The Girl Next Door
The Girl Next Door
| 13 May 1953 (USA)
The Girl Next Door Trailers

Stage-and-night club star Jeannie Laird buys her first home, and everyone who is anyone comes to her first garden party only to be blinded by smoke from next door. Jeannie charges next door to bawl out her new neighbor and meets comic-strip artist Bill Carter. Bill has devoted himself to his strip, and raising his ten-year-old son Joe since the death of his wife. Joe bases his strip on the everyday happenings of he and his son and is proud of keeping it scrupulously honest. When Jeannie and Bill fall in love, young Joe is hurt, especially when Bill starts using a lot of the father-son time to be with Jeannie. Bill cancels a father-son trip to Canada, and Joe decides to write a letter to Bill's syndicate pointing out that the current plot line of the script being set in Canada isn't honest, since they didn't go.

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Reviews
NekoHomey

Purely Joyful Movie!

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Maidexpl

Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast

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Derry Herrera

Not sure how, but this is easily one of the best movies all summer. Multiple levels of funny, never takes itself seriously, super colorful, and creative.

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Allison Davies

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

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MartinHafer

I am an odd person in that I like musicals BUT dislike them when they have a lot of songs or unnecessary song and dance sequences that slow down the plots. So, while I really loved the plot from "The Girl Next Door", I felt that a couple times the song and dance routines got in the way--particularly the fantasy sequences. Now this is NOT to say I disliked the film. I think it's actually highly underrated and don't exactly know why it isn't thought of as one of the better musicals. Perhaps it's because it starred Dan Dailey and June Haver--and they were not see as in the same level as Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly, Judy Garland and other top Hollywood names. Well, despite this, it is a very good picture...even with a song or two too many.The film begins by showing us very quickly the life of the actress Jeannie Laird (Haver). Now, after wowing audiences all over the world, she has just bought a home and plans to settle down a little bit. She's still a working woman and loves acting, but now she has a house to call her own. But, on the night she's throwing a big housewarming party, she runs afoul of her neighbors--Bill and Joe Carter (Dan Dailey and Billy Gray). Fortunately, this minor tiff did not characterize the movie or their relationship and soon she and Bill are dating. The problem is that Joe LOVES all the attention he gets from his single dad--and he naturally resents anyone who might try to take him away from him. Unfortunately, Bill is a bit oblivious to this and it takes patience from Jeannie and some understanding from Joe to work through all this.This is a very nice family film. The relationship between father and son seemed natural and sweet. Daily and Haver are exceptional, but the real star to me was Gray. While he'd played precocious and ill-behaved brats in a few previous films, here he was all boy--and I mean that in the best possible way. He seemed very natural and was in his element in the film. Overall, apart from one or two songs too many, the film has a nice story, excellent acting and is well worth your time.By the way, this was Haver's last film, as she soon retired to be a nun. This didn't take, apparently, and a bit later she became Mrs. Fred MacMurray and never looked back at her film career. Also, get a load of the big kiss at the end--it's one of the best of the era!If you see this on DVD, look for the special features--they are excellent!

