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6/10
In the Doghouse
malcolmgsw8 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
It just goes to show what can be done with a minimal budget and an excellent cast.

Poor old Jack McNaughton marries Elsie Randolph and is henpecked. He sees no way out till first husband, Geoffrey Keen comes back from his supposed watery grave and gives him a way out,since of course his wife is a bigamist.

One normally one associates Elsie Randolph with musicals as Jack Buchanan's partner rather than in B movies playing this type of role.

KO Distributed by Apex Distributors who released low budget films in the nineteen forties and fifties..This film would be on the lower half of the bill but probably have been more entertaining than the film that was top of the bill.
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6/10
Perhaps not 'sophisticated', but amusing nevertheless.
hoppitysmummy3 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I'd first heard of CHEER THE BRAVE around forty years ago, when it was available for hire on 16mm. Finally catching up with it, albeit in a poor copy, I am with 'drednm' in finding it a very funny movie which I feel my late partner Deirdre would have probably enjoyed.

McNaughton's henpecked husband is fully sympathetic as he loyally sticks with the appalling Randolph through a nightmare of housework and scrimping. And a surprise to see Geoffrey Keen as the shifty, seedy husband who really should have known better than to attempt blackmail. Very rough-and-ready, but with that essential ingredient in a comedy - laughter.
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5/10
Not Much To Cheer About
boblipton31 March 2020
Jack McNaughton marries widow Elsie Randolph, looking for some kindly creature comforts. He's vastly disappointed by her self-serving behavior in this rather lugubrious comedy.

Miss Randolph seems have had a knack of looking older than her years when she wasn't dancing up a sexy storm with Jack Buchanan. She plays a pretty nasty piece of work in this comedy, putting on airs of grim morality, immediately punctured by all who know her. It's clear that McNaughton realizes pretty quick what he's in for, but sticks loyally by her... until opportunity presents itself. It's also a chance to see Marie Ault in her final screen role as Miss Randolph's dipsomaniacal mother. She had died three months before the movie's release at the age of 80.
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Elsie Randolph in a Black Comedy
drednm1 April 2020
Neat little black comedy about a lonely man (Jack McNaughton) who marries the wrong woman.

As Rose (Vida Hope) comes out of a church crying, we assume she's at a funeral. Rather, it McNaughton's wedding to Doris (Elsie Randolph). Bystanders gossip about why on earth he married Doris, a sour widow who lives on a widow's pension. We soon find out just how big a mistake this was.

As soon as he moves into Doris' flat, she starts nagging and complaining. She hoards his earnings and lies about how she spends money and what she does while he's at work. When her mother and sister come to visit, he learns just how common Doris really is, despite her airs.

After two years of this domestic misery, there's a knock on the door that leads to a surprise (and very welcomed) ending.

Randolph and McNaughton are excellent. Cast also includes Geoffrey Keen as Bill, Marie Ault as the mother, Helen Goss as the sister, Sam Kydd as the barrow boy, Mavis Villiers as Shirley, and Violet Gould and Eileen Way as the gossipers.
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