Susan Slept Here

1954

Action / Comedy / Drama / Romance

4
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 43% · 7 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 61% · 500 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.4/10 10 2197 2.2K

Plot summary

On Christmas Eve, suffering from a case of writer's block, screenwriter Mark Christopher and his gofer Virgil get an unexpected visit from Sergeant Maizel. Knowing Christopher is working on a juvenile delinquent script, the sergeant brings by delinquent Susan thinking she will inspire Christopher while providing a place for her to spend the holidays outside of juvenile hall.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
July 13, 2021 at 06:06 AM

Director

Top cast

Debbie Reynolds as Susan Beaurgard Landis
Anne Francis as Isabella Alexander
Dick Powell as Mark Christopher
Les Tremayne as Harvey Butterworth, Mark's Lawyer
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
900.93 MB
1280*778
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 38 min
Seeds ...
1.63 GB
1792*1072
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 38 min
Seeds 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by csab-39797 6 / 10

Cute movie but the age thing is creepy

In the movie DR is 17 and DP is supposedly about 35 (but looks 55). So he agrees to watch her over Christmas for 2 cops.. (ok suspend disbelief)... he's reminded she's underage. It starts out more like father daughter stuff then she falls for him. In an effort to make his fiancé Ann Francis jealous and get some good writing material they marry. This is when I hit pause to look up DR real age which is 22. I felt a bit creeped out if she was really 17. Glenda Farrell plays the old lady which is ironic since she's closer to Dick Powell's age. Anyway the acting is good and DR is adorable. I won't give too much away but it's not for everyone.

Reviewed by AlsExGal 6 / 10

On paper it sounds creepy but on screen it works

This is the kind of odd thing that RKO would put together on its downhill slide in the 50's that sometimes would work and sometimes would not. This time it does seem to work although an ick factor seems to be hanging around just off camera that doesn't ever quite completely present itself. At least part of the enjoyment is seeing two veterans of the 30's Warner Brothers musical comedies together playing mature roles twenty years after the fact - Dick Powell as screenwriter-in-a-rut Mark Christopher and Glenda Farrell as his secretary Maude who likes to stay inebriated but is quite the philosopher and friend during her sober moments. She still has all of the bite and fun she had when she was Torchy Blaine.

The ick factor I talked about before is the marriage in name only of middle-aged Mark to 17 year old Susan Landis (Debbie Reynolds) who is left on Mark's doorstep by the police of all people, because one of the detectives thinks Susan would be good research for a serious script by Mark, and plus the detective doesn't want to put her in jail on Christmas Eve. The detective promises to return for her in two days. The marriage occurs because Susan will be booked on vagrancy without a visible means of support, so off they go to Vegas with Mark looking at this whole thing as a good deed to keep a basically good kid out of jail. However, Susan, the romantic, wants it to be something more. After the wedding Mark deposits Susan back in his Hollywood apartment while he goes off to an isolated spot - without Susan - to try and redeem the script he's been writing.

Susan and writer's block aren't Mark's only problems. He also has a rich girlfriend (Anne Francis) whom he seems to want to quit almost as much as the job at the studio he had writing fluff pieces but that paid well. It's hard to leave something behind that's comfortable and familiar for the unknown, even if it's slowly strangling you.

The funniest part of the movie is watching Susan, after she's legally married and living apart from Mark, trying to figured out how to win her man back. She tries everything from watching home movies of Mark's girlfriend and trying to imitate her moves and expressions to basting a turkey in an evening dress waiting for Mark to arrive for dinner, to memorizing how to make various mixed drinks. Then you have to wonder how much of this is love and how much of this is a teenage girl's natural curiosity about sex. Since Debbie Reynolds is just five years older than the part she's playing, she gives the role of Susan the realism of someone who is young enough to have recent memories of their teen years but is old enough to see the humor in them.

This thing works because it is the 50's, because it is Susan with all of the romantic and aggressive sexual impulses rather than Mark, and because of the excellent supporting players. The one thing that doesn't quite work here is Dick Powell as a 35 year old. He seems like he's playing a man quite a bit older and more beat down than one of 35 - Dick Powell was actually 50 at the time- and perhaps Mark is lying - to himself and to Susan - when he says that's how old he is.

This isn't a masterpiece, but it is a cute romantic comedy that works.

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