Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueExhausted from wartime riveting, a chorus girl (Ann Sothern) goes to Nevada and falls for a card dealer (John Hodiak).Exhausted from wartime riveting, a chorus girl (Ann Sothern) goes to Nevada and falls for a card dealer (John Hodiak).Exhausted from wartime riveting, a chorus girl (Ann Sothern) goes to Nevada and falls for a card dealer (John Hodiak).
Lynn Arlen
- Girl at Party
- (non crédité)
William Bailey
- Nightclub Patron
- (non crédité)
Larry J. Blake
- Policeman
- (non crédité)
Billy Bletcher
- Public Address Announcer
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
Karin Booth
- Girl at Party
- (non crédité)
Anthony Caruso
- George - Blackjack Dealer
- (non crédité)
Wally Cassell
- Reporter
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe eighth of ten movies starring Ann Sothern as the heroine Maisie Ravier, released from 1939 to 1947.
- GaffesWhile Maisie and the soldier are talking in the diner, the glass of coke she's drinking changes positions and goes from full to empty at the end of the scene. Likewise, the amount of lemonade in her glass goes up and down from shot to shot when she's on a date with Flip at the casino.
- Citations
Tommy Cutter: Say, what's with that bellboy?
Maisie Ravier: He's stuck on me.
Tommy Cutter: That little kid?
Maisie Ravier: Listen, honey, these days you don't even throw the little ones back.
- ConnexionsFollowed by Up Goes Maisie (1946)
Commentaire à la une
For once, Maisie Ravier isn't losing a job on vaudeville, in a carnival or night club. "Maisie Goes to Reno" is the 8th of 10 films of the Maisie series by MGM. But now, our heroine has been working too hard at the war-time factory. So, the company doctor orders her to take a two-week vacation. Well, she runs into an old pal, Tommy Cutter, who happens to have a band and is heading for a gig at a hotel in Reno. He talks her into making her two-week vacation a return to singing with his band.
But, after being scammed by an old lady in the train depot and losing her money for a ticket, she gets her ticket from a G. I. He was on his way to try to stop his recent bride from divorcing him, but his leave has just been cancelled and he has to report back to base right away. In exchange for the ticket, Maisie agrees to take his letter and deliver it personally to the girl.
Well, Maisie winds up in another situation of skullduggery, but she is able to crack the case in the end so that the two lovebirds aren't divorced. In the meantime, of course, she has problems of her own over work and singing. How interesting this always is so that the audience never sees Ann Sothern sing or dance. Maisie falls for another guy, but has to put Flip off for moving too fast. Things get a little wacky in this one before it's over.
Here are some good lines from this film.
Flip Hennahan, "Take it easy! Take it Easy! What for? Do I have to buy you flowers and take you to the movies a whole year before I convince you?" Maisie Ravier, "Well, a girl does like to have flowers and a little romance before she's married. Heaven knows, few of them get it after."
Parsons, "You are an employee of this hotel. I'll see you in my office." Maisie, "Yes, sir. Shall I being the whip along or do you keep one handy?"
George, the blackjack dealer, "Aw, come now. Too much is plenty."
Maisie Ravier, "Flip, are you intimating again, that I'm a little nutsy?" Flip Hennahan, "Oh, no, honey, of course not. You've just been working too hard."
But, after being scammed by an old lady in the train depot and losing her money for a ticket, she gets her ticket from a G. I. He was on his way to try to stop his recent bride from divorcing him, but his leave has just been cancelled and he has to report back to base right away. In exchange for the ticket, Maisie agrees to take his letter and deliver it personally to the girl.
Well, Maisie winds up in another situation of skullduggery, but she is able to crack the case in the end so that the two lovebirds aren't divorced. In the meantime, of course, she has problems of her own over work and singing. How interesting this always is so that the audience never sees Ann Sothern sing or dance. Maisie falls for another guy, but has to put Flip off for moving too fast. Things get a little wacky in this one before it's over.
Here are some good lines from this film.
Flip Hennahan, "Take it easy! Take it Easy! What for? Do I have to buy you flowers and take you to the movies a whole year before I convince you?" Maisie Ravier, "Well, a girl does like to have flowers and a little romance before she's married. Heaven knows, few of them get it after."
Parsons, "You are an employee of this hotel. I'll see you in my office." Maisie, "Yes, sir. Shall I being the whip along or do you keep one handy?"
George, the blackjack dealer, "Aw, come now. Too much is plenty."
Maisie Ravier, "Flip, are you intimating again, that I'm a little nutsy?" Flip Hennahan, "Oh, no, honey, of course not. You've just been working too hard."
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- You Can't Do That to Me
- Lieux de tournage
- Virginia Street, Reno, Nevada, États-Unis(establishing shot of the Reno arch)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 30 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Maisie Goes to Reno (1944) officially released in India in English?
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