To me, this movie is perfection.
... View MoreDisappointment for a huge fan!
... View MoreIt's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.
... View MoreThe movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.
... View More"Wintertime" from 1943 was, I believe, the last film Sonja Henie made for Darryl F. Zanuck. To me, it was pretty poor with the exception of Sonja's fabulous skating. It's loud, a little slap-sticky, and the funny parts aren't all that funny. The film also stars Jack Oakie, S.Z. Sakall, Cornell Wilde, Carole Landis, and Cesar Romero. The story is sketchy and really just an excuse for the musical numbers, of which there are many. Nora (Henie) and her uncle (S.Z. Sakall) are in Canada to be part of a quota so they can immigrate to the U.S. They spend the night in a hotel in Canada which has seen better days. Nora develops a crush on the owner (Wilde) and talks her uncle into investing into the hotel. However, with his funds being frozen in Norway due to the war, the investment has put Nora's uncle in financial trouble now. Also, Nora starts to think her romance is one-sided when reporter Landis appears. Sonja was a first in many aspects of figure skating, and even today with more athletic moves, her talent can be appreciated. She was fast and had beautiful spins, as well a big personality. She was the first figure skater to wear the short skirt costume, the first to wear white boots, the first to make use of dance choreography, and she invented many skating techniques -- all things that remain in place today in the sport. She also made ice shows and figure skating popular. For the above reasons, seeing a Sonja Henie movie is always a treat. In this case, do yourself a favor and fast forward through the rest of it.
... View MoreNorwegian ice skater Sonia Henie (Nora) arrives in Canada with her wealthy uncle S.Z. Sakall expecting to stay in a luxury hotel. However, promoter Jack Oakie (Skip) has booked them into a failing hotel run by Cornel Wilde (Freddy). Resident entertainers Cesar Romero (Brad) and Carole Landis (Flossie) are there in the mix as well along with Woody Herman's band. Cue singing and skating We have the bad – Jack Oakie and S.Z. Sakall – set against the good – the songs and Romero, Landis and Henie. Romero wins the comedy prize – he is very funny and quite athletic with a talent for singing and dancing. The film started poorly with overbearing Jack Oakie blustering away in his unfunny manner to insipid Cornel Wilde. Then the film gets a massive boost with a great song by Romero and Landis before we slip into some nonsense with unfunny S.Z. Sakall. As the film progresses and Romero takes centre stage, things get enjoyable. Henie also gets some funny moments as well as her skating segments.
... View MoreThere isn't so much a storyline as there is a situation. Romantic issues occur at a winter resort in Canada with the arrival of its new prominent guests, portly S.Z. Sakall and his sweet niece, skater Sonia Henie. There's tons of deception but little in the way of plot development, filled with some brittle acid comedy and a long-lasting farcial sequence involving Cesar Romero stuck out in the snow in his long johns and his attempts to find clothes when he gets back into the inn. The laughs are plentiful as long as this sequence goes on, but other than a scene with one of the women involved in the minimal plot goes ballistic, telling off Romero while traipsing through the lobby of the crowded inn. Pretty inconsequential, "Wintertime" is pretty to look at but shabby otherwise, with the Canadian setting being spoofed with an ice skating version of "Indian Love Call" ("Rose Marie" on ice I refer to it...) and a lavish finale where Henie (a star only when skating) gets to show off her stuff. Jack Oakie is the top billed male star, but it's really Cesar Romero who gets the best material. A young Cornel Wilde is also amongst the cast. Henie's earlier films at least had more than a shell of a plot, so this one seems very rushed together in order to wrap up her seven year 20th Century Fox contract.
