5/10
With two singers as the leads, it could have been better
15 September 2017
Doris Day and her two sisters all fall for composer Gig Young in Young at Heart. However, even though his last name is featured in the title, Gig Young isn't the male lead. Doris wins out over her sisters, and she and Gig become engaged. In walks Frank Sinatra. He's Gig's musical arranger, and when he visits the family to help with some music, he clashes with Doris. She's sunshine and daisies; he's a dark raincloud. They bicker and banter as he tries to impart his cynical wisdom and she tries to brighten his outlook. I think you can guess what happens next.

Ethel Barrymore, Dorothy Malone, and Robert Keith make up the adult family chaperones—would you leave your three daughters alone in the house with two strange men?—and a variety of composers contribute to the songs Frankie and Doris sing, although not every one was written for the film. "One for My Baby (And One More for the Road)", "Someone to Watch Over Me", "Just One of Those Things", and of course the title song, are performed in the movie. While some scenes are cute, I found an equal number of scenes to be depressing. In real life, we've all found it tempting to try and cheer up a perpetually grumpy person, but in a movie, it's a little tiring. Yes, it's Frank Sinatra so we want to forgive him, but who really wants to see Doris "Ms. Sunshine" Day struggle so much to make him smile?
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