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Robert Riskin (1897–1955)

Author of It Happened One Night [1934 film]

11+ Works 582 Members 11 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Film Reference

Works by Robert Riskin

It Happened One Night [1934 film] (1934) — Screenwriter — 220 copies
Meet John Doe [1941 film] (1941) — Screenwriter — 91 copies
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town [1936 film] (1936) — Screenwriter — 80 copies
Lost Horizon [1937 film] (1937) — Screenwriter — 78 copies
You Can't Take It With You [1938 film] (1938) — Screenwriter — 78 copies
Lady for a Day [1933 film] (1933) — Screenwriter — 6 copies
Illicit [1931 film] (1931) — Screenwriter — 5 copies

Associated Works

20 Best Film Plays (1943) — Contributor — 16 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Riskin, Robert
Birthdate
1897-03-30
Date of death
1955-09-20
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
New York, New York, USA
Place of death
Los Angeles, California, USA
Occupations
screenwriter
playwright
Relationships
Wray, Fay (wife)

Members

Reviews

C- (Meh).

An airplane is hijacked and taken to a utopia. At least, the filmmakers meant it to be a utopia. It's more like a bomb shelter. I guess in 1937 a bomb shelter made for a plausible utopia?

(Dec. 2023)
 
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comfypants | 1 other review | Dec 30, 2023 |
It was in Mr. Deeds Goes to Town that Frank Capra perfected the blend of comedy and social commentary that would become his trademark. The screwball comedy was graceful rather than frantic, and the social elements of Robert Riskin's fine screenplay are handled in an even-handed manner that earned Capra the second of his three Academy Awards for Best Director. Both Gary Cooper, as the tuba playing no-nonsense Longfellow Deeds, and Jean Arthur, as the reporter who exploits him until she falls for his goodness are wonderful in this true Capra classic.

Longfellow Deeds (Cooper) lives in the small town of Mandrake Falls where he earns his living writing greeting card poems and spends his free time playing the tuba. He is less than enthused when a bunch of big city attorneys show up at his door to tell him he has just inherited 20 million dollars from a relative he’s never met. They want him to sign over his power of attorney. Deeds goes to the city with them mainly so he can get a look at Grant's Tomb.

Cooper’s Deeds is honest and good, but no pushover. His initial reluctance about the situation proves wise as everyone wants to mooch off him while at the same time making him look a fool. Deeds gives as good as he gets and wins over the crusty Cornelius Cobb (Lionell Stander) to his way of doing things, but he can't get around the way a certain Louise Bennet is mocking his every escapade in the papers, making him look like a country bumpkin.

But Deeds knows it doesn't matter when he meets the sweet Mary Dawson (Jean Arthur), a lady in distress who becomes his constant companion. The lonely deeds no longer has to go off by himself like he did back home, where he talked to an imaginary girl. He tells Mary that she makes up for all the fakes he's met and writes a poem to her telling her how much he loves her. But nothing is as it seems to Deeds.

Arthur is wonderful as the cynical reporter who slowly realizes that Longfellow is straightforward and honest. She realizes it is everyone else’s viewpoint that is distorted. But will the truth ruin everything? Deeds is ready to pack it up and head back to Mandrake Falls until a starving farmer during the Great Depression gives Deeds an idea. It sets in motion a courtroom showdown where, as Cobb says, “Lamb Bites Wolf!”

Cooper and Arthur are memorable together in this wonderful Frank Capra classic. You’ll definitely get choked up when she reads Longfellow's poem about her on the steps of her apartment. Arthur does, because the words he has said earlier to a group of published poets making fun of him echo in her heart: "I guess it's alright to hurt someone as long as you don't care how much you hurt them."

