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I Like Your Nerve

I Like Your Nerve (1931)

September. 12,1931
|
5.3
| Comedy Romance

Romance and political intrigue highlight director William C. McGann's 1931 comedy about a playboy smitten with the stepdaughter of a corrupt government official in a fictional Central American country. The cast includes Loretta Young, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Henry Kolker, Boris Karloff (in the small role of a secretary), Edmund Breon, Claude Allister and Luis Alberni.

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Reviews

Hellen
1931/09/12

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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Exoticalot
1931/09/13

People are voting emotionally.

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ChanFamous
1931/09/14

I wanted to like it more than I actually did... But much of the humor totally escaped me and I walked out only mildly impressed.

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Cheryl
1931/09/15

A clunky actioner with a handful of cool moments.

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marcslope
1931/09/16

Loose-structured little First National comedy is worth watching for its leads, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Loretta Young, who appeared together several times and were always charming. She's an heiress in a Central American mythical country who's being forced to marry an old coot to pay off a debt, and is sidelined by Doug, an American adventurer whose behavior now looks aggressive and uncharming, but at the time was considered attractive American hi jinx. It's a William Haines sort of character, meddlesome and trickstering, but folks took it for appealing back then. And he certainly makes it as appealing as possible. Boris Karloff turns up spouting butler lines, and some nice Ernest Haller compositions make it look more expensive than it is. A time waster, but an attractive one, with two young stars who know how to look and know what they're doing.

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Michael_Elliott
1931/09/17

I Like Your Nerve (1931) * 1/2 (out of 4)Far fetched, unromantic and unfunny romantic comedy has Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. in a Latin country where he falls in love with Loretta Young even though she's to be married to another man. Several words like boring, insane and stupid come to mind when I think about this film, which is a major disappointment considering the talent involved. Boris Karloff has a small role as a butler.Loretta Young is my favorite actress but this is certainly one of her lesser films.

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movingpicturegal
1931/09/18

This film features a basic plot line we've all seen many times in many different films and that is this - a more appropriate, more handsome man tries to catch, before it's too late, a woman about to be married to a less appropriate, "wrong" man. In this film, Loretta Young plays the beautiful daughter of the Minister of Finance, and she is set to marry, in four days time, a wealthy, but gruff and rather ugly old man (well - there's really no other way I could put it!) - the reasons for her odd choice of partner are a secret. When she meets grinning, conceited Larry O'Brien (played by Douglas Fairbanks Jr.), he is immediately in love and uses a bunch of tricks and schemes in an attempt to win her for himself. She seems to dislike him (but, of course, in the way of most movies from then to now, she *really* secretly likes him).There is some humor in this, mostly of the Three Stooges / slap-in-the-face variety, plus some funny scenes with Claud Allister as Larry's gay sidekick Archie. Loretta Young really has little to do in this film other than look gorgeous in beautiful gowns and dangling earrings. Boris Karloff also has little to do in this film other than slink in and out of the room as butler. The actor who plays her father acts in a sort of bugged-out eyes style, but I guess it's supposed to be funny. Douglas Fairbanks Jr. tries to be charming, but he comes across to me as not particularly interesting - he's just sort of there. Okay film, but nothing great - a middle-range time filler, mainly for fans of Loretta Young.

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John Seal
1931/09/19

Doug Fairbanks Jr. stars as an ugly American-style tourist stranded in a corrupt Central American Ruritania, only to fall in love with the daughter (Loretta Young) of the country's finance minister (Henry Kolker) days before her wedding to the local millionaire (Edward Breon). This First National production was obviously done on the cheap, as there are numerous technical flaws and even a few flubbed lines by Fairbanks. The film was attractively shot by Ernest Haller, however, and there are some impressive sets probably left over from a big budget feature. Sixth billed Boris Karloff has about two dozen words as Luigi, the butler, character actor Luis Alberni shows up as a local restarauteur, and Claud Allister plays a gay British diplomat ("everyone KNOWS I'm a bachelor!"). It's a cheap and cheerful early talkie, so suspend your disbelief and enjoy the ride.

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