Design for Scandal
Rache ist süß
© 1941 Turner Entertainment Co. All rights reserved.
Judge Cornelia Porter makes an enemy of a newspaper tycoon when she awards his wife large alimony payments during the divorce proceedings. To get his revenge, the publisher agrees to sic reporter Jeff Sherman on the judge. The plan is to seduce Porter, opening her up to blackmail by embroiling her in a public scandal involving Sherman’s planned marriage. He follows her to the seaside resort where she is vacationing, where the upright judge initially rebuffs Sherman’s advances. But by posing as an artist, he manages to exploit her love of sculpture. Far from her usual professional habitat, Judge Porter displays a “typically feminine” weakness. After Sherman flatteringly calls her glamourous, she checks herself out in the mirror – providing Rosalind Russell with a perfect opportunity to show off her physical comedy chops. Although she manages to rise above false compliments, she proves powerless against Sherman’s insinuations of love – with the central gag of this romantic comedy being that even the man whispering sweet nothings ends up succumbing to them.
With
- Rosalind Russell
- Walter Pidgeon
- Edward Arnold
- Lee Bowman
- Jean Rogers
- Mary Beth Hughes
- Guy Kibbee
- Barbara Jo Allen
- Leon Belasco
- Bobby Larson
Crew
Director | Norman Taurog |
Screenplay | Lionel Houser |
Cinematography | Leonard Smith, William Daniels |
Editing | Elmo Veron |
Music | Franz Waxman |
Sound | Douglas Shearer |
Art Director | Cedric Gibbons |
Costumes | Kalloch |
Producer | John W. Considine Jr. |
Produced by
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.
Additional information
Print: 16mm collection print courtesy of the UCLA Film & Television Archive