Love in the Rough (1930) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
10 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Early talkie which challenges the conventional wisdom.
max von meyerling15 January 2006
Love in the Rough initially resembles the legendary disastrous early talkies which almost brought down the heavily indebted film industry in the early '30s. Based on a Broadway flop play with music seemingly added on by hiring top song writing team of Dorothy Fields and Jimmy McHugh, it had all of the elements that the movie moghuls though would add up to boffo box office but, because of the depression's arrival following the Oct. 29 stock market crash, people didn't have a taste for stories about people in evening dress or college hi jinks. The failure at the box office was always blamed on the static camera imposed by the crude and clunky sound equipment but this film exposes that canard.

The outdoor shots, seemingly with direct sound, are airy revelations. The camera work is fluid with out calling attention to itself with flashy moves. The musical numbers are imaginative, but, considering the work of Busby Berkeley to come, these are merely a stone age precursor. Maybe they didn't know enough at the time to shoot strictly in the studio with back projection process shots and post dubbed music but this is enjoyable for nothing else than its atypical uniqueness. The static scenes are embarrassing, as in did anybody find the opening scene with broken porcelain funny at any time? Likewise the racial 'humor', Jewish, Italian and African-American, is highly cringe worthy. The plot is nearly non existent, a reminder of the pre-Showboat musical which was virtually a series of scenes, songs and routines from a Vaudeville review.

This is an early performance by Robert Montgomery (his sixth of seven releases in 1930) in which he apparently sings, if, as I suspect, the music was recorded direct. Dorothy Jordan looks pretty, at least for the standards of the time but doesn't project much personality, unlike her support one Dorothy McNulty who pops from the screen. Jordan was a star in late silent and early sound times but retired to become Mrs. Merian C. Cooper.

After returning to vaudeville and radio, McNulty returned to films and modest fame as Penny Singleton of the Blondie series. An interesting trivia item is the fact that both Montgomery (Screen Actors Guild) and Singleton (American Guild of Variety Artists) were union presidents.

Montgomery's support was Benny Rubin, a dialect comic and a huge star in vaudeville. It was Benny Rubin who people like Jack Benny and Bob Hope aspired to become, and, years later, when they became big stars, they would always throw Benny a featured bit on radio and TV. Most of his comedy here is from hunger except for a laugh out loud two spot where Benny is acting as Mongomery's caddie and he meets Allan Lane's (as Harry Johnson) caddie going by the name 'C. Wesley Rappaport' and they conduct a hilarious dialogue in Yiddish. Even if it could be translated the subtitles wouldn't be able to keep up, and, with the timing lost, the humor would be lost. 'Rappaport' is not credited but as he appears later leading a harmonica quartet perhaps it could be Borrah (Boris) Minevitch, Russian born leader of the Harmonica Rascals. The tune introduced by the Harmonica quartet provides an excellent opportunity for an eccentric duet dance with Rubin and Singleton, one of the more delightful examples of what was lost with the demise of vaudeville.

Again this is not anywhere near what might be considered a 'good' film but specialists will find it more than just a historical curiosity. The plot is a swiss cheese. Montgomery is a golf champion working as a shipping clerk in Walter's Department Store and is enlisted by the golf mad proprietor to help him in the country club championship. This gets Montgomery to the country club and meets the millionaires daughter whereby the "mentoring the boss" is just dropped. The rest is just poor boy/rich girl bla bla bla.

At least LOVE IN THE ROUGH attacks the groundless convention that it was the staticness of the early sound films which nearly drove the Hollywood studios to the wall in the early 30s.
32 out of 35 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Likable musical remake of the superior silent "Spring Fever"
AlsExGal21 November 2009
The film is actually a musical comedy remake of the 1927 silent film "Spring Fever", which starred William Haines and Joan Crawford. Montgomery plays the part of wise-cracking shipping clerk Jack Kelly who gets a holiday at a resort courtesy of his employer when the employer learns that Kelly is a great golfer and the employer needs help with his own golf game. At the resort Kelly meets Marilyn Crawford, daughter of a wealthy industrialist, and the two fall in love. They elope with Marilyn believing that Kelly is wealthy too, but Kelly's conscience soon begins to bother him about the false pretenses under which he has married his new wife.

