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Apartment for Peggy
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Directed by George Seaton
Jason (William Holden) is a World War II veteran going to college on the GI Bill in the hope of bettering himself. He has recently married his sweetheart, Peggy (Jeanne Crain), who has learned that they're having a baby. However, money is tight for the young couple, and inexpensive housing is at a premium in the post-war boom times. Peggy meets Professor Henry Barnes (Edmund Gwenn), an instructor at the college who lives alone in a huge house. Barnes is convinced that the best years of his life are over, that he has no purpose in life, and that our culture has sacrificed its highest ideals. But Peggy convinces Prof. Barnes to let her and Jason stay in his attic. As the newlyweds try to turn the cobwebbed space into a home, the professor gets to know his tenants better, and their enthusiastic optimism rubs off on him, giving him a sense that there are things left to be accomplished and reasons to go on. Apartment for Peggy reunited director George Seaton with actor Edmund Gwenn, who had clicked the previous year in the classic Miracle on 34th Street. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Miracle on 34th Street vets George Seaton and Edmund Gwenn, a young William Holden, and starlet Jeanne Crain teamed up for this now-forgotten Fox drama with comic overtones. As Professor Henry Barnes -- an over-salted academic who feels he has little reason to go on until two young and expectant newlyweds waltz into his life -- Gwenn never begs for audience sympathy but manages to consistently earn the respect of the viewer by virtue of sheer charm and the small doses of offhanded humor with which director/scenarist Seaton invests his dialogue. As the title character, Jeanne Crain is consistently natty and irritating, with her rapid-fire delivery (and may leave the viewer wondering why in the world Holden's character would go near her) but always radiant to behold. Given the subject matter, this film (and particularly its denouement) could have been terrible -- Hollywood has seen more than enough of films where down-and-outers learn to "appreciate life" from the young and young-at-heart -- thankfully, Seaton never quite succumbs to preachiness and wisely avoids delving into melancholia. The film's only significant drawback is Seaton's failure to take better advantage of the fine character actor Gene Lockhart; in a supporting role, Lockhart feels wasted. Overall, it's a pleasant, effortless entertainment that may crumble under deep analysis, but weighs gently on the mind and spirit for the better part of two hours. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
 

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