Movie Reviews for Writers: Christmas in Connecticut

I’m a sucker for Barbara Stanwyck. Not only is she a compelling dramatic actress in such films as Double Indemnity and The Secret Loves of Martha Ivers and Meet John Doe, but she is also a gifted comedic genius, whether the sharp wit of Lady of Burlesque and Ball of Fire or the almost Lucille Ball-like sense of manic panic as it this one.  

Holiday movies, I’m not usually so much a fan. They tend to either smack of forced melodrama or cutesy romantic intrigue that’s about as believable as the romance between Anakin and Padme. 

But I do love this charming little flick about a magazine writer who gets herself in trouble by “faking it” without “making it.”

Stanwyck is Elizabeth Lane, a sort of Martha Stewart before there was a Martha Stewart. She writes home décor and cooking articles for a major magazine, and she’s a rock star in the world of doilies and fancy dining. The only trouble is she’s a total fake. When she is called out on it and has to put on a holiday dinner for a returning war hero, she finds that as a Fifth Avenue dame, she’s way out of her element, no where close to the ranch, newborns, and homey world she pretends to inhabit. To save her job, she had to pull off the con of her life.

So, to use our writer slang, she fakes it. 

But making it, well, that’s a little more difficult.

https://seanhtaylor.blogspot.com/2022/02/movie-reviews-for-writers-christmas-in.html

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