This movie lacks the poignancy of the silent "Spring Fever". Montgomery does a good job as Kelly, but nobody can really replace Joan Crawford as the leading lady. In fact, you get the feeling that this actress was hired for her musical talents - she is pretty good in the musical numbers - and then as audiences began to reject musical films in 1930, MGM cut a bunch of the musical numbers and was basically left with an ineffective leading lady in a film lacking a good plot. In the original, Kelly is marrying to up his station in life. In this film, Kelly falls in love with a girl who just happens to be the daughter of a wealthy man. This film replaces all of the drama of Spring Fever with a musical comedy style. The musical numbers are catchy, but the comedy is somewhat dated. Released in September 1930, it is a good example of how entertainment was transitioning from the Jazz Age into the Great Depression. Recommended for those interested in films from this time period.
8 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Showcase for Benny Rubin
goblinhairedguy17 December 2011
"Love in the Rough" is a cute little comedy-musical with a golf club setting, starring a callow Robert Montgomery (who sings and dances!). The first hour is quite winning, though the plot bogs down a bit in the latter reels. There is a nice visual fade at the very end, so keep watching. The film has a surprising immediacy since it was filmed open-air on a real golf course rather than being studio-bound. And it provides a nice portrait of innocent courtship (just holding hands is considered pretty erotic).

The film is really a showcase for the comic talents of Benny Rubin, who is hoodwinked into being Montgomery's caddy. A lot of movie history books state that Rubin could not find work in the movies after the early 30s because he looked "too Jewish". Probably what they really mean is that his stereotypical Yiddish character (God-given looks included) was offensive. Of course, Chico Marx, Henry Armetta, Mantan Moreland, etc., got away with coarse ethnic stereotypes for years, so maybe he was really offensive to the moguls. Anyway, he has plenty of entertaining shtick to display in this picture, the highlight being a hilarious Yiddish palaver with another Jewish caddy. He's also menaced by a crude Italian greenskeeper. The politically incorrect portrayals are trumped by Roscoe Ates's incredible take on stuttering. In this movie, he takes his "art" to the extreme (he even gets Young's character to catch the bug). The dancing – much of it comedic – is fine, especially an interlude by one Earl "Snake Hips" Tucker.

One thing that really gets my goat is the writers' obvious ignorance of golf. They think that yelling "fore" means to be quiet, and that if an opponent's golf ball is blocking your putt, you have to putt around it! The latter leads to the climax, where the hero cleverly finds a way to overcome the obstacle.
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Early talkie musical comedy has its moments.
mush-25 June 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Early talkie musical comedy has its moments. Robert Montgomery is charming. The song "Go Home and Tell Your Mother" has an infectious melody,if an insipid lyric. Benny Rubin is occasionally hilarious (if not very P.C.) as Montgomery's Jewish sidekick. If you know a little Yiddish, his scene with a fellow" landsman" on the golf course is a riot. The location shooting is fluid and polished by the standards of the day.

The plot is silly and forgettable and the leading lady is pretty but not much of an actress. I read this was a flop. I guess by 1930, audiences were not in the mood for the super rich lording it over the working class and talk about " inexpensive" $50,000 apartments came off as elitist and offensive.

Still, for a not unpleasant time filler, you could do worse than Love in the Rough.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
A case, once again, where the remake wasn't nearly as good as the original.
planktonrules17 August 2020
Only three years before "Love in the Rough", MGM made "Spring Fever" with William Haines. Why would they remake a film so quickly? Well, Hollywood OFTEN did remakes only a few years later...but most importantly they did it in this case since the original was a silent and this Robert Montgomery version had sound. In fact, because it was a sound picture, a few songs were added as well to take advantage of the new technology.

When the story starts, Mr. Waters is being a very grouchy boss and starts firing employees for the littlest things. Soon you learn why....he's angry because his golf game stinks. However, when he learns that the employee he just fired, Jack (Robert Montgomery), is an excellent golfer, he re-hires him and begs him to help him improve his game.

Jack and his friend, Benny (Benny Rubin), arrive at the club to play some golf. And, instead of focusing just on his golf game, he's entranced by a lovely lady who is also there. Now, instead of putting all his attention on golf, he's obsessed with Marilyn (Dorothy Jordan).

