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Here Comes Mr. Jordan
Overlook Pick

Here Comes Mr. Jordan

A picture different from anything ever screened before!
70
User Score123 ratings
TMDB 7.016+19411h 34mEnglish
ComedyFantasyRomance

Synopsis

Boxer Joe Pendleton, flying to his next fight, crashes...because a Heavenly Messenger, new on the job, snatched Joe's spirit prematurely from his body. Before the matter can be rectified, Joe's body is cremated; so the celestial Mr. Jordan grants him the use of the body of wealthy Bruce Farnsworth, who's just been murdered by his wife. Joe tries to remake Farnsworth's unworthy life in his own clean-cut image, but then falls in love; and what about that murderous wife?

Director
Alexander HallFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Columbia Pictures1 production companies
Release
August 7, 1941Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 52
Robert Montgomery
Robert Montgomery
Joe Pendleton
Evelyn Keyes
Evelyn Keyes
Bette Logan
Claude Rains
Claude Rains
Mr. Jordan
Rita Johnson
Rita Johnson
Julia Farnsworth
Edward Everett Horton
Edward Everett Horton
Messenger 7013
James Gleason
James Gleason
Max Corkle
John Emery
John Emery
Tony Abbott
Donald MacBride
Donald MacBride
Inspector Williams

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Dec 4, 2023

Robert Montgomery is really quite good in this engaging fantasy story. He's a boxer ("Joe") working with coach "Max" (the frequently scene-stealing James Gleason) for a crack at the world title. Then, suddenly, he is joining a queue to get into Heaven. Surely some mistake, he says - and after a bit of investigation by the eponymous administrator (Claude Rains) it is discovered that he's fifty years too early. Send him back - well unfortunately his friends were a little too zealous on the cremation front so there's no longer a body. "Jordan" concludes that it's best to find him another one - and they alight on millionaire "Farnsworth". It's a bit of a baptism of fire for "Joe" especially when his decision to do the right thing by some small investors earns him the enmity of his board and the need for yet another "host". He's getting fed up, "Jordan" is getting fed up - what's to be done? The story is amiably well written with Montgomery and developing love interest "Julia" (Rita Johnson) working well together as the story gathers an entertaining pace, tempered by a charmingly measured performance from Rains and Edward Everett Horton as the source of all the woes in the first place. It's Gleason, towards the end, that makes me smile - all thanks to some incredulity and a saxophone. Well worth a watch.

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