went the Strings of My Heart," "On a Bumpy Road to Love," and "Ten Pins in the Sky" ... It is really a natural, pleasant and sensible little film."

==References==
<references />