I didn't really see the same division. Of course the parents are more sympathetic than the children, but they're plausibly irritating for their kids to have around, and Moore's character in particular is kind of an asshole at times (especially in the doctor scene). The fact that they get more kindness from strangers than their own children, in this sense, isn't at all implausible. Little acts of kindness to strangers, like the bandleader changing to a slow waltz so they can dance to it, cost nothing. Taking your parents into your house can upend your whole life.Michael Kerpan wrote:The set-up strikes me as rather artificial -- and the disposition of "good" parents and "bad" children is simplistic.
I suppose you can believe more in the children's behavior in Make Way For Tomorrow if you see their attitude to their parents -- as, basically, irritants -- as something you've encountered in your own life, maybe even sometimes in yourself. Maybe it doesn't say much good about me that I find it all too plausible and real, the sort of thing that is not at all restricted to "bad" people.
No Dumont and no songs for Groucho? I can't go that far.swo17 wrote:Well, Monkey Business is the best Marx Bros. film. I'll grant you that.Michael Kerpan wrote:When I told my children that I now preferred Monkey Business to Duck Soup, their reaction was --"Well, it's about time".