Jack of All Trades (1936)

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Jack of All Trades: Directed by Jack Hulbert, Robert Stevenson. With Jack Hulbert, Gina Malo, Robertson Hare, Mary Jerrold. Jack Warrender (Jack Hulbert) bluffs his way into big business in order to promote his new invention.

“Dear old Jack, he was so ebullient, resilient and confident, exuding a goofy charm no-one else could quite match. (By todays standards) his talents as a singer, dancer and actor were pretty thin, Iu0026#39;ve often wondered if he could come back what heu0026#39;d think of the dancing skills displayed on the London stages today. Would he agree that way back when he sang like a foghorn and danced like a demonised flagpole in a suit? But he sure entertained the show and picture goers of the 10u0026#39;s to the 40u0026#39;s, many times alongside his wife, Cicely Courtneidge. Apart from liking his films I also like the man himself, his simple unwavering message of Keep Smiling being one I subscribe to myself – or try to!u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIn this heu0026#39;s on the dole, hungry and ready to do any job but quickly light-heartedly scams his way into society and a highly regarded position at a bank next to the beleaguered Robertson Hare. Here he invents a fraudulent business plan (Merrivale – you remember it surely?), the manager and chairman and another finance company are suck(er)ed in and it all snowballs from there. With of course a love interest as a dynamo.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eAlthough the last 10 minutes seem to drag a little (did Hitchcock get the inspiration for the ending of North by Northwest from this?!), itu0026#39;s a jolly little film, with 3 breezy musical numbers, the most popular one being u0026quot;Where thereu0026#39;s you thereu0026#39;s meu0026quot;, adding up to totally inconsequential fun.”

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