By Marc S. Sanders
If you want to stay on top of how the world of American cinema evolved over the last hundred years, within all its categories, you must find time to watch the one film that paved the way for the romantic comedy, as well as the travel comedy. Frank Capra’s Oscar winning picture, It Happened One Night, is the first of three films to win Oscars for every major category: Best Picture, Director, Screenplay, Actor and Actress. Nearly a hundred years later, the accolades still feel worthy.
Claudette Colbert is wealthy heiress Ellie Andrews who dives off and swims away from the captivity of her father’s yacht and buses from Miami to New York to reunite with her new husband, King Westly (Jameson Thomas). Her father, Alexander Andrews (Walter Connolly), never approved of this marriage and insists his spoiled daughter get it annulled once she is found. A ten-thousand-dollar reward is up for grabs to the person who finds her.
Along the way, a rogue reporter, Peter Warne (Clark Gable) ends up next to this young lady on the bus. Complications ensue where their money gets lost, bags are stolen, buses are missed, and buses get stuck. Then this trip becomes a walking experience. Ellie has agreed to stay by Peter’s side though. He promises to get her to New York as long as he gets to write about her story firsthand amid the constant headlines that recount Alexander’s desperation to get his daughter back.
It’d be easy enough if only Peter and Ellie were not falling for one another.
Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Any Nora Ephron script has the elements of It Happened One Night. Screwball comedies with Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn seemed to follow a similar blueprint. To the best of my knowledge, Frank Capra’s film was first though.
A famous scene has Colbert and Gable on the side of the road trying to hitch a ride. Colbert’s bare leg does the trick that Gable’s outstretched thumb could not. Eventually, this scene for the ages evolved into Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal daring to fake an orgasm effectively while dining at Katz’s Delicatessen.
When Harry Met Sally… is what easily comes to mind while watching It Happened One Night. Peter will tease this spoiled rich girl. Yet, he will also be gentlemanly enough to put up a blanket to divide a cabin room he shares with Ellie, allowing for some privacy. In the middle of the night though, the two will stay up chatting from either side of their blanket wall, as both acknowledge sad voids within their personal lives. It’s parallel to how Harry and Sally would chat on the phone from their respective apartment bedrooms while discussing their newly evolving friendship with Casablanca on TV.
Ellie and Peter become relaxed as their sojourn continues. They could be left in the middle of nowhere with no money or food, but Gable and Colbert’s chemistry show an easy comfort to each other. That is what’s expected of any troubled travel film. At first Ellie does not want to share a rear bench on the bus with Peter. She’s married to King and the purpose of this runaway trip is to be back in her new husband’s arms. Plus, this odd fellow on the bus feels unseemly. His charm is overbearing to the socialite’s proper petiteness. He’ll resort to munching on a carrot he finds in a patch. She can’t find the appetite for it. Time together breaks down barriers though, just as movies in later decades eventually accomplished with films like Midnight Run and Planes, Trains & Automobiles. This kind of formula, with ongoing new settings and circumstances, is almost guaranteed to end in positivity once the mutual antagonism is behind the pair.
For 1934, It Happened One Night was bold in its content, ahead of an eventual ratings system intent on upholding an acceptable level of conservatism. Colbert’s leg is the most unforgettable. Later, Peter feels it necessary to spank Ellie. Then there is the fact that the two share a room together. Comedic circumstances and shock lend to the humor of this scenario. Plus, there’s Claudette Colbert undressing down to her slip while a bare-chested Clark Gable is only one side of a blanket away from her.
Would It Happened One Night endure an endless admiration if moments like these were contained? I doubt it. Frank Capra’s film hinges on sexual appeal that feels naughty and rebellious.
The dialogue remains witty. Clark Gable’s introduction in the film while on the phone with his editor is a precursor to what an outlandish Bill Murray might have done with the script. The material is sometimes quite brash, and the ending, which has been duplicated hundreds of times since, is a perfect example of romantic escapism.
Over ninety years have passed but unexpected romance is what remains treasured. When two people with nothing in common begin an unwelcome journey together, it’s still easy to hope they find a way to like each other. They have to like one another first before they can even concern themselves with falling in love. The progress of this east coast bus ride allows for the stages to develop naturally. Frank Capra, Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert were the first to give it a shot and it works brilliantly and beautifully.
