Claudette Colbert, Joel McCrea, Mary
Astor, Rudy Vallee, William Demarest, Robert Warwick
As for the opening reels, the principal
motivating factor is money. After a deliberately confusing pre-credit
sequence (not explained until the film's punch line), Tom Jeffers
(Joel McCrea) and Gerry Jeffers (Claudette Colbert) are married.
"And so they lived happily ever after," exults a title
card, "...or did they?" Well, they didn't. After five
years of marriage, Tom hasn't raised a dime with his pie-in-the-sky
inventions. Using the sort of logic common to Sturges heroines,
Gerry decides that the only way to help her husband is to divorce
him, marry a wealthy man, and use the second husband's money to
finance Tom's schemes. Borrowing money from a generous self-made
business mogul known only as the Wienie King (Robert Dudley), Gerry
boards a train to Palm Beach, FL, where all the rich folk go. En
route, she is "adopted" by the Ale & Quail Club, a
group of perpetually drunken millionaires whose idea of a good time
is to shoot their rifles at everything that moves (among the club
members are such Sturges regulars as William Demarest, Robert Warwick,
Jimmy Conlin, Robert Greig, Jack Norton, and Dewey Robinson). Taking
refuge from this rowdy crew, Gerry makes the acquaintance of likeable
stuffed shirt John D. Hackensacker III (Rudy Vallee), who happens
to be one of the wealthiest men in the Western Hemisphere. While
Gerry spoons with Hackensacker in Palm Beach, the confused Tom (remember
him?) dallies with Hackensacker's man-crazy sister, Princess Centimillia
(Mary Astor). How all this straightens itself out is better seen
than described, which is pretty much the case whenever one discusses
Sturges' singular work, and The Palm Beach Story is vintage Sturges
with one side-splitting sequence after another. |