It Must Be Love (1926 film)

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It Must Be Love
File:It Must Be Love ad in Motion Picture News (weekly, July 3, 1926 to August 28, 1926) (page 563 crop).jpg
Directed by Alfred E. Green
Produced by John McCormick
Written by
Starring
Cinematography Hans F. Koenekamp
Production
company
John McCormick Productions
Distributed by First National Pictures
Release dates
August 22, 1926
Running time
70 minutes
Country United States
Language Silent
English intertitles

It Must Be Love is a 1926 American silent comedy film directed by Alfred E. Green and starring Colleen Moore, Jean Hersholt and Malcolm McGregor.[1]

Plot

Fernie Schmidt (Colleen Moore) lives with her parents in the rear of their delicatessen. The smells of the business - cheeses, sausages, garlic and pickled herrings - repulses Fernie, who dreams of removing herself from the environment and moving into a life with a more rarified. Her father, Pop Schmidt (Jean Hersholt) has plans for his daughter to marry Peter Halitovsky (Arthur Stone), a sausage salesman, but Fernie is repulsed by the idea. At a dance, Fernie meets Jack Dugan (Malcolm McGregor), who tells her that he is in stocks, a paper-counter, and she falls for him. Because of her rejection of her father's chosen candidate for matrimony, Pop puts Fernie out of the house.

Fernie manages to find works as a counter girl in a department store. Luckily, the job is at the perfume counter. Jack, in due course, proposes to Fernie. Before she can give her answer, she is invited back home by Pop for dinner, at which time he announces he is going to buy a new home, removing himself from the back of the fragrant delicatessen. Peter is there and he proposes to her, but before she can reject him Jack appears on the scene, declaring that he has purchased a delicatessen business. Seeing that marrying jack would return her to the life she wishes to flee, she finds herself resolved to the fate of marrying her father's choice of husband, Peter.[2]

Cast

References

  1. Monaco p.328
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Bibliography

  • Monaco, James. The Encyclopedia of Film. Perigee Books, 1991.

External links


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