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Kiss and Tell

Kiss and Tell (1945)

1h 30m | PG-13

⭐ 5.6 / 10

Film adaptation of the Broadway hit, about the comic mayhem that erupts in a small town when a 15-year old high-schooler (Shirley Temple) is wrongly suspected of being pregnant.

Director: Richard Wallace

Studio: Columbia Pictures

Genre: Comedy

Video: 720p

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Cast

Shirley Temple

Shirley Temple

as Corliss Archer

Jerome Courtland

Jerome Courtland

as Dexter Franklin

Walter Abel

Walter Abel

as Harry Archer

Katharine Alexander

Katharine Alexander

as Janet Archer

Robert Benchley

Robert Benchley

as George Archer

Porter Hall

Porter Hall

as Bill Franklin

Reviews

By CinemaSerf

Poor old Porter Hall gets most of the acting plaudits here. He is "Bill" who, together with his wife "Janet" (Katharine Alexander) and daughter "Corliss" (Shirley Temple) lives next to the "Pringle" family. Their two daughters like to get up to some teen mischief, and after one such trivial incident their mothers fall out. Meantime the slightly older "Mildred Pringle" (Virginia Welles) falls for a squaddie gets pregnant and they elope. She swears her best pal "Corliss" to secrecy, but the parents get the wrong end of the stick and conclude that it's actually "Corliss" who has been up to naughties with gangly boy-next-door "Dexter" (Jerome Courtland) and that the baby is their's. Oh, the scandal! Chaos ensues and that's where Hall comes to the fore - his paternal frustrations are well demonstrated with quite a fun few moments of amusing parental angst. Courtland is also quite good as the "holy cow" youth, sweet on "Corliss", who is all to happy to reap the advantages of this snowballing misunderstanding. It borders on farce just a bit to much for me, though - to many implausible co-incidences and the character of "Corliss" is quite unpleasantly selfish and manipulative. Still, it doesn't hang about, and there is nothing wrong with it as 90 minutes of lightly comedic wartime entertainment that passes the time fine.