Strange musical comedy which is a mishmash of miscellaneous ideas. There's Irene Dunne as a Russian aristocrat exiled in Paris who runs a fashion house and falls in love with a rich American jock (Randolph Scott). And there's Fred Astaire as a US jazz band leader abroad who romances Ginger Rogers, a compatriot posing as a Polish countess.
It feels like a classic Astaire and Rogers vehicle wedged into a subpar Ernst Lubitsch film. It's further unbalanced by some comisseration for the plight of Russian émigrés grubbing along in Paris since the 1917 revolution. It's the forgotten Fred And Ginger musical, yet there are some amazing numbers.
Of course, we get their wonderful dance routines together, especially the closing reprise to I Won't Dance. And a couple of songs by Otto Harbach and Jerome Kern are among the greatest compositions for musicals ever: Yesterdays and Smoke Get in Your Eyes. Though they are not presented in the fashion we are now used to.
Irene Dunne sings them in an operetta style, which was probably in keeping with the original Broadway versions. They are fine but far from definitive. Plus there's Hard to Handle and the Oscar nominated Lovely to Look At. And the exotic fashions and deco studio sets. It's a must-see for fans of Astaire and Rogers, but generally a mixed bag.