Bringing
Up Baby (1938)
Starring
Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn
Director
Howard Hawks
Film Notes
"The love impulse in man," says a psychiatrist in Bringing
Up Baby, "frequently reveals itself in terms of conflict." That's for sure.
For a primer on the rules and regulations of the classic screwball comedy, which throws
love and conflict into close proximity, look no further. A straight-laced paleontologist
(Cary Grant) loses a dinosaur bone to a dog belonging to free-spirited heiress Katharine
Hepburn. In trying to retrieve said bone, Grant is drawn into the vortex surrounding the
delicious Hepburn, which becomes a flirtatious pas de deux that will transform
both of them. Director Howard Hawks plays the complications as a breathless escalation of
their "love impulse," yet the movie is nonetheless romantic for all its speed.
Grant and Hepburn are a match made in movie heaven, in sync with each other throughout.
Not a great box-office success when first released, Bringing Up Baby has since
taken its place as a high-water mark of the screwball form, and it was used as a model for
Peter Bogdanovich's What's Up
Doc (Robert Horton, Amazon.com)