The Miracle of the Bells

5.9
19482h

The body of a young actress is brought to her home town by the man who loved her. He knows that she wanted all the church bells to ring for three days after she was buried, but is told that this will cost a lot of money. The checks that he writes to the various churches all bounce, but it is the weekend and, in desperation, he prays that a miracle will happen before the banks reopen. It does, but not in the way he hoped.

Production

Logo for RKO Radio Pictures

Cast

Photo of Fred MacMurray

Fred MacMurray

William 'Bill' Dunnigan

Photo of Alida Valli

Alida Valli

Olga Treskovna

Photo of Frank Sinatra

Frank Sinatra

Father Paul

Photo of Lee J. Cobb

Lee J. Cobb

Marcus Harris

Photo of Harold Vermilyea

Harold Vermilyea

Nick Orloff

Photo of Charles Meredith

Charles Meredith

Father Spinsky

Photo of James Nolan

James Nolan

Tod Jones

Photo of Philip Ahn

Philip Ahn

Ming Gow

Photo of Frank Wilcox

Frank Wilcox

Dr. Jennings

Photo of Dorothy Sebastian

Dorothy Sebastian

Miss Katie Orwin (uncredited)

Photo of Brooks Benedict

Brooks Benedict

Drunken Man

Photo of Eddie Borden

Eddie Borden

Crew Member

Photo of Chet Brandenburg

Chet Brandenburg

Crew Member

Photo of Herbert Evans

Herbert Evans

Nobleman in 'Joan of Arc'

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

This is actually quite an uplifting tale of an actress (Alida Valli) who wants to be buried back in her home town. Snag is, her one and only film is considered a bit of a stinker by the producer (Lee J. Cobb) and so when she dies the day after it's completion, a well-meaning Hollywood press man (Fred MacMurray) has to resort to creating a bit of a public interest storm to facilitate her last wish. To that end, he manages to convince local priest (Frank Sinatra) to let the body lie in his church and for the bells to ring for three days... It's told cleverly, partially using flashback, in a gently paced manner that does demonstrate some of the finer aspects of humanity countered by some of the less kind ones. Unfortunately, it does tend to over-correlate the better aspects of the story with the church a bit too much; not exactly a religious white-wash, but certainly a little naively simplistic when it comes to the characteristics of the benign journalist against the evil, malevolent producer. On the face of it, it is quite a fun film with a good performance from MacMurray and a slightly implausibly saintly Sinatra; but just a touch too sugary for me...

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