After making some great Technicolor
vehicles like Blue Skies and The Emperor Waltz, Top O’ The Morning looks drab and boring in black and white. I
don’t know how Paramount could make a movie about colorful Ireland without the
film being in color. The plot is slight, and at times I surprisingly find the
movie hard to follow. Although
the film has a marvelous cast, it is only mildly entertaining, with the story
stumbling along in fits and starts, though it does pick up speed in the last
half. Crosby plays a New York insurance
investigator sent to Ireland to search for the missing Blarney Stone. Yes, it's
been stolen! Barry Fitzgerald plays the ineffectual police sergeant in a nearby
town, with Blyth playing his pretty daughter, Conn, and Hume Cronyn is his
assistant, Hughie. John McIntire, who later appeared in Blyth's charming comedy Sally And Saint Anne (1952), plays a police inspector working on the case.
The original name of the film was supposed to be Diamond In The Haystack. Very little happens in this rather slow-moving film, which spends a great deal of time on the mysterious prediction of a townswoman (Eileen Crowe) regarding who will marry Conn; eventually, of course, the Blarney Stone mystery is solved and true love prevails. Even though I am of Irish decent, I did not really know what the Blarney Stone was. The Blarney Stone is a block of Carboniferous limestone built into the battlements of Blarney Castle about 8 kilometers (5 miles) from Cork, Ireland. According to legend, kissing the stone endows the kisser with the gift of the gab (great eloquence or skill at flattery). The stone was set into a tower of the castle in 1446. The castle is a popular tourist site in Ireland, attracting visitors from all over the world to kiss the stone and tour the castle and its gardens.
The original name of the film was supposed to be Diamond In The Haystack. Very little happens in this rather slow-moving film, which spends a great deal of time on the mysterious prediction of a townswoman (Eileen Crowe) regarding who will marry Conn; eventually, of course, the Blarney Stone mystery is solved and true love prevails. Even though I am of Irish decent, I did not really know what the Blarney Stone was. The Blarney Stone is a block of Carboniferous limestone built into the battlements of Blarney Castle about 8 kilometers (5 miles) from Cork, Ireland. According to legend, kissing the stone endows the kisser with the gift of the gab (great eloquence or skill at flattery). The stone was set into a tower of the castle in 1446. The castle is a popular tourist site in Ireland, attracting visitors from all over the world to kiss the stone and tour the castle and its gardens.
Back
to the film, Bing Crosby looked quite bored in the film as if he was going
through the motions of a substandard script. I do not know if it was because of
the age difference of Bing and his co-star Ann Blyth, but their pairing did not
seem to gel to me, and they did not seem to have too much chemistry. Bing Crosby had
wanted Deanna Durbin to
costar in this picture as well as A Connecticut Yankee
in King Arthur's Court (1949).
Miss Durbin, about to retire from the screen with the finish of her
Universal-International contract on August 31, 1949, declined both offers from
Bing. In place of Miss Durbin, Universal loaned Ann Blyth to
Paramount for this film...
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