Penny Wisdom (1937) Poster

(1937)

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6/10
Culinary Expert comes to the help of helpless housewife...
Doylenf5 June 2008
This is a rehash of a similar short produced a few years earlier called "Menu". Like the previous short, this one is also in Technicolor, much improved over the intervening years, and stars PRUDENCE PENNY, a culinary expert who specialized in home economics and wrote a column a Chicago newspaper.

As in the previous short, a housewife is badly in need of help before company arrives with her husband. She calls for the services of Prudence Penny, who shows up prepared to whip up a meal on short notice. The results look appetizing enough, especially in color.

Once again, the best feature of this short is the narration which manages to remain bright and witty throughout. By the time it's over, you may want to whip up a little snack for yourself.
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7/10
PENNY WISDOM (David Miller, 1937) ***
Bunuel197613 March 2010
This Oscar-winning "Pete Smith Specialty" short is basically an exercise in gastronomical short-hand, where a society matron – who is helpless in the kitchen – has her proficient but long-suffering cook quit on her right on the night of an important business dinner at home! Since the husband is obviously aware of her ineptitude, he prepares for the worst – but, actually, a professional steps in to save the day by preparing simple but still attractive and palatable dishes. The film is unassuming but reasonably amusing (especially in dealing with the woman's accident-prone nature, to which even the family dog falls victim!), engaging (one might say educational for anyone with a deep-seated culinary interest!) and quite pleasant-looking (being shot in early Technicolor).
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7/10
Who Would Name A Daughter Prudence Penny?
boblipton3 June 2021
Hubby phones home to announce he is bringing the boss and his best customer. Wife Gertrude Short finds the cook has quit, ad her idea of how to cook involves coating the dog in flour. No problem! A Smith called Pete phones the local paper, and Prudence Penny shows up .

There was no Prudence Penny. It was a pen name used by the Los Angeles Times for their food editors. Here, with Smith's snarky narration, ill-conceived make-up and dyspeptic Technicolor, the audience gets treated to some household hints.
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Fun Short
Michael_Elliott15 February 2009
Penny Wisdom (1937)

*** (out of 4)

Fun, Oscar-winning short from Pete Smith tells the story of a housewife who receives a call from her husband saying he's bringing the boss home for dinner. The wife ends up ruining the dinner but have no fear because the famous cook Prudence Penny, from various Chicago newspapers, comes in and shows her how to make a great meal very quickly. This is pretty much a reworked version of Smith's 1933 film Menu but in my opinion this one here is a lot better. Gertrude Short does a pretty good job as the wife as she has a certainly look and style that makes it seem like she'd be the type to ruin a dinner. The uncertain nature of her character is perfectly brought out by Short. Penny does a pretty nice job as well even though she pretty much just has to smile and cook the food. The film being in Technicolor was fairly rare for this type of short but perhaps it helped in the Oscar voting. I guess the best thing to say about the film is that it made me quite hungry while watching it.
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6/10
Penny Wisdom
CinemaSerf8 February 2024
It's the sarcastic commentary from Pete Smith that sells this rather daft short feature. "Mr. Smudge" telephones "Mrs. Smudge" to say that he's bringing his boss round for dinner. That's fine, she's got the best cook in the city. Or does she? It looks like she's been a bit of a pain to her lately and so she has abandoned ship. Cooking can't be that hard, or so she thinks. Some cremated and rock hard roast beef and ice cubes later, the chaos requires the intervention of our narrator and his skilful pal Prudence who'll try to turn this disaster into a triumph. Who knew peanut butter eliminated the taste of burning? Indeed, Prudence is full of great tips to satisfy even the most pernickety of diners. The day is saved! Phew! Good fun, this...
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6/10
Kitchen chaos
Horst_In_Translation10 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Penny Wisdom" is an American short from 80 years ago and it brought Pete Smith his first Academy Award. If you know Smith, you will know that this one is as usual roughly 10 minutes long. It also has color, which is not a given at all for 1937, especially not for documentary films. This little movie is about a young woman who has to prepare a meal for her guests, but who knows nothing about cooking. All goes wrong that could go wrong. Luckily for her, another woman called Prudence shows up and saves the day in every regard. There are some funny moments, especially early on, as usual with Smith, but the second half here actually felt like a real cooking lesson in terms of documentary style and it lacked a bit humor in my opinion. Nonetheless, overall it was a decent watch. Not Smith's best, but certainly not bad at all either. I recommend it.
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7/10
Worth A Watch!
essmom3 November 2015
The plot involves the hubby inviting the boss home for supper and notifying the wifey only about 2 hours before said supper. She attempts to produce a worthy meal but fails. The evening is saved when a favor is called in and the husband beams with pride, none the wiser about the culinary disaster she created behind the kitchen door.

This movie pays off in this one unforgettable scene--when the hapless housewife douses the family dog, a black cocker spaniel, in spilled flour. She then tries to wash it clean in the kitchen sink and ... Well, I won't spoil this wonderful visual joke.

While other Pete Smith shorts I've found to be rather infantile in content and humor level, such as Dogs 'N Ducks and You Can't Win, this gem, Penny Wisdom (1937) had many charming qualities.
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10/10
From Disaster To Delight
Ron Oliver6 September 2003
An MGM PETE SMITH SPECIALITY Short Subject.

When her cook walks out, an incompetent housewife receives PENNY WISDOM in the kitchen only minutes before her hubby's boss comes to dinner.

Pete Smith serves up his special brand of narrative lunacy in this very enjoyable short film which features Prudence Penny, Culinary Columnist for the Los Angeles Examiner. She demonstrates her cooking expertise by producing a delicious ham meal, with baked Alaska for dessert, in a short time. The food looks great in Technicolor.

This little movie, which won the Oscar for Best Short Film of 1937, was a reworking of an earlier Pete Smith short subject, MENU (1933).

Often overlooked or neglected today, the one and two-reel short subjects were useful to the Studios as important training grounds for new or burgeoning talents, both in front & behind the camera. The dynamics for creating a successful short subject was completely different from that of a feature length film, something akin to writing a topnotch short story rather than a novel. Economical to produce in terms of both budget & schedule and capable of portraying a wide range of material, short subjects were the perfect complement to the Studios' feature films.
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8/10
Not since the Miracle of the Two Loaves and Five Fish . . .
oscaralbert7 June 2015
Warning: Spoilers
. . . (or was it Two Fish and Five Loaves?) have so many eaten so well for so little (exactly $2.83, in this PENNY WISDOM Parable). Naturally, when you teach how to whip up a gourmet meal for a dinner party of four in 35 minutes, you deserve an Oscar. That's precisely what PENNY WISDOM won as Best Live Action Short of 1937. Featuring the endearing commentary of Pete Smith (who says of main character "Chloe:" "What a Mucklehead, she's decided to bake something--perhaps a cornerstone for the new city hall") and the Food Stylings of newspaper chef Prudence Penny, this piece inspired generations of TV cooks to come. Since cooking is mostly comprised of Experiments in Chemistry, it's nice to see that amazing lab tricks were so prominently featured at the genesis of this genre. No double some viewers will find Ms. Penny's efforts here difficult to emulate. Therefore, I'll offer this far simpler Old Family Recipe as a public service: PEANUT BUTTER BREAD--Take one slice of Wonder Bread (or a cheaper generic substitute), one knife, and one jar of peanut butter. Open jar, dip knife inside, and use it to slather peanut butter all over one side of a slice of bread, to taste. Repeat as necessary.
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