The Awful Truth
Married couple Lucy and Jerry Warriner both suspect the other of cheating and find themselves in divorce court. Before their divorce becomes final, Jerry and Lucy Warriner both do their best to ruin each other's plans for remarriage, Jerry to haughty socialite Molly Lamont, she to oil-rich bumpkin Daniel Leeson.
10 November 1885, Beaufort, South Carolina, USA
4 May 1893, Ceres, California, USA
28 March 1906, Mount Vernon, New York, USA
November 23, 1898 in Sherman, Texas, USA
17 June 1904, Chicago, Illinois, USA
30 December 1879, Hornsey, Middlesex [now in Haringey, London], England, UK
2 August 1888, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
July 31, 1892 in Sydney, Australia
18 January 1904, Horfield, Bristol, England, UK
22 May 1910, Boksburg, Transvaal, South Africa
6 July 1885, New York City, New York, USA
February 17, 2006
The look of love [Grant] gives co-star Irene Dunne, captured not in a close-up but a medium-wide shot, could melt anyone.January 07, 2006
A smart screwball comedy from the 1930s that's given the Lubitsch touch by director Leo McCarey.May 21, 2003
To be frank, The Awful Truth is awfully unimportant, but it is also one of the more laughable screen comedies of 1937, a fairly good vintage year.August 16, 2003
Episodic but sublime screwball comedy, with Grant and Dunne at their most alluring.April 10, 2007
...has earned its reputation as one of the most effective screwball comedies from the 1930s.June 24, 2006
Zappy, sophisticated screwball comedy with Grant and Dunne displaying perfect timing.November 09, 2006
One of the best screwball comedies (of remarriage) ever made, based on the astute mise-en-scene of director Leo McCarey (who won an Oscar) and superb turns from Cary Grant and Irene Dunne as the sparrying partners.May 27, 2008
A joy.February 10, 2006
One should be rooting for Cary Grant to get the girl, which means he ought to deserve her — and if that's more or less the case here, well, it's only because the girl turns out to be no great shakes either.April 04, 2003
As pleasurable as anything a Hollywood studio and the star system ever produced.May 27, 2008
Leo McCarey's largely improvised 1937 film is one of the funniest of the screwball comedies, and also one of the most serious at heart.December 06, 2005
Its sophistication convinced the Academy that it was more than "just" a comedy and they awarded McCarey the Best Director Oscar