SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN (1952)

Directed by Gene Kelly & Stanley Donen

Singin’ in the Rain is probably the best “movie about making movies” ever made — really, it’s one of the best movies, full stop. Nearly 75 years after the release date, it holds a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It’s a classic that earns the title because it’s ageless. It’s fizzy and spirited, pure fun with stakes just high enough to warrant the plot line. It’s the ultimate rainy day flick, sing-along, and feel-good family film all in one.

THE PLOT

After the first film with synchronized sound premieres in 1927, silent film superstars Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly) and Lina Lamont (Jean Hagen) are suddenly out of step with a world that wants to watch its movies turn into talkies. Lockwood can pivot easily thanks to his smooth voice and charm, but Lamont struggles with a squawking, bird-like voice and a comical inability to speak into her microphone. The money-making enterprise of “Lockwood and Lamont” is at risk.

As Don and his wisecracking, musically gifted bestie Cosmo Brown (Donald O’Connor) scramble to save their careers, they meet Kathy Selden (Debbie Reynolds), a chorus girl with dreams, sass, and a gorgeous singing voice. What follows is beautiful Hollywood mayhem: voice dubbing, musical makeovers, a million costume changes, and trying to make a picture that works.

Every sequence is beautifully constructed, the story moves at a clip, and the acting is superb. Singin’ in the Rain is for the dreamers, the dancers, and those of us who still believe in movie magic.

THE MUSICAL NUMBERS

This is a musical where the songs don’t interrupt the plot, they are the plot. From Cosmo’s slapstick chaos in “Make ’Em Laugh” (which literally hospitalized avid smoker Donald O’Connor for four days after filming wrapped), to the all-time classic “Good Morning”, to Kelly’s rainy title song, each musical moment takes the plot further and brings new energy to the story.

Kelly needs no introduction. Reynolds, who was 19 years old and well-known to have been bleeding through her shoes, keeps pace with him step for step (even more impressive considering she’d never danced before this film). O’Connor is a walking cartoon.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Singin’ in the Rain is a blissful experience, quality entertainment with a quick pace that slows only to showcase the mesmerizing singing and dancing of true masters of the art form. Kelly, O’Connor, and Reynolds are dynamite. The Cyd Charisse sequence is literally the stuff of dreams. It’s a rare picture where just about everything works out for just about everyone but it doesn’t feel annoying or contrived. This film is offering you 100 minutes of happiness. Take it.

this movie is good.

My rating: 5/5

Read this post on Substack.

Discover more from The Good, the Bad, & the Reviewed

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading