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Meet
Me In St. Louis (1944)
In Vincente Minnelli's gorgeous musical, his third
feature film and his first in Technicolor, about the romantic yearnings
and tribulations within a single family, the Smiths, who lived in
1903 St. Louis:
- the structure of the film: four seasonal vignettes,
beginning with the summer of 1903, in turn of the century St. Louis
- the character of the second eldest Smith family daughter,
17 year-old Esther Smith (Judy Garland), and her rendition of the
romantically expressive falling-in-love song "The Boy Next Door" as
she fell for the literal shy neighbor boy John Truett (Tom Drake)
- the dinner scene of the Smith family awkwardly having
to eavesdrop on a phone call between eldest Smith family sister Rose
(Lucille Bremer) from her beau Warren Sheffield (Robert Sully), when
she was expecting him to propose
- the sequence of Esther with her precocious younger
sister - a night-gowned 'Tootie' Smith (Margaret O'Brien) performing
a spontaneous, delightful little song "Under the Bamboo Tree" and
cakewalk complete with straw hats and canes in a home-style minstrel
shuffle
- the scene, after a going-away party at her house,
when Esther asked the last-leaving guest, John, to accompany her
throughout the house to turn off the gas lights - a beautifully-executed
scene in which the camera moved non-stop from light to light; as
the lights were extinguished in the parlor, the dining room and the
landing, she shyly courted the boy next door in the darkness - hoping
(in vain) to be offered a goodnight kiss; as she gazed at him with
undisguised love, he complimented her: "You don't need any beauty
sleep"; she rendered a sweet old song to him:
"Over the Bannister"; at its conclusion, he shook her hand
goodbye one more time, awkwardly complimenting her a second time: "You've
got a mighty strong grip for a girl"
- the scene of Esther's singing of the joyful "The
Trolley Song" ("Ding, ding, ding went the trolley!")
as she rode to the fairgrounds
- Tootie's Halloween adventure, dressed up as a ghost
with an oversized coat, bowler hat, and long rat's nose; she bravely
volunteered to execute a trick-or-treat prank (the 'killing' of hated
neighbor Mr. Braukoff by throwing flour into his face at his front
door); her stealthy walk to the victim's house was filmed in one
long traveling shot in front of her; with the camera at a slightly-upward
angle to approximate her own view, she flung flour into his glowering
face, shouted "I hate you, Mr. Braukoff," shrieked, and
then scampered off; accepted and lauded as brave by other older children
("she's the bravest of them all"), she congratulated herself: "I'm
the most horrible. I'm the most horrible"; but then, she returned
home cut and bruised, frightened and injured
- because Tootie falsely blamed her injury on Esther's
boyfriend John Truett, Esther marched over to John's house and punched
him ("What do you mean hitting a five-year-old child?")
- the real truth - Tootie had stuffed an old dress to look like a
body, and laid it on the trolley tracks to sabotage the trolley car;
John had fought with her only to hide her from police - that was
the reason for her injury; Esther was enraged at 'Tootie' for fooling
her, and not confessing to her own prank gone wrong; during an apology
speech given to John, Esther received her first kiss from him - and
she retorted to him: "You've got a mighty strong grip for a
boy"
- the scene of Esther's heartbreaking singing of "Have
Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" at a wintry window - lovingly
and tenderly sung to her distressed sister 'Tootie' who didn't want
to move from St. Louis
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"Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas"
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Tootie's Destruction of Snow People in Backyard
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- the scene of Tootie's angry destruction of the snow
people she had created in her backyard, to express her upset at
the news of the family's impending move to New York, due to father
Alonzo
"Lon" Smith's (Leon Ames) promotion and business transfer
- the final concluding scene at the 1904 St. Louis
World's Fair itself with Esther hand-in-hand with her boyfriend:
("I can't believe it, right here where we live! Right here in
St. Louis!")
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"The Boy Next Door"
Smith Family Eavesdropping on Phone Call
"Under the Bamboo Tree"
John: "You've got a mighty strong grip for a girl"
"The Trolley Song"
Tootie's Halloween Prank
Esther's First Kiss with John
Off to the Fair
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