I'm No Angel (1933) Poster

(1933)

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7/10
When I'm Good, I'm Very Good. But, When I'm Bad... I'm Better
claudio_carvalho1 July 2012
The dancer and lion tamer of a circus Tira (Mae West) meets with an admirer at a hotel room and her lover, the pickpocket Slick Wiley (Ralf Harolde) try to steal the man and hits his head with a bottle. Slick believes that he had killed the man and flees, but he is arrested by the police.

Tira fears to be betrayed by Slick and asks for a loan to Big Bill Barton (Edward Arnold) to leave the place. However, he offers her the money provided she accepts to put her head into the mouth of a lion. The show is a success and the circus move to New York, where the millionaire Kirk Lawrence (Kent Taylor), who is engaged but becomes her "protector", giving expensive gifts to Tira. But when she meets Kirk's partner Jack Clayton (Cary Grant), they fall in love with each other and decide to get married. But Big Bill does not want to lose his great attraction and plots a scheme with Slick to call off the engagement of Clayton and Tira.

"I'm No Angel" is one of the most important films of the controversial Mae West, the actress who saved Paramount Pictures from bankruptcy after the Great Depression. This actress was responsible for the censorship code in Hollywood and her malicious quotes are great. For example, "When I'm Good, I'm Very Good. But, When I'm Bad... I'm Better"; or the song "No One Does It Like a Dallas Man", that was forced to be changed "No One Loves Me Like a Dallas Man". My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "Santa Não Sou" ("Saint I am not")
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7/10
First time I ever watched an entire Mae West movie.
ChuckStraub29 March 2004
Knowing that I enjoy watching some of the older movies, a friend at work lent me a VHS copy of `I'm No Angel'. It's not really something I would have picked up on my own. I guess I had some preset ideas about Mae West movies. For some reason, unknown even to myself, this is the first time I ever watched an entire Mae West movie. What a pleasant surprise it was to find my preconceived notions were totally wrong. Cary Grant and Mae West were great together. Very good acting all the way around and some interesting characters really helped to make this a very enjoyable viewing. This movie had a bit of drama, lots of comedy, it was a bit of a musical, and had some romance. All of this was combined into a masterful blend to make this movie very entertaining. I was really surprised that the comedy was so effective for today's audience considering the movie was made 71 years ago. This was a very good movie that I recommend. Glad I watched it.
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8/10
Arguably Mae West's best film
robb_77220 April 2006
Considered by many to be Mae West's finest film appearance (with only 1933's SHE DONE HIM WRONG and 1940's MY LITTLE CHICKADEE even coming close), the legendary star of the stage and screen has rarely been in better form than in this seminal film. Based on her own stage hit, the film's storyline is naturally preposterous, but West and director Wesley Ruggles wisely keep the focus on the then-salty dialogue and the still hilarious word play. Although he doesn't make his first appearance until nearly two-third of the film is over, Cary Grant remains the ideal straight man to West's zany antics. The film moves at a brisk pace, and its concluding courtroom sequence is unarguably one of the funniest scenes in film comedy.
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No education complete without this one
jaykay-1020 March 2002
The great stars are inimitable. With the very greatest, such as the outrageous one-of-a-kind Mae West, nobody else even mirrors the style. Bogart, Hepburn, Dietrich, Cagney, maybe a few others - all you ask is that the story not smother what they do best. Here is Mae West's finest movie, giving her the opportunities, sometimes denied elsewhere, to strut her stuff - all of it. Suggestive dialog, provocative poses, sashaying hips, and a young Cary Grant who makes her purr: the Production Code would not be far behind.
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7/10
A class of its own
km_dickson14 December 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Not the same caliber of work as Mea West's other 1933 film, She Done Him Wrong, but still an entertaining, one of a kind picture. This one, again, was adapted from a hit stage show written by West herself. In it, West pretty much reprises the seductive, loose living but tough as nails character that she made famous. This time she is Tira, a circus performer who goes on the road with a hit lion taming act. The story at first seems to be moving along without much point as Tira simply moves from man to man, eventually landing on a young Cary Grant, who she decides to settle down with. Everything comes to a head quite nicely, though, in the final courtroom scene in which all her past lovers are put on the stand to testify against her character. This scene is an absolute classic as West decides to cross examine the witnesses herself, taking each of them apart with such flash and comic timing that you can't help but think of Joe Pesci in My Cousin Vinny. The film may lack the depth and drama that made She Done Him wrong such a complete movie, but it still stands in a class of it's own among early 1930s movies.
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7/10
"To win the game of romance"
Steffi_P13 February 2012
A strange thing happened with movie stars during the depression. The most popular players weren't the young and beautiful ones; they were homely, middle-aged figures like Wallace Beery, Marie Dressler and Will Rogers, unlikely stars but ones who seemed perhaps a little more earthly and genuine to moviegoers in troubled times. And this trend even had its own sex symbol – Mae West, a plump forty-year-old who became for a few years a Top 10 box office draw on the pull of her considerable sexual magnetism.