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weezeralfalfa

This fun contemporary musical marked the end of an era for Fox musicals. It was the last of 5 films in which versatile likable Dan Dailey starred as the leading man with one of Fox's two blond leading ladies of '40s and early '50s musicals: Betty Grable and June Haver. This was June's last Hollywood film, after a string of mostly Fox or Warner musicals since '44. It was also singer Dennis Day's last Hollywood film. Finally, it was the last Fox film scored by composer Josef Myrow and lyricist Mack Gordon, who began collaborating on a number of Fox musicals beginning in '46, after Gordon's previous primary collaborator, Harry Warren, left Fox for MGM.Actually, Fox wanted Betty Grable to once again star opposite her favorite leading man for musicals. But, she turned it down. Thus, June served the purpose for which she was originally signed: as a backup for Betty, in case she couldn't or wouldn't do a film. Happily, we see that Dan and June also had super chemistry, bringing a high intensity of energy to the film. This is perhaps best exhibited by their unique spectacular 'mating dance', which provides a fitting finale to their whirlwind romance. Actually, its clear to me that they made a more dynamic pair than Betty and DanUnlike most of June's and many of Betty's previous musicals, which had nostalgic themes of the gay '90s through '20s, this film was set in contemporary suburbia, which was mushrooming in the years following WWII. Thus, we have spacious modern houses close to each other, but with backyards were parties and cookouts are hosted. Unlike most of June's other Fox musicals, there is no other significant female musical star to share the musical spotlight with. Also, unlike most Fox musicals of the '40s, most of the dancing and singing is done off-stage. Aside from the opening chorus girl number, the major exception is the imaginative film-noire-like song and dance to "Nowhere Guy": very different in mood to the effervescent other musical numbers: something that looks like it belongs in an MGM Kelly or Astaire-dominated film. The dream dance, involving Dan, June, and Dan's son, as well as several animated cartoon portions, also look more like MGM features, than Fox. The chief choreographer was Richard Barstow, whose only other film credits as such were for "A Star is Born" and "the Greatest Show on Earth" : 2 quite prominent films for their times. The musical director was Lionel Newman: brother of the more famous Alfred Newman. Marilyn Monroe, whose star was rapidly rising at this time, requested Lionel to be the musical director in all her films.The central drama of the film revolves around Dan's son's(Joe) strong opposition to admitting a female into his cozy life as a father and son family vs. the obvious strong attraction between Dan's and June's characters(Bill and Jeannie).. Obviously, Joe is still at that age where girls around his age are often considered boring and clumsy at things he's interested in(like fishing trips in the woods). He emphatically lets his wannabe girlfriend(Kitty) and stepmother (Jeannie) know about his profound disinterest in them. At first, Jeannie thinks she can bring Joe around to accepting her, then decides this isn't likely, and berates Bill for trying to badger Joe into changing his attitude toward her. She decides it's better if she moves away, until Joe belatedly offers some words of peace, causing her to delay her hasty plan, bolstered by the advice of her friends Reed(Dennis Day) and Rosie(Cara Williams). But, in the end, after the Bill-Jeannie crisis is resolved, when Kitty asks Joe if he will marry her when they grow up, she gets an emphatic arrogant "no", showing that Joe's dislike of girls(at least Kitty) has not budged.For the most part, laconic Bill provided a calming effect on the hyperkinetic social butterfly nightclub entertainer Jeannie, which is probably one reason she immediately fell for him, along with his obvious song and dance talent and domestic skills. Joe and Kitty provide characters that children can somewhat identify with. However, their dialogue with each other is often very awkward. ..The dish juggling act between Bill and Joe, accompanied by the song "I'd Rather Have a Pal Than a Gal", is a very clever scene, emphasizing their great relationship, and the lack of need for a woman to do household chores. However, after Joe goes to bed, Bill says, at times, he would like to reverse the "gal" and "pal" in the song: providing an opening for Jeannie. Bill's profession as a cartoonist provides a largely at-home job for a single father, and also leads into the several animated cartoon segments, which presumably mainly appeal to the children in the audience.Many viewers today are put off by Dennis Day's rather formal, if usually cheery, persona and formal attire, and his traditional Irish tenor singing, as contrasted with Dan's Gene Kelly style. I don't have a problem with him, certainly compared to Jeannie's comically super stiff and arrogant butler! Cara Williams, as his bright-eyed carrot-haired girlfriend, provides some distraction from June's dominance.