... View MoreSoon after publishing this review, Fox finally came out with a DVD release of this superior Sonja Henie-starring film, which they show periodically on their movie channel. I wasn't expecting too much, but rate it up there close to "Sun Valley Serenade", which combined Sonja with the Glenn Miller band and is one of my favorite musicals from the '40s. The two films have different strengths, In SVS, Sonja engineered most of the comedy and romance. Skiing, as well as ice skating, was a prominent part of the story. Singing and orchestration were more prominent, although the present film does feature Woody Herman's band at times. Her romantic relationship with John Payne's character is much more fun than the rather unconvincing and uninteresting relationship with Cornel Wilde's character in the present film. On the other hand, comedy engineered by the male supporting players in the present film is far superior to that offered by Milton Berle and is the chief reason you might want to watch this film. Cesar Romero does his best to imitate Charlie Chaplin's style of comedy, while veteran Jack Oakie gives one of his best non-musical performances, with his mostly verbally oriented comedy. (Yes, I know some viewers consider him more irritating than funny). With his plump stocky build, he will probably remind you of a blend of Oliver Hardy and Jackie Gleason, contrasting with Cesar's suave tall trim physique and ideal Latin matinée idol looks. We have yet a third charismatic comedian in S.Z. 'Cuddles' Sakal: that portly irascible white-haired elderly gentleman of many a musical and other films of the '40s and '50s, with the thick European accent and fractured English. Actually, Cornel Wilde; the pretty boy hunk leading man Sonja falls for, also began life in Hungary, but emigrated to the US as a boy, thus leaving no discernible trace of his native speech.As I said, Cornel, as Freddie, part owner of a decrepit , once glorious, isolated hotel in Quebec, comes across as a colorless pretty boy for Sonja, thus garners an incredibly low 6th spot in the credits pecking order. Cesar(as Brad) would seem a much more exciting prospect for Sonja. In fact, she agrees to marry this US citizen so that she can legally enter the US and make a fortune in ice skating shows. However, in the Fox formula for its musicals, Cesar never ends up with the leading lady. Hence, Jack Oakie, as Skip, Freddie's hotel partner, learns of this secret scheme and foils their escape from the hotel by stealing all of Cesar's clothes and personal effects while he's in the shower, resulting in a series of hilarious episodes by Cesar. Cesar's antics surpass those in the previous "Weekend in Havana", in which he is caught between Carmen Miranda and Alice Faye. You see, Sonja and uncle Hjalmar(Sakal) came to Quebec so she could participate in the winter sports games. Hjalmar is a rich Norwegian and is railroaded into investing money in this hotel to hopefully restore it to its heyday condition. Now, he has lots of bills , but learns that the Nazis have recently taken over Norway and frozen his bank accounts. Hence, the need for a speedy way for Sonja to get into the US to make money to save the hotel from bankruptcy. Sonja has competition in the romance department from Helene Reynolds, as sports magazine reporter Marion Daly. Carole Landis, as Flossie, is also mixed in the romance merry go round as someone Cesar is hiding from("Where is tall, dark, and elusive?"). Of course, the finale suggests that she ends up with Cesar and Sonja with Cornel, by stealth.Most of Sonja's ice skating performances are bunched in the middle of the film, with interludes mostly involving Herman's band, sited next to the skating pond. The first is done to "Indian Love Call" music, another to Tchaikovsky's familiar "Waltz of the Flowers". Her final performance is at the end of the film, done to the theme song "Wintertime". The new songs were composed by the veteran Nacio Herb Brown, and lyrics by the veteran Leo Robin. Brown did his best work in the late '20s and '30s for MGM. Much of the best was later collected in the mega-hit "Singing in the Rain"Sonja doesn't come across as cuddly as in SVS. She seems more like a wide-eyed schemer in this one. Reportedly, she privately was not that nice a person. ..This was not the first Sonja film for Cesar nor Jack, though they had not been cast together. Poor Carol Landis, who spent so much time entertaining the GIs in person during WWII, would decide in a few years that her frustrating romantic relationships, inability to bare a child, downward-turning film career, and various chronic health problems warranted her exiting from her life at age 29.Would be nice if Fox collected all, or most, of Sonja's films they did, and release them as a DVD collection.
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