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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nice Pre-Code
I don't want to be too extensive. I only want to tell you this short (61 minutes of running time) Pre-Code, is a goody-goody, with Cary Grant, and especially Loretta Young, who is great in it...she looks ravishing, great gowns, slim-fitted, beautiful face-eyes, fresh beauty, great spunk.

I cannot understand why (I've read it) Loretta was "stereotyped" and...
Published on September 14, 2004 by Fernando Silva

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34 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too Boring to Be Bad
Movie: ** DVD Quality: ** DVD Extras: ****

I've seen enough of Loretta Young's and Cary Grant's early work to know that this movie surely represents some kind of nadir for both stars. Despite their considerable skills, no one could possibly turn this sow's ear of a script into anything resembling a decent film. Loretta plays a 22-year-old never- married...
Published on December 3, 2004 by J. Michael Click


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34 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too Boring to Be Bad, December 3, 2004
By 
J. Michael Click (Fort Worth, Texas United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Born to Be Bad (DVD)
Movie: ** DVD Quality: ** DVD Extras: ****

I've seen enough of Loretta Young's and Cary Grant's early work to know that this movie surely represents some kind of nadir for both stars. Despite their considerable skills, no one could possibly turn this sow's ear of a script into anything resembling a decent film. Loretta plays a 22-year-old never- married mother of a 7-year-old son; the kid is being raised to be just as morally compromised as Mom. Enter Cary as a victim of one of their scams; before you can say, "What the hey?!!!?", Cary and his wife are raising Loretta's son ... Loretta's moving in on Cary to get her boy back ... Cary's wife is all-forgiving of her husband's dalliance ... Loretta does the "noble" thing by walking away and abandoning her son to Cary and wife's care. This all takes a scant 61 minutes that drags on f-o-r-e-v-e-r because no one does anything but talk, talk, and talk ... oh! they also slam doors - lots of doors - in Cary's lavish mansion. It couldn't have been fun for the actors to make this rubbage, but at least they must have known enough to stay away from the finished film!

Certainly whoever wrote the insert notes for this Fox Home Video release never watched the movie! They identify Cary's character as a "dairy farmer" (he's actually the very wealthy head of a dairy corporation); they name aged 50-something character player Henry Travers (Clarence the Angel in "It's a Wonderful Life") as the actor playing Loretta's 7-year-old son; and they describe the film as a "heartwarming, well-made classic" as well as a "gripping classic" (maybe they had this confused with Cary and Loretta's later film, "The Bishop's Wife", which really is a classic).

I doubt that whoever was in charged of transferring the film to video paid much attention to the movie, either. The picture is grainy throughout with some noticeable jumps (indicating bad splices); and the sound is frequently muddy as well. At least Fox doesn't claim it was restored. There is a nice selection of trailers from other movies Grant starred in at Fox, including "I Was a Male War Bride" (1949), "People Will Talk" (1951), "Monkey Business" (1952), "Kiss Them For Me" (1957), and "An Affair to Remember" (1957) ... but the trailer to this film isn't among them. There's also a small photo gallery.

Overall, I can't in good conscience recommend this DVD to anyone except the most diehard Young and Grant fans. But if for some reason you insist on watching it, check out the jurors in the trial scene ... doesn't the man on the front row to the right of your screen bear a resemblance to the producer of the film, Darryl F. Zanuck?
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nice Pre-Code, September 14, 2004
This review is from: Born to Be Bad (DVD)
I don't want to be too extensive. I only want to tell you this short (61 minutes of running time) Pre-Code, is a goody-goody, with Cary Grant, and especially Loretta Young, who is great in it...she looks ravishing, great gowns, slim-fitted, beautiful face-eyes, fresh beauty, great spunk.

I cannot understand why (I've read it) Loretta was "stereotyped" and "dismissed", mainly in the 1930's as being a so-so or bad actress, and being only a "clotheshorse"...untrue...she's radiantly good (Well BAD) (chuckles) here.

It's difficult to think of this LORETTA...when one thinks of the 1940's Loretta in "The Farmer's Daughter"....or her other teaming with Cary Grant, the excellent & cute & sentimental "The Bishop's Wife"...a completely different stuff.

I wanna watch more early '30s Loretta, not only her virginal-good characters (like "Zoo in Budapest" (I'd "kill" to see this one) or "The Crusades" (here she's mostly "decorative" IMHO)....but stuff like "Midnight Mary" (I've read it's TOP) "Employee's Entrance", "Taxi". "The Hatchet Man".....

The quality of the DVD is pretty good.