If all the great Capra classics were represented by a vase full of red roses, this would be the one white rose in the center. It is flawless and pure, and represents everything that was special about the films of the first director allowed to have his name above the title. After seeing this film, you'll know why.
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Matt_Ransom | 1 other review | Nov 19, 2023 |
“I’ve been lonely and hungry for something practically all my life.” — Long John Willoughby

This Frank Capra film, more so than his others, was shaded more towards drama than humor. Not without humor or charm, as evidenced in many scenes between Barbara Stanwyck and Gary Cooper, the tone of the Robert Riskin screenplay, based on a story by Richard Connell and Robert Presnell, has more serious implications, however, than Capra's other films. For that reason, and perhaps because many surviving prints of this film are not as good as the others, Meet John Doe sometimes gets unfairly dismissed when films of this extraordinary director are discussed. This was the meat in what many call Capracorn.

Barbara Stanwyck is Ann Mitchell, a reporter soon to be unemployed when her paper is gobbled up by D.B. Norton (Edward Arnold). Desperate to keep the thirty dollar a week salary that keeps her two young sisters and her mom (Spring Byington) afloat, she begs editor Henry Connell (James Gleason) for her job back, but her plea falls on deaf ears. She decides to go out in a blaze, writing a column in which she purports to have received a letter from one John Doe, who, because of the injustice in the world, the state of civilization, and the downtrodden, plans to kill himself at Christmas.

A groundswell of support for Doe gets Ann her job back, but now she and boss Connell must find a 'real' John Doe or their heads will roll. In walks Long John Willoughby (Gary Cooper), a starving baseball player with a bad wing. He and his pal, Colonel (Walter Brennan), are just hungry enough to play along. Colonel has reservations from the get-go, however, afraid that Long John will become a helot — a guy with a bank account. Long John just wants to earn enough to get the arm he injured pitching a 19 inning game fixed by Bonesetter Brown, but his shy affection for Ann keeps him around long enough to make a radio speech. Written from words in her father's diary, his speech spreads the John Doe movement all across the country. But Colonel sees the train wreck coming, and takes off.

Clubs start up everywhere, only the John Does allowed to join. People start treating their neighbors with kindness, showing the spirit of Christmas on a day-to-day basis. D.B. Norton, however, has political aspirations, and sees a way to twist the movement to fit his ambitions. It is Henry Connell who clues in Long John on what is about to happen, letting the air out of his balloon and shattering his smitten image of Ann, with her chestnut hair and great legs. What follows, as the country discovers John Doe was a fake, will lead Long John to a rooftop overlooking the city on a snowy Christmas night.

Stanwyck is wonderful here, as Ann slowly comes to realize she has found a man like her father but may have helped to destroy him. Cooper is memorable as Long John Willoughby, a shy ball player who realizes he has come to stand for more than he ever could have on the pitching mound. Brennan is his usual great character, looking out for Long John as much as he can. Some warm and sentimental moments between Cooper's Long John and Stanwyck's Ann humanize the social drama, and offer great charm. In particular, Cooper's scene with Ann's mom, whose help he needs to ask her daughter to marry him, has a sweetness to it that is long gone from today's films. The baseball scene in a hotel room, when they play pretend ball, is a classic.

This is a wonderful film about the little guy that sometimes gets over-analyzed. Capra was simply reminding people that the first John Doe came a long time ago, and people still weren't listening, often fooled by words, and those who would twist something decent to their own sordid advantage. This film that works best if you forget it is a Frank Capra picture, and just enjoy it on its own merits. It can then be placed proudly beside the director's other classics on your movie shelf. A masterpiece, with an unforgettable performance by Coop.
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Matt_Ransom | 1 other review | Nov 19, 2023 |
A man from a family of rich snobs becomes engaged to a woman from a good-natured but decidedly eccentric family.
 
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DrLed | 1 other review | Nov 4, 2017 |

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Associated Authors

Samuel Hopkins Adams Original story
Moss Hart Writer
Edith Fitzgerald Screenwriter
Allen Fox Actor
George Barnes Cinematographer
Richard Connell Original story
Robert Presnell Sr. Original story
Ann Doran Actor
James Hilton Original book
Damon Runyon Original story

Statistics

Works
11
Also by
1
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Popularity
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Rating
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Reviews
11
ISBNs
37
Languages
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