Here Comes Mr. Jordan
{{short description|1941 film by Alexander Hall}}
{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}
{{use mdy dates|date=September 2023}}
{{Infobox film
| name = Here Comes Mr. Jordan
| image = Here Comes Mr. Jordan poster.jpg
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| director = Alexander Hall
| screenplay = {{plainlist|
}}
| based_on = {{based on|Heaven Can Wait|Harry Segall}}
| producer = Everett Riskin
| starring = {{plainlist|
- Robert Montgomery
- Claude Rains
- Evelyn Keyes
- James Gleason
- Edward Everett Horton
- Rita Johnson
- John Emery
}}
| cinematography = Joseph Walker
| editing = Viola Lawrence
| music = Friedrich Hollaender
| studio = Columbia Pictures
| distributor = Columbia Pictures
| released = {{Film date|1941|08|07}}
| runtime = 94 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
}}
Here Comes Mr. Jordan is a 1941 American fantasy romantic comedy film directed by Alexander Hall, in which a boxer, mistakenly taken to Heaven before his time, is given a second chance back on Earth. It stars Robert Montgomery, Claude Rains, Evelyn Keyes, James Gleason, Edward Everett Horton, Rita Johnson, and John Emery.
The film screenplay, based on Harry Segall's 1938 play Heaven Can Wait (originally titled It Was Like This),{{cite book |last=Segall |first=Harry |author-link=Harry Segall |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8sxqowNQEdMC&pg=PA2 |title=Heaven Can Wait: Comedy-Fantasy in Three Acts |location=New York |publisher=Dramatists Play Service |year=1969 |page=2 |isbn=978-0-8222-0509-8}} was written by Sidney Buchman and Seton I. Miller. The working titles for the film were Heaven Can Wait and Mr. Jordan Comes to Town.{{cite web |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/26737 |title=Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941) – History |website=AFI Catalog of Feature Films |access-date=May 13, 2018}}
Horton and Gleason reprised their roles in the film's sequel Down to Earth (1947), while Roland Culver took on the role of Mr. Jordan. Warren Beatty later remade the film in 1978 as Heaven Can Wait. The 2001 film Down to Earth, starring Chris Rock, is also based on the play. The 1943 film, Heaven Can Wait, itself also a Best Picture Oscar nominee, has no connection to the source material for Here Comes Mr. Jordan.
Plot
On May 11, 1941, boxer and amateur pilot Joe Pendleton, affectionately known as "the Flying Pug", flies his small aircraft to his next fight in New York City, but crashes when a control cable severs. His soul is retrieved by 7013, an officious angel who assumed that Joe could not have survived. Joe's manager, Max "Pop" Corkle, has his body cremated. In the afterlife, the records show his death was a mistake; he was supposed to live for 50 more years.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JkIokIoovNU "Here Comes Mr. Jordan"] on youtube.com, 9:20, an angel checking the records says that Pendleton is scheduled to arrive on May 11, 1991. The angel's superior, Mr. Jordan, confirms this, but since there is no more body, Joe will have to take over a newly dead corpse. Jordan explains that a body is just something that is worn, like an overcoat; inside, Joe will still be himself. Joe insists that it be someone in good physical shape, because he wants to continue his boxing career.
After Joe turns down several "candidates", Jordan takes him to see the body of a crooked, extremely wealthy banker and investor named Bruce Farnsworth, who has just been drugged and drowned in a bathtub by his wife Julia and his secretary, Tony Abbott. Joe is reluctant to take over a life so unlike his previous one, but when he sees the murderous pair mockingly berating Bette Logan, whose father's name has been misused by Farnsworth to sell worthless securities,{{cite web |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/26737#4 |title=Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941) – Synopsis |website=AFI Catalog of Feature Films |access-date=13 May 2018}} he changes his mind and agrees to take over Farnsworth's body.{{efn|The audience continues to see Montgomery as Pendleton, but everyone in the film, including his wife and secretary (who are astonished to see that the murder was not successful after all), see and hear Farnsworth.}}
As Farnsworth, Joe repays all the investors and has Bette's father exonerated. He sends for Corkle and convinces him that he is Joe (by playing his saxophone just as badly as he did in his previous incarnation). With Farnsworth's money to smooth the way, Corkle trains him and arranges a bout to decide who will next fight the current heavyweight champion, but Jordan returns to warn Joe that, while he is destined to be the champion, it cannot happen that way. Joe has just enough time to tell Bette, with whom he has fallen in love, that if a stranger (especially if he is a boxer) approaches her, to give him a chance. Then he is shot by Tony. While Joe returns to a ghostly existence, Farnsworth's body is hidden, with everyone believing Farnsworth has simply disappeared. Corkle hires a private investigator to find him.