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mark.waltz

1953 Hollywood-MGM had "Small Town Girl"; Warner Brothers had "Three Sailors and a Girl", and Paramount announced "Here Come the Girls". 20th Century Fox added its own girl to the group by putting a girl next door. Here, June Haver plays a Broadway star who moves next door to a handsome widower (Dan Dailey) with a young son (Billy Gray) who enjoys keeping his father busy with fishing trips and things that guys do, no females allowed. When Haver has a dinner party, they ruin it, first with pet pigeons that literally get into people's hair, then with a cook-out that threatens to be a smoke-out. Haver storms over to complain but finds herself entranced by Dailey, which upsets young Gray. They had earlier shared a duet entitled "I'd Rather Have a Pal than a Gal", and now papa Dailey is tempted to switch the two nouns in the song.Haver soon finds out that writer Dailey is quite a song and dance man himself, sharing a number with helium voiced Dennis Day that ends with the usual pose of the performers having their hands out to the audience begging for applause. But Gray won't back down on trying to keep Haver and Dailey apart, having a cute little animated dream that while fishing with his father (and a talking pooch and raccoon), Haver shows up as a witch, threatening to spoil their fun. You know in the end he'll change his mind and help reconcile the two; It's just a matter of getting through a few so-so musical numbers where the songs aren't very good, but the colorful Fox direction helps distract the viewer to that fact. The choreography by Richard Barstow (whom I had never heard of until I saw his name in the credits for this film) is also covered with lavish art direction, particularly in Dailey's dream finale that has Gray using a giant pencil in his efforts to keep Haver and Dailey apart.Minus Betty Grable for the first of a few times during his Fox musical career, Dailey is likable, and more down to earth than he was in backstage musicals such as "Mother Wore Tights" (where he plays a total ham) and "When My Baby Smiles at Me" (receiving an Oscar nomination as an alcoholic). He would be paired with Jeanne Crain and Ethel Merman in other movie musicals, but here, it is blonde June Haver who gets him. Some people confuse her with the similarly named June Havoc (Baby June of "Gypsy" fame), but they are very different people. The June Haver musicals, with titles such as "The Daughter of Rosie O'Grady" and "Look For the Silver Lining", are enjoyable but not among the top rated musical films of the golden age. She had a pleasant personality, was a talented singer and dancer, passable actress, but lacked the spark of other blonde musical stars of that era such as Betty Grable, Betty Hutton, and Doris Day. It's perhaps because there's no seemingly temperament there; She's like the chorus girl who made good and never forgot from where she came. There's no scandal or temperament to her personality that make her front page news. Day could get away with her spunky sweet nature because you knew somewhere underneath laid sadness from unspoken traumas; Grable could swear and spar with the crew, yet you knew she was one of the gang who enjoyed having fun. The lack of these qualities, plus the mystery of the newest rising blonde bombshell (Marilyn Monroe), makes Haver equally talented if not remarkable in these films. Those qualities ruined her best chance for stardom as the real-life temperamental Marilyn Miller in "Look For the Silver Lining".Young Billy Gray, who was fun as the younger brother in the Doris Day/Gordon MacRae films "On Moonlight Bay" and "By the Light of the Silvery Moon", is thankfully not obnoxious as the determined kid. It's easy to understand his desire to keep his dad to himself, so he avoids being a stereotypical screen brat. It was tempting to fast forward through any moment where Dennis Day sang, but I avoided it just to make sure I didn't miss any of his love interest Cara Williams' funny wisecracks. (Her appearance with the pigeons all over her is quite humorous.) They really are a mismatched second couple and are no threat to the same years young lovers Tommy Rall and Ann Miller in "Kiss Me Kate". Natalie Schaefer, the matronly Lovey Howell of "Gilligan's Island", plays of all things, a maid, paired with Clinton Sundberg's Franklin Pangborn-ish butler. Schaefer had better screen work playing society matrons in several Joan Crawford and Lana Turner films, as well as a memorable cameo in the film version of William Saroyan's "The Time of Your Life"."The Girl Next Door" is not a hard film to like, but it is one of those musicals that had good ideas, high ambitions, but unfortunately doesn't quite come together. Try not to laugh out loud at the silliness of the final musical number which is pretty to look at, yet worthy of gapes similar to the ones of the audience to "Springtime For Hitler" in "The Producers".

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edwagreen

Entertaining Dan Dailey and June Haver film. It's the story of a boy affected by his widower father's attachment to the woman who has moved next door.The singing, dancing and cartoon like sequence scenes are an absolute joy to watch.Dennis Day is wonderful here in a supporting role along with a very young looking Cara Williams.The story moves along at a rapid pace and is well done with the music adding so much to the story.Look for a stodgy Clifford Sunberg as a butler.

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