*** Welcome to piglix ***

The Magnificent Dope

The Magnificent Dope
The Magnificent Dope FilmPoster.jpeg
Directed by Walter Lang
Produced by William Perlberg
Written by Joseph Schrank (story)
George Seaton
Starring Henry Fonda
Lynn Bari
Don Ameche
Music by Emil Newman
Leigh Harline
Cyril J. Mockridge
David Raksin
Cinematography J. Peverell Marley
Edited by Barbara McLean
Production
company
Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox
Release date
  • July 1, 1942 (1942-07-01)
Running time
83-84 minutes
Language English

The Magnificent Dope (1942) is a comedy film released by Twentieth Century-Fox. It is also known as Lazy Galahad, Strictly Dynamite and The Magnificent Jerk.

Dwight Dawson (Don Ameche) runs a hype-driven self-improvement course in the Dale Carnegie mode. He and his partner Horace Hunter (Edward Everett Horton) are seeking new sales ideas as enrollment has declined sharply. Their chief of marketing, Claire Harris (Lynn Bari), who is also Dwight's fiancée, comes up with an idea to announce a contest seeking the biggest loser in the country. The prize is $500 and Dwight's course in career advancement. The idea is that the contest will create interest to Dwight's teaching system.

A winner is chosen: Thadeus Winship Page (Henry Fonda) from the small town of Upper White Eddy in Vermont. He is running a not overly successful business of renting out boats during summer time, and is- by his own description- lazy and completely unmotivated.

Tad comes down from his town to New York City to collect his prize, determined to use the money toward a fire-engine needed by the small town. The publicity stunt is jeopardized, though, when happy and contented Tad is uninterested in taking Dwight's business course, and has to be persuaded by Claire to do so. Tad is charmed by Claire during a night out in the city and falls in love with her, all the while expounding his own philosophies on relaxation, enjoying life, and the unimportance of money. After the night out, Tad reluctantly agrees to take the course, just to be close to Claire.

Claire gets to spend some time with Tad during the course, and she realizes that he isn't the failure they had thought him to be. After a while Tad shyly admits to Claire that he is in love, but he doesn't dare tell her she is the subject of his affection, inventing a girl from his hometown named "Hazel".

When Dwight hears about this, he tells Tad that the business course will help him in his quest to win his girl. Tad believes Dwight and continues the course until he hears that Claire is in love with someone else. Dwight and Horace have to persuade him once again to stay, telling Tad that the man Claire is in love with is an ugly, fat, and stupid man (from Hoboken!) who can be out-conquered, carefully concealing his own engagement to Claire.

The publicity from Tad's course makes it a success and attendance becomes much higher. Dwight convinces Tad to get a job to prove his success to the various magazines covering the course progress, so he does. He is hired as an insurance salesman, but is soon discouraged when he is unsuccessful. Dwight secretly helps out by making his friend buy an insurance policy from Tad, unaware that his friend, Frank Mitchell, has high blood pressure and wouldn't pass the physical to get to buy a policy. Tad commits his anticipated commission to the purchase of the fire engine from his home town, and takes Claire to see it. They bond further over Claire's passion for fire engines- she was a fire chief's daughter.


...
Wikipedia

...