In 1938's My Bill, Kay Francis plays Mary Colbrook, the
widowed mother of four children. 3 of her little darlings are rude,
selfish, graspy creeps. But then there is Bill (played by Dickie
Moore), who for some unexplained reason calls his mother "Sweetheart",
and who is the only sensible member of this family. Though Kay was left
some money on her husband's death, she has wasted every cent of it
providing the selfish bunch with piano lessons and new dresses. Now,
she's broke. So the obnoxious 3 leave her (after she squanders more
money on cabs and flowers); Bill remains, begins a paper route, and
takes on the job of "Man of the Family" to support his mother.
I
think it would be fair to call this an odd movie. It's based on a play
(from 1928), but really the biggest problem is the character of Mary.
By the end, we get a lot more back-story (which does make her story more
interesting), but she is such a scatterbrain that one wonders how she
has survived as long as she has. Bill, however, is a stand-up young man,
and Dickie Moore plays him with verve. Bonita Granville, Anita Louise
and Bobby Jordan as the other three nightmarish offspring bring
obnoxious to new heights. And Elizabeth Risdon as Aunt Caroline confirms
they are from the correct gene pool.
This film came out the same
year that Kay got labeled "Box Office Poison" (along with Katharine
Hepburn and Marlene Dietrich); it's obvious it was less her and more
some of the parts she was being given. She does the best she can, but
in a sense, this IS Dickie Moore's movie. And he kinda runs with it.
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