In many ways, the original film, "Spring Fever" is a better film. Sure, it's a silent but it as also an exceptional silent...one of Haines' best movies. This remake, however, suffers for many reasons. First, the songs don't help the film and the people singing really were NOT singers but were being forced to be. As my daughter said..."they kinda sucked"! Second, and the biggest problem, is that the father-son relationship of the first movie was completely removed from "Love in the Rough". It's a shame, as it was the best aspect of the first film and really gave the film depth...and depth is NOT something you'd notice in "Love in the Rough". To make it worse, Benny Rubin was strictly added as comic relief...again, something they didn't have nor needed in the original. Overall, it's very slight and lightweight....not bad but also not all that good nor memorable.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
talkies meet vaudeville bits.
ksf-230 October 2022
A young, skinny, twenty five year old robert montgomery, in an early role. When the boss drags kelly along to improve his golf game, things get wacky. Kelly goes looking for a girl. This starts with a plain, simple story...it's a good print of a film from almost 100 years ago.. one of the early talkies. Sure, there are a couple of musical numbers, but they move right along and don't slow it down too much. A fun dance number by earl tucker, about thirty minutes in; sadly, he died at age thirty. Co-stars dorothy jordan. The middle part seems to be a bunch of vaudeville bits that don't really go anywhere. Kind of drags for a long time.... the women talk in high, squeaky, little girl voices that must have been desired in 1930. Directed by charles reisner. He had started in the early silents. This was based on the play by vincent lawrence. Honestly, not much of a story, really. It's just ok. I think part of the entertainment was just hearing people talk in films. Although i could do without those high squeaky voices that they seemed to use back then.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Love in the Rough - Dated 30s Comedy
arthur_tafero3 October 2022
Love in the Rough is a B comedy film starring Robert Montgomery before he attempted more serious films. It also features Benny Rubin, a talented Jewish comedian, who was far more successful in burlesque and vaudeville than in early Hollywood films. The plot of an office worker becoming a ringer in a golf foursome is fairly different from the norm, and the filming of the episodes in the open air, rather than a studio, gives it an air of authenticity.

After about forty minutes, however, the film begins to lose its energy, and bogs down quite a bit. The end result is a pleasant, but not too stimulating comedy that captures the mentality of the 1930s corporate mindset for impressing others at the club.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Social climbing golfer
bkoganbing22 July 2020
Love In The Rough casts a young Robert Montgomery as a shipping clerk in J.C. Nugent's department store who happens to be a greatamateur golfer. Just the man to help Nugent with his game so he brings Montgomery alongt to his country club. There Montgomery meets and romances Dorothy Jordan who assumes he's as rich as all the others there.

This s a remake of William Haines's silent classic Spring Fever and it would have been a whole lot better without an incredibly insipid score from Jimmy McHugh and Dorothy Fields. Made worse by the fact that neither Jordan or Montgomery could sing a lick.

No doubt that MGM saw in Montgomery someone wh could eplace Bill Hines and at the begnning of his career Montgomery was playing smart aleck parts like Haines. Either those or cads or punks. Montgomery was also safely straight in the studio's eyes and Haines was beginning to rebel against the studio enforced closet.

Love In The Rough would have been somuch better without the music.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Go Home and Tell Your Mother - that they certainly knew how to write tuneful songs in those days!!!
kidboots18 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
There may have been only 2 "all golfie musicals" ever released but they both came out within a week of each other - "Love in the Rough" coming out on September 6th, "Follow Thru" on September 12th. In 1930 Bobby Jones put golf on the map by winning the "Grand Slam" - U.S. Open, Masters, British Open and the British Amateur Tournaments. Even though it was a remake of an MGM silent "Spring Fever", starring William Haines and Joan Crawford, "Love in the Rough" combined the topicality of golf with the infusion of musical numbers (then in vogue).

Department store clerk Jack Kelly (Robert Montgomery) is a good enough golfer to be invited to an exclusive country club for 2 weeks to give his boss lessons. While there he meets pretty Marilyn Crawford (adorable Dorothy Jordan) and it is love at first sight. She is joined by the Biltmore Trio (who seem to be on hand whenever music and harmonizing are needed) and leads her flapper friends in an adorable number - "I'm Doin' That Thing". There is room in the sequence for a bellhop doing an eccentric tap dance and the gang finishes off with a "charlestony" type finale - all choreographed by Sammy Lee.

