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Blondie Meets the Boss (1939)
In this, the second of the “Blondie” series of films that were made between 1938 and 1950, Dagwood (Arthur Lake) inadvertently gets cornered in to resigning; when his wife Blondie (Penny Singleton) tries to ask Dagwoods boss Mr. Dithers for his job back, he ends up hiring her instead. This doesn’t sit too well with Dagwood. Complications ensue: Blondie’s sister comes to visit, and Dagwood is put in a compromising situation with another woman.
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Go West, Young Lady (1941)
A young woman arrives in the western town of Headstone and helps the locals outsmart a gang of outlaws.
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Swing Your Lady (1938)
Promoter Ed Hatch comes to the Ozarks with his slow-witted wrestler Joe Skopapoulos whom he pits against a hillbilly Amazon blacksmith, Sadie Horn. Joe falls in love with her and won’t fight. At least not until Sadie’s beau Noah shows up.
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Blondie’s Hero
The 27th and second last Blondie movie, “Blondie’s Hero”, finds Dagwood entering the Army Reserve. Blondie visits, only to discover that he has caused all sorts of problems which lead to numerous conflicts. The ORC Training Center, Fort MacArthur, California was used for the setting of this film.
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Blondie’s Big Moment
Blondie decides she wants to be a star and nearly turns her household upside down in this entry in the long-running domestic comedy series. Dagwood has mixed emotions about his wife’s theatrical aspirations and eventually he decides to get her to quit. As usual – disaster ensues.
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Life with Blondie
Number 16 in the Blondie franchise centers on the family dog Daisy.
Daisy, the Bumstead’s mischievous mutt, makes the family a little extra cash when she wins a contest to become a model for the Navy. From there she becomes the favorite calendar gal. All the attention to the dog, makes Dagwood feel that his position as master of the house is jeopardized. Meanwhile all the attention catches the greedy eyes of gangsters who try and abduct Daisy! -
Footlight Glamour
Mr. Dithers is trying to encourage a businessman to build a war-time manufacturing plant on land he owns while Dagwood tries to prevent the businessman from learning his daughter is involved in a local theatre production.
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Blondie for Victory
Blondie organizes Housewives of America to perform home-front wartime duties, including guarding the local dam… Blondie for Victory was twelfth in Columbia’s series of comedy films based on Chic Young’s popular comic strip Blondie. Anxious to do her bit for the war effort, Blondie (Penny Singleton) joins the Housewives of America, a home defense league. Husband Dagwood (Arthur Lake) soon finds that Blondie is neglecting her responsibilities at home in favor of her war work; also disgruntled are Dagwood’s chauvinistic boss Mr. Dithers (Jonathan Hale) and a newlywed husband (Stu Erwin) whose wife is never home thanks to the defense league.
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Blondie Has Servant Trouble
Few of the popular Blondie films strayed as far off the tried-and-true Blondie formula as “Blondie Has Servant Trouble” (#6 in the series). Things get under way when Blondie Bumstead (Penny Singleton) demands that her husband Dagwood (Arthur Lake) request a raise from his boss Mr. Dithers (Jonathan Hale), so that Blondie can afford to hire a maid. But Dithers has no time for any salary disputes: his construction firm is currently stuck with an unsaleable old mansion, which is rumored to be haunted. To disprove this theory, Dithers asks the Bumstead family to spend a night in the crumbling old house, throwing a retinue of servants into the bargain. Homicidal maniacs? The Bumsteads in mortal danger? But even a done 1000 times ‘Haunted House-Homicidal Maniac’ storyline somehow works here.. Because in the end, no matter what, there’s always Penny Singleton as “Blondie”.
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Blondie
Blondie and Dagwood are about to celebrate their fifth wedding anniversary but this happy occasion is marred when the bumbling Dagwood gets himself involved in a scheme that is promising financial ruin for the Bumstead family. Camping on the porch of the Poor House would become the most-used prevalent plot line in the 27 series-films that followed. It was also an issue in the comic-strip for about a year after its inception when it was basically a continuity strip but, aside from Dagwood’s inability to coax a pay-raise from Mr. Dithers over the years, the financial status of the family was seldom an issue when the format switched to a gag-a-day strip.
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