Accompanied by Jordan, Joe goes to retrieve his lucky saxophone he left on Farnsworth's piano and finds the police conducting a group interrogation. Corkle, talking to himself, wanders the room looking for Joe or Jordan. Corkle has explained about Joe, Mr. Jordan and the body-switching, to the police detective who thinks he is a nut. Joe manages to mentally nudge Corkle into turning on the radio to hear the championship fight and hears that Murdock has collapsed from a slight grazing punch. Jordan reveals that the boxer was shot by gamblers because he refused to throw the fight. Joe takes over Murdock's body and wins the title. Back at the mansion, Corkle hears one of the radio announcers mention a saxophone hanging by the ringside and seeing the saxophone gone from the room, realizes Joe has assumed Murdock's body.
Corkle races down to the dressing room. There, Joe passes along information from Jordan that Farnsworth's body is in a refrigerator in the basement of the mansion. Corkle tells the detective, who promptly has Julia and Tony arrested. As Murdock, Joe fires his old, crooked manager and hires Corkle. Jordan reveals to Joe that this is his destiny; he can be Murdock and live his life.
Healing the gunshot wound and at the same time removing Joe's memory of his past life, Jordan hangs around for a bit longer until Bette arrives. She wanted to see Corkle, but runs into Murdock instead. The pair feel they have met before. The two go off together, while Jordan smiles and says "So long, champ."
Cast
{{Cast listing|
- Robert Montgomery as Joe Pendleton
- Evelyn Keyes as Bette Logan
- Claude Rains as Mr. Jordan
- Rita Johnson as Julia Farnsworth
- Edward Everett Horton as Messenger 7013
- James Gleason as Max "Pop" Corkle
- John Emery as Tony Abbott
- Donald MacBride as Insp. Williams
- Don Costello as Lefty
- Halliwell Hobbes as Sisk
- Benny Rubin as "Bugsy" (the handler)
- Lloyd Bridges as Mr. Sloan, the co-pilot
- Eddie Bruce as reporter
- John Ince as bill collector
- Bert Young as taxi driver
- Warren Ashe as Charlie
- Ken Christy as plainclothesman
- Chester Conklin as newsboy
- Joseph Crehan as Doctor
- Mary Currier as Secretary
- Edmund Elton as elderly man
- Tom Hanlon as announcer
- Bobby Larson as "Chips"
- Heinie Conklin as reporter (uncredited)
}}
Production
File:Screen shot Here Comes Mr. Jordan.png of the heavenly aircraft resembled contemporary designs.}}]]
Columbia Pictures president Harry Cohn was persuaded to try a somewhat "risky" project in Here Comes Mr. Jordan, despite his well-founded policy of building on past successful ventures, rather than financing more adventurous films. An original 1938 stage play, Heaven Can Wait by Harry Segall, was adapted to form the basis of the film. Broadway producer Jed Harris had planned to produce the play on the New York stage, until Columbia purchased the rights as a vehicle for Cary Grant. While it was still in pre-production, Montgomery was borrowed from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to star in the film.{{efn|Robert Montgomery was initially disappointed in MGM releasing him to star in a film for one of the "Poverty Row" studios.}}
Principal photography began on April 21, 1941, and ran until June 5 of that year. Location shooting took place at Providencia Ranch, California, and on Universal City sound stages.{{cite web |url=https://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/28067/here-comes-mr-jordan#film-details |title=Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941) – Original Print Information |publisher=Turner Classic Movies |access-date=April 9, 2015 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150419105313/http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/28067/Here-Comes-Mr-Jordan/original-print-info.html |archive-date=April 19, 2015}}
Reception
=Critical response=
Upon Here Comes Mr. Jordan{{'s}} world premiere at Radio City Music Hall, film critic Theodore Strauss of The New York Times noted, "Columbia has assembled its brightest people for a delightful and totally disarming joke at heaven's expense." He further described the film as "gay, witty, tender and not a little wise. It is also one of the choicest comic fantasies of the year."{{cite news |last=Strauss |first=Theodore |author-link=Theodore Strauss |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1941/08/08/archives/here-comes-mr-jordan-in-which-robert-montgomery-appears-opens-at.html |title=Review: 'Here Comes Mr Jordan (1941); 'Here Comes Mr. Jordan,' in Which Robert Montgomery Appears, Opens at the Music Hall |newspaper=The New York Times |date=August 8, 1941 |access-date=January 5, 2016}}
