The More the Merrier
The only picture with a DINGLE!
It's World War II and there is a severe housing shortage everywhere - especially in Washington, D.C. where Connie Milligan rents an apartment. Believing it to be her patriotic duty, Connie offers to sublet half of her apartment, fully expecting a suitable female tenent. What she gets instead is mischievous, middle-aged Benjamin Dingle. Dingle talks her into subletting to him and then promptly sublets half of his half to young, irreverent Joe Carter - creating a situation tailor-made for comedy and romance.
Cast

Jean Arthur
Constance Milligan

Joel McCrea
Joe Carter

Charles Coburn
Benjamin Dingle

Richard Gaines
Charles J. Pendergast

Bruce Bennett
FBI Agent Evans

Frank Sully
FBI Agent Pike

Donald Douglas
FBI Agent Harding

Clyde Fillmore
Senator Noonan

Stanley Clements
Morton Rodakiewicz

Sam Ash
Committee Member (uncredited)

Don Barclay
Drunk (uncredited)

Hank Bell
Singing Man on Apartment Stairway (uncredited)

Gladys Blake
Barmaid (uncredited)

Ruth Cherrington
Night Club Guest (uncredited)

Chester Clute
Hotel Clerk (uncredited)

Ann Doran
Miss Bilby (uncredited)

Henry Hebert
Committee Member (uncredited)

Ernest Hilliard
Senator (uncredited)

Helen Holmes
Dumpy Woman (uncredited)

John Ince
Shaving Gag (uncredited)
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
I’d have liked a bit more from Charles Coburn in this, but he still features engagingly enough as the man who facilitates the meeting of his unexpectedly acquired landlady “Connie” (Jean Arthur) to the man he has sub-let one half of his bedroom too. That man is “Joe” (Joel McCrea) and his arrival comes after a little failed cloak and dagger activity from “Dingle” who was only staying for a few days himself, and who had no authority whatsoever to take the man’s six bucks to sleep in her apartment. Scene set, what now ensues is hardly rocket science, but Arthur is on good form as the inevitable courtship plays out despite her already being engaged to the steady “Pendergast” (Richard Gaines) and there being a secret sub-plot that could end up embroiling them in affairs of the dreaded FBI! There is chemistry a-plenty between Arthur and McCrea, loads of mischief and some great timing from a Coburn whose matchmaking could have got him a job on “Fiddler on the (sun) Roof”. There is also plenty of quickly-paced dialogue that builds nicely on the accumulating daftness of the whole thing as people from adjacent bedrooms chat to each other through their respective open windows. It’s got a small cast, so we can focus on the characters better and with a jolly accompaniment from studio regular Leigh Hardine it lets Coburn, Arthur and McCrae entertain us for one hundred, enjoyable, minutes.
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