Pre-Code lovers watch it!
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19 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars BORN TO BE DISMAL ON DVD, January 28, 2004
By 
Nix Pix (Windsor, Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Born to Be Bad (DVD)
"Born to Be Bad" is a very uncharacteristic Cary Grant movie. Uncharacteristic because it's at the beginning of his career, features him in an almost non-comedic role and has him cast as a man double-crossed by a woman of easy virtue in an almost maudelin plot. The story concerns Grant hitting the son of a woman of easy virtue (Loretta Young) with his car. He then having to make the mends. The rest is pure melodrama but pulled off with such panache that you'd scarcely mind any of the hockum. Truly, this is a very, very good movie.
TRANSFER: Unfortunately the same can't be said for FOX's transfer. We get a very dirty, very gritty, very grainy transfer that - although free of digital anomalies - is so heavily damanged by age that seeing the film is hardly worth the effort. Black and contrast levels are extremely weak, fine detail is lost in practically every scene and the ravages of time are glaring and obvious throughout. The audio hasn't been cleaned up either for a slight hiss and some unexpected pops along the way.
EXTRAS: Trailers from the other Grant films. Boring, unworthy and disappointing.
BOTTOM LINE: Someone should point out to studio executives that films pre-Star Wars are worth the time, effort and, oh yes, the MONEY that is required to make them sparkle like they did when they were premiered. Really, history is getting shafted here!!!
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting pre-code film, July 17, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Born to Be Bad (DVD)
I quite enjoyed this film - it's an interesting pre-code that was released about 6 weeks before enforcement of the production code. Loretta Young's acting is pretty good but Cary Grant is kind of dull - definitely not his best role. Some of the pre-code plot elements in this film include Loretta Young's unspecified "profession" and lifestyle that involves men and clothes and some of the rather risque shots of Loretta in her underwear. I think the release of this pre-code movie, which was previously unavailable, is to be applauded.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars neat pre-code melodrama, March 6, 2009
This review is from: Born to Be Bad (DVD)
"Born to be Bad", made by Twentieth Century Pictures before they merged with Fox, is a fast moving pre-code melodrama possibly made as Daryl F. Zanuck's response to Warner's "Baby Face" and MGM's "Red Headed Woman". The interest in the film today is that Loretta Young plays against type as a promiscuous dame with an illegitimate son whom she raises to defy any sort of authority. Young is on record as loathing the film, not the least for the morals, or lack of, which the film depicts. However, that judgement ignores that here is the sexy radiant Young playing a tough broad very convincingly. A wooden Cary Grant plays opposite her.

The print is OK and there are no extras. The DVD is quite expensive and only worth seeing for Young.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Loretta Young in brittle Pre-Code drama, June 10, 2008
By 
Byron Kolln (the corner where Broadway meets Hollywood) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)    (TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Born to Be Bad (DVD)
Effective Pre-Code drama starring Loretta Young in a role light years away from her virtuous characters in films like "The Bishop's Wife" and "The Farmer's Daughter".

BORN TO BE BAD stars Cary Grant and Marion Burns as married couple Malcolm and Alyce Trevor, whose lives are almost destroyed by scheming single mother Letty Strong (Loretta Young), when her son is injured by one of the milk trucks owned by the Trevors' large dairy company. Taking Malcolm all the way to the bank - literally - Letty's blackmail and bitchery eventually leads to her predictable ruin...

Marion Burns gamely plays Grant's rather passive and uninteresting wife (she was much more enjoyable in Monogram's "Sensation Hunters" which is available via Alpha Video); BORN TO BE BAD is mainly notable for the pairing of Grant and Young, thirteen years before their most celebrated co-starring vehicle, "The Bishop's Wife".

Co-starring Jackie Kelk and Henry Travers, BORN TO BE BAD will interest Cary Grant completists and Pre-Code fans; the performance of Loretta Young should make it a worthwhile title for casual viewers as well. (Single-sided, single-layer disc).
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars It's amazing that Loretta Young could ever be bad, November 3, 2011
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This review is from: Born to Be Bad (DVD)
I bought this DVD mainly because I really love Cary Grant in just about anything (well, there's a couple of his films that are stinkers but that's for another time). One of my all time favorite films of his is The Bishop's Wife, which also stars Loretta Young. It's really hard to imagine Loretta (usually the pious pillar of virtue in most of her films) actually being the bad girl from the wrong side of the tracks - but that's exactly what she is in this film. If you like Cary Grant (or Loretta Young), it's worth it to buy this DVD (even better when it's on sale).
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Born to be Bad, October 5, 2007
This review is from: Born to Be Bad (DVD)
Born to be Bad concerns a married couple who after several years, find that they cannot have children. Enter Loretta Young, a young, beautiful, unmarried, unprincipled woman who has a child. She agrees to the adoption. Then when she later visits her in Cary's home, she decides she would like to replace his wife. This is where the plot thickens. I was a bit disappointed in Cary Grant. His behavior early in the film didn't prepare me for his very strong reactions exhibited later.
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars GREAT CLASSIC MOVIE!!, January 23, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Born to Be Bad (DVD)
THIS GREAT CLASSIC 1934 MOVIE STARRING LORETTA YOUNG AND CARY GRANT IS ABOUT AN EVIL UNWED MOTHER.IT'S A MUST SEE!!
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10 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars They should have kept this one on the vault shelf....., April 16, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Born to Be Bad (DVD)
Someone should educate 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment about classic movies. Just because a movie is old, doesn't make it a classic, and certainly doesn't justify a DVD release.

Fox is sitting on hundreds of great unreleased films, while they end up releasing junk like BORN TO BE BAD. A more accurate title would be FILMED TO BE BAD. Dull and boring (in a poor transfer), this is a waste of time and money.

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Born to Be Bad
Born to Be Bad by Lowell Sherman (DVD - 2004)
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