Jack is a great golfer and organises to give Marilyn lessons - at the same time having to make excuses to his boss as to why he can't give him lessons as well. "I'm Learning a Lot From You" is another musical interlude that combines eccentric dancing and golfing lessons. The song gave a chance to the supporting couple - Benny Rubin, a dialect comedian, whose comedy wore thin after 5 minutes and Dorothy McNulty (soon to be Penny Singleton), who had been a highlight of the 1930 movie "Good News" - to strut their stuff. When rain sets in, that's the cue for Jack and Marilyn to duet on "Go Home and Tell Your Mother (that she certainly did a wonderful job on you)" - the song became one of the hits of the year. Jack has been told by his boss to pass himself off as being in the shipping business (instead of a mere clerk) but word soon gets around that he is a shipping magnate. Rather than confess, he tells Marilyn he must leave on Saturday but they end up eloping which is a bit silly because now it looks as if she has married him because he is rich. The movie reaches it's climax with - what else? - a big golfing tournament. Jack, of course, weighed down by doubts and unhappiness is playing badly. When Marilyn's father realises that he is a star golfer instead of a mere millionaire, he scolds her for not being at the tournament to support him. The film ends with an extraordinary golfing shot and Marilyn on hand with plenty of hugs and kisses.

It's unpopularity may well have been due to depression weary audiences being fed up with the frivolous doings of the rich - Hollywood style, but a more plausible reason was probably the public's attitude, at the end of 1930, to movie musicals. In 1929 more than 60 musicals were released, in 1930 there were more than 80 - but in 1931 there were only 11. Obviously people were fed up with musicals but especially the movies where no reason was given for a performer to break into song. "Love in the Rough" may have only been a second string MGM movie, but in my opinion the musical numbers were very hummable and quite memorable. Dorothy Fields and Jimmy McHugh may not have been in the same league as Rogers and Hart but they were responsible for some beautiful songs including "Cuban Love Song". Dorothy Fields also collaborated with Jerome Kern on the scores for "Roberta" and "Swingtime".

Even though Dorothy Jordan's singing and dancing were pleasant at best, you would have thought (judging by some of the movies she made in 1929 - 1930) that she was a leading musical star. She and Ramon Novarro were "screen sweethearts", who starred together in three operettas. She was also scheduled to play Honey Hale opposite Fred Astaire in "Flying Down to Rio" but elected to go on her honeymoon instead, thus paving the way for Ginger Rogers.

Highly, Highly Recommended.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
One fore the money
jarrodmcdonald-129 August 2023
Warning: Spoilers
I wouldn't call this a musical comedy. It's a comedy with musical interludes. The goal is not to build to the next song, but to show how music is part of everyone's lives. Dancing is also part of their lives. And so is something else...golf. Yes, golf.

Robert Montgomery plays a shipping clerk who is nearly fired one day, except that his boss (J. C. Nugent) discovers he's a whiz on the greens. Nugent needs to improve on his game to do better against his pals at the local country club. So he gives Montgomery a chance to redeem himself by going to the club with him in the hopes of getting a few quick lessons. Of course, things don't go too smoothly. Montgomery and a coworker (Benny Rubin) who tags along as a caddy soon get into all sorts of zany situations.

While most of the physical comedy routines are given to Rubin to perform, Mr. Montgomery also has several moments to shine. He's convincing in the film's more athletic scenes, and he makes some excellent drives along the golf course that do not seem be done by a double. Montgomery also gets to burst into song when the occasion calls for it, and as always, he has plenty of romantic scenes to play...in this case, with lovely costar Dorothy Jordan.

MGM had previously filmed Vincent Lawrence's play 'Spring Fever' in 1927 as a silent comedy starring William Haines and Joan Crawford. Three years is a fast turnaround for a remake, particularly since Haines and Crawford were both still under contract. They had scored a huge hit with the material which even audiences with short memories would surely have remembered. Some of the antics Haines did in the earlier film are toned down, and a few supporting characters have been dropped. Also, a secondary love story is given considerably less screen time in the remake which means less complications for the main couple.

The story's central conflict, if we can call it that, is about whether Montgomery will be able to win a tournament. And also whether or not people at the club will realize he's not the Aristocrat they think he is. Along the way he and Jordan have a rushed wedding, but during their honeymoon night in a cheap hotel, he explains how he cannot afford anything more expensive. Surprisingly, she doesn't dump him...though it certainly helps when her dad shows up the next morning and encourages her to stay married, since Montgomery is such a pro golfer and it would be good to have one of them in the family.

This is a harmless piece of fluff that makes you feel better after watching it. I was surprised at how many scenes were filmed on location. It doesn't feel like the typical studio talkie. And Robert Montgomery gives such a breezy delightful performance alongside Jordan, Rubin and Nugent, you can't help but want to check out more of his MGM films from this period.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed