Saloon entertainer Ann Sheridan has to take it on the lam when her louse of an ex-boyfriend, Phillip Reed shows up, one jump ahead of the law. She finds refuge taking care of three small boys for widowed Sterling Hayden. But local gossip starts to run wild; Hayden is the local preacher.
Given this is director Douglas Sirk's first movie for producer Ross Hunter -- it's Hunter's first time in that role -- there might be a tendency to look at this and compare it to the suburban weepers the pair turned out in the second half of the 1950s. I think that would be a mistake. Given their next collaboration was a 3-D western which Sirk said was his favorite American movie, perhaps we should be a tad less auterist in our appraisals, and a bit more commercial. This looks like a bunch of similar 1950s comedies, including HOUSEBOAT. Given that Hunter co-produced it with Universal's high-volume Leonard Goldstein, likely this was simply another assignment for Sirk, one which he turned out as well as he could, before moving on to the next as it came up. As it stands, Hayden gives a surprisingly relaxed performance, and Miss Sheridan does what she does best, which is doing what she's doing at the moment. The kids are cute, and there's a nice role for Lee Patrick as Miss Sheridan's older dance-hall friend.