Variety called Montgomery's acting "a highlight in a group of excellent performances" and praised Hall's direction for "expert handling of characters and wringing utmost interest out of every scene."{{cite magazine |url=https://archive.org/details/variety143-1941-07/page/n249/mode/1up |title=Film reviews – Here Comes Mr. Jordan |page=[https://archive.org/details/variety143-1941-07/page/n17 18] |magazine=Variety |date=July 30, 1941 |issn=0042-2738}}
Harrison's Reports wrote, "Here is a picture that is praiseworthy from many angles; for one thing, the theme is novel and the plot developments ingenious; for another, the production values are good, and the acting and direction are of a high standard."{{cite magazine |url=https://archive.org/details/harrisonsreports23harr/page/n137/mode/2up |title='Here Comes Mr. Jordan' with Robert Montgomery, Claude Raines and Evelyn Keyes |magazine=Harrison's Reports |volume=XXIII |issue=32 |date=August 9, 1941 |page=127}}
The review in The Film Daily opined, "Producer Everett Riskin, noted for his successes in the field of comedy, had no cinch with this property which might easily have backfired with an inexperienced hand at the helm. But Riskin's talent and knowledge has placed this finished product very near the peak of perfection in film making."{{cite magazine |url=https://archive.org/details/filmdaily80wids/page/n211/mode/2up |title=Reviews of the New Films: 'Here Comes Mr. Jordan' |magazine=The Film Daily |volume=80 |issue=21 |date=July 30, 1941 |page=4}} Here Comes Mr. Jordan placed fifth on the year-end poll of 548 critics nationwide at The Film Daily, naming it one of the best films of 1941.{{cite magazine |url=https://archive.org/details/filmdaily81wids/page/n79/mode/2up |title=GWTW Captures Critics' Poll |magazine=The Film Daily |volume=81 |issue=9 |date=January 14, 1942 |page=1}}
Russell Maloney of The New Yorker called the film "one of the brightest comedies of the year ... Mr. Rains' acting is the kind that makes the word 'ham' a word of endearment, and I mean that for a compliment."{{cite magazine |last=Maloney |first=Russell |title=The Current Cinema |magazine=The New Yorker |date=August 16, 1941 |page=52 |issn=0028-792X}}
The film's premise of a protagonist receiving a second chance through the intervention of angels inspired other films throughout the ensuing decade, including I Married an Angel (1942), A Guy Named Joe (1943), and Angels in the Outfield (1951).{{cite web |last=Stafford |first=Jeff |url=https://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/28067/here-comes-mr-jordan#articles-reviews |title=Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941) – Articles |publisher=Turner Classic Movies |access-date=April 9, 2015 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150419105310/http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/28067/Here-Comes-Mr-Jordan/articles.html |archive-date=April 19, 2015}}
Film critic Leonard Maltin noted that Here Comes Mr. Jordan was an "Excellent fantasy-comedy of prizefighter Montgomery accidentally sent to heaven before his time, forced to occupy a new body on earth. Hollywood moviemaking at its best, with first-rate cast and performances."{{cite book |editor-last=Maltin |editor-first=Leonard |editor-link=Leonard Maltin |title=Leonard Maltin's 2009 Movie Guide |title-link=Leonard Maltin's Movie Guide |location=New York |publisher=Plume |year=2008 |page=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780452289789/page/602/mode/2up 603] |isbn=978-0-452-28978-9}}
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=Accolades=
Harry Segall won the Academy Award for Best Story, while Sidney Buchman and Seton I. Miller won for Best Screenplay. Nominations included: Best Picture, Montgomery for Best Actor in a Leading Role, Hall for Best Director, Gleason for Best Actor in a Supporting Role and Joseph Walker for Best Cinematography, Black-and-White.
Here Comes Mr. Jordan was preserved by the UCLA Film and Television Archive with the cooperation of Columbia Pictures and the Library of Congress.
=Home media=
Here Comes Mr. Jordan was originally going to be released on VHS and Betamax in November 1979 as one of Columbia Pictures Home Entertainment's launch titles, but because of the financial success of Midnight Express, the release was cancelled and Midnight Express took Here Comes Mr. Jordan{{'s}} place in the launch lineup. Due to this, Columbia did not release the film on home video until 1982.
