Spring Reunion is a 1956 American drama film that centers on the fifteen-year reunion of the fictional Carson High School class of 1941. It was the second film produced by Kirk Douglas' film production company Bryna Productions.[1]
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Spring Reunion | |
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Directed by | Robert Pirosh John E. Burch (assistant) |
Written by | Robert Alan Aurthur |
Produced by | Jerry Bresler |
Starring | Betty Hutton Dana Andrews |
Cinematography | Harold Lipstein |
Edited by | Leon Barsha |
Music by | Earle Hagen Herbert W. Spencer |
Production company | Bryna Productions |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
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Running time | 79 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Spring Reunion was a screen comeback for actress Betty Hutton, her first film in five years since her departure from Paramount Studios in 1952, after the completion of the musical Somebody Loves Me. Although Hutton's performance was praised by several critics, the film generated little interest and failed at the box office. It was Hutton's last feature film. The film opened at the Astoria Theatre in London, England in late December 1956.[2][3]
Maggie Brewster (Betty Hutton), once voted the most popular girl in her class, has a successful real estate career, but regrets that she never married. When she runs into an old flame at the reunion (Dana Andrews), it looks as if the two might be meant for each other after all. However, Fred's aversion to commitment and Maggie's unwillingness to step out of her comfort zone threaten to kill their romance before it begins.
Writing in The New York Times, contemporary reviewer A. H. Weiler panned the film, saying, "Although it fleetingly captures the loneliness of some of its principals, it is largely a nostalgia-ridden and unimaginative comedy-drama that makes its points haltingly and without impact. Like the members of Carson High School's class of '41, 'Spring Reunion' tries desperately but fails to make its rosy dreams come alive."[4]
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