Domestic crime-solving bliss. Image: tmdb.org

Perhaps you’ve heard of Nick and Nora Charles, the husband-and-wife sleuthing team of The Thin Man movies.

On the face of it, they’re an unlikely pair. Nick (William Powell) is a retired gumshoe, a sleek, witty man with an unparalleled track record of putting criminals in the Clink.

He’s married to Nora (Myrna Loy), a sleek, witty woman with an unparalleled bank account.

But Nick is no gold digger and Nora is no hot-house orchid. They love solving mysteries as much as they love (A) each other, and (B) cocktails.

There’s plenty of mystery and cocktails in the third installment of this series, Another Thin Man (1939), wherein Nick and Nora – along with their new baby – visit a friend’s estate on Long Island for the weekend, and a murder ensues.

Make that three murders, which is alarming considering they take place on the same weekend, but never fear! The Charleses have things Well In Hand as they work their way through Clues and libations.

Indeed, the pair make the business of solving murders seem like an easy bit of fun. A murder would ruin anyone’s holiday weekend, but the Charles couple marié never let a murder get in the way of a good time.

This is evidenced by their clever lines. For example, an acquaintance studies the Charles’ new baby.
Acquaintance: “I’m trying to figure out who he [the baby] looks like.”
Nick: “Anyone I know?”

With lines like that, and an unexpected murderer, this film is a heckuva Good Time.

Is a murderer among us? Image: thethinman1934.com

AND NOW, A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR

This review of Another Thin Man is brought to you by the Pick My Movie Tag challenge from Rebecca at Taking Up Room. She challenged us to review a movie about a Vacation Gone Wrong.

We felt Nick and Nora going on a holiday weekend and bumping into a murderer fit this category, but we forgot how much fun these two are.

But something really did go wrong with Another Thin Man, in the pre-production stage, which was not referenced in the free-wheeling script.

It concerned star William Powell.

William Powell and Skippy (a.k.a. Asta). Image: Pinterest

Another Thin Man was set to begin filming in 1938, less than a year after the death of Powell’s financé, actress Jean Harlow. She died at the age of 26 from uremic poisoning.

If that weren’t difficult enough, Powell was diagnosed with cancer, and he underwent surgery in March, 1938, and again in January, 1939.

MGM delayed production of Another Thin Man until the fall of 1939, when doctors gave Powell the Go-Ahead to return to work. Even so, the studio did not ask him to work more than six hours per day due to his condition.

TCM quotes the biography, Gentleman: The William Powell Story by Charles Francisco, when describing Powell’s return to the studio on the first day of filming:

“Powell, looking remarkably fit and tanned, seemed embarrassed by the attention. He held up his hands and the familiar grin began to play at the corners of his mouth as he tried to think of something funny to say. The applause stopped, and Bill found that he couldn’t speak. Myrna Loy rushed over to him and gave him a kiss and a big hug. [Director] Woody Van Dyke supplied the proper ending to the emotionally charged scene. ‘All right,’ he bellowed, ‘what are we wasting time for? Let’s get to work.'”

TCM, Another Thin Man

It seems to us that Nick Charles, a man beloved by active and retired criminals alike, closely resembles Powell himself.

In watching this film, you would never know the trials Powell faced. On screen, he’s relaxed, debonair, amusing, and you marvel at the way he Pulls It Off.

In spite of Powell’s personal turmoil, Another Thin Man is a frothy movie, and we mean it in the best way possible. It shows us that when things go wrong, a lot of things can still go right.

Another Thin Man: starring William Powell, Myrna Loy, Virginia Grey. Directed by W. S. Van Dyke. Written by Frances Goodrich & Albert Hackett. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1939, B&W, 103 mins.

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