On June 14, 2016, The Criterion Collection released a fully restored version of the film on DVD and Blu-ray.{{cite web |last=Dillard |first=Clayton |url=https://www.slantmagazine.com/dvd/here-comes-mr-jordan/ |title=Review: Alexander Hall's Here Comes Mr. Jordan on Criterion Blu-ray|website=Slant Magazine |date=2016-06-16 |access-date=2021-11-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211117033023/https://www.slantmagazine.com/dvd/here-comes-mr-jordan/|archive-date=2021-11-17 |url-status=live}}
Remakes
On January 26, 1942, Claude Rains, Evelyn Keyes, and James Gleason reprised their roles in a Lux Radio Theatre broadcast with Cary Grant, the original choice for the lead role, co-starring.{{cite book |first=Ronald L. |last=Smith |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1_-EtQwxAP4C&pg=PA178 |title=Horror Stars on Radio: The Broadcast Histories of 29 Chilling Hollywood Voices |location=Jefferson, North Carolina |publisher=McFarland & Company |year=2010 |page=178 |isbn=978-0-7864-4525-7}} A made-for-television adaptation was aired as an episode of The DuPont Show of the Month as "Heaven Can Wait" in 1960 starring Tony Franciosa as Joe Pendleton and Robert Morley as Mr. Jordan.{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0566698/fullcredits|title=Full Cast & Crew|work=IMDb.com|access-date=February 15, 2024}} Here Comes Mr. Jordan was remade as Heaven Can Wait (1978), starring Warren Beatty, Buck Henry, and Julie Christie. Ice Angel, a 2000 film for Fox Family starring Nicolle Tom and Tara Lipinski remade it with the "twist" that it was an adult male hockey player who was forced to take over the body of a teenaged female figure skater. Down to Earth (2001), sharing the title with the sequel to Here Comes Mr. Jordan, starred Chris Rock. An Indian Hindi remake of Here Comes Mr. Jordan titled Jhuk Gaya Aasman was released in 1968.{{cite web |url=http://boxofficeindia.com/showProd.php?itemCat=174&catName=MTk2OA |title=Jhuk Gaya Aasman |website=Box Office India |access-date=April 10, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131029184625/http://www.boxofficeindia.com/showProd.php?itemCat=174&catName=MTk2OA |archive-date=2013-10-29}} The Punjabi film Mar Gaye Oye Loko is also inspired by Here Comes Mr. Jordan. A pornographic remake, Debbie Does Dallas ... Again (which reimagines the person taken too soon as the lead character from Debbie Does Dallas), was released in 2007.{{cite magazine|last=Sullivan|first=David|url=http://business.avn.com/articles/video/Showtime-Premieres-i-Debbie-Does-Dallas-i-Reality-Series-30343.html|title=Showtime Premieres Debbie Does Dallas Reality Series|magazine=AVN|date=2007-03-07|access-date=2013-12-29|archive-date=December 31, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131231000839/http://business.avn.com/articles/video/Showtime-Premieres-i-Debbie-Does-Dallas-i-Reality-Series-30343.html|url-status=dead}}
In other media
In Road to Morocco (1942), one of Bob Hope's characters, the deceased Aunt Lucy, comes to him in a dream but then cuts it short, saying "Here comes Mr. Jordan", a homage to the film of the same name.
See also
Notes
{{Notelist}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb title}}
- {{Rotten Tomatoes}}
- {{AFI film}}
- {{TCMDb title}}
- [https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/4103-here-comes-the-angel-of-death Here Comes the Angel of Death] – an essay by Farran Smith Nehme at The Criterion Collection
- [http://www.carygrantradio.com/radio/Here%20Comes%20Mr%20Jordan.mp3 Here Comes Mr. Jordan] on Lux Radio Theater: January 26, 1942
{{Heaven Can Wait}}
{{Alexander Hall}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Here Comes Mister Jordan}}
Category:1941 romantic comedy films
Category:1940s English-language films
Category:1940s fantasy comedy films
Category:1940s romantic fantasy films
Category:1940s sports comedy films
Category:American aviation films
Category:American black-and-white films
Category:American boxing films
Category:American fantasy comedy films
Category:American films based on plays
Category:American religious comedy films
Category:American romantic comedy films
Category:American romantic fantasy films
Category:American sports comedy films
Category:Columbia Pictures films
Category:Films about the afterlife
Category:Films about reincarnation
Category:Films adapted into radio programs
Category:Films directed by Alexander Hall
Category:Films scored by Friedrich Hollaender
Category:Films set in New York City
Category:Films that won the Academy Award for Best Story
Category:Films whose writer won the Best Adapted Screenplay Academy Award
Category:Films with screenplays by Sidney Buchman
Category:English-language romantic comedy films
Category:English-language romantic fantasy films