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Bringing Up Baby, directed by Howard Hawks in 1938, is one of the greatest screwball comedies and a treasure from the Golden Age of Hollywood. Cary Grant plays a naive and repressed palaeosaurologist who becomes entangled with (and ensnared by) a wilful heiress (Katharine Hepburn). Chaos ensues as romance blossoms and not one but two leopards are set loose in verdant Connecticut. All of Hawks's skills are to the fore: there is a wonderful ensemble cast, the characteristically refined but unselfconscious visual style, an endless succession of pratfalls, innuendo and jokes (written by Dudley Nichols and Hagar Wilde) and, underneath the chaos and good cheer, a serious dream of escaping life's hardships by dint of nothing more or less than nerve and luck. As well as being a thoroughly American fiction of the 1930s, Bringing Up Baby is in its way a classical comic narrative, exploring conflicts between civilisation and nature, rationality and insanity or eccentricity, middle-class inhibitions and aristocratic blitheness. It is the epitome of film comedy, an anthology of comic types and devices, and one of the most seductively funny films ever made.
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Previews available in: English
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Bringing Up Baby (BFI Film Classics)
June 6, 2005, British Film Institute, Palgrave Macmillan
Paperback
in English
1844570703 9781844570706
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