West was not possessing of the beauty of contemporaries such as Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich (neither of whom ever surpassed her in the polls). Her allure lies in the way she controls her body, a not-so-subtle hinting at what she is capable of in the bedroom, all done without showing so much as an ankle or flash of cleavage. She is perhaps the only female example of what many male stars from Clark Gable to George Clooney have been – an older player publicly seen as sexy thanks to a presence that transcends age. There have been other female stars who have this quality, but I believe West is the only one who thrived on it. As we see from her opening piece in I'm No Angel, she has absolute control over every aspect of her demeanour – a flick of the hips, a roll of the eyes, a set mouth. She could have been a decent straight actress had she turned her hand to drama.

But what is also remarkable about Mae West is that she had an unprecedented level of creative control over her work. Female writers were known but not common, and writer-actors of either gender were almost unheard of at the time. And I'm No Angel demonstrates West's wit and sophistication as much as it does her sexuality. And it's a rare tale for classic Hollywood in which the women are in charge. There's a sense of sisterhood, or at least mutual respect, between Mae and the other female characters. And as she says herself, walking off stage from her opening performance, the men who fall at her feet are just "suckers".

*I'm referring here to the ever-reliable Quigley Poll, which since 1932 has annually interviewed a large section of cinema-goers and asked them for their three favourite stars. Mae West came in at No. 8 in 1933, and No. 5 in 1934.
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9/10
The Best of West
gftbiloxi9 May 2005
Mae West was an unlikely sex symbol. She was a small woman with a face that defied most standards of beauty and an unremarkable body--and by the time she hit film she was edging into middle age. But as West herself might have said, it ain't what ya got, its what ya do with it. If anybody knew what to do with it, Mae West certainly did, and I'M NO ANGEL finds her doing it in remarkably fine style indeed.

The story and script, by West herself, is hilariously improbable. West stars as Tira, a carny entertainer who divides her work between a hootchie coochie act (which gives her the opportunity to perform a sizzling "They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk") and a lion taming act--but when she runs afoul of a small town romeo she hits the road for New York, where she captivates both city and Cary Grant with her circus act. Needless to say, there are comic complications galore, but like the Mounties, Mae West always gets her man.

West did a number of justly famous films during the 1930s, but I'M NO ANGEL is arguably her best, salted with with one memorable quip after another as she cracks whips, snubs snobs, frolics with her maids ("Peel me a grape!"), and waylays the willing Cary Grant with considerable aplomb. If you've never seen a Mae West movie but have always wondered what made her a great star, this is the film to see!

Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
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7/10
Underrated.
gratian-231 March 2000
Mae West was one of the greatest comedians of cinema. She and her work are horribly under appreciated by the vast majority of viewers. I would compare much of her work with that of the Marks Brothers and would rate this film alongside, say 'A Night at the Opera' or a film which treats a similar subject, 'The Seven Year Itch.'

In any case: see this film!
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9/10
The Men in Her Life
lugonian10 July 2004
I'M NO ANGEL (Paramount, 1933), directed by Wesley Ruggles, Mae West's second starring feature, with the full of story, screenplay and ALL dialog credited by Mae West, as listed in the opening titles super-imposed from an overview of a circus, according to the title, might have been a comedy fantasy centering upon a fallen angel, but as the story goes, it's about a freewheeling woman's rise from circus tent to Park Avenue penthouse.

The story centers around Tira (Mae West), a free-spirited woman working as a midway dancer in Big Bill Barton's (Edward Arnold) low class carnival. She is loved by Big Bill, but has a casual lovers, or in another sense of the word, acquaintances with the male population, one being "Slick" Wiley (Ralf Harolde), a pickpocket. Tira keeps a hotel room in town where she entertains gentlemen friends. One of her latest pickups is Ernest Brown (William B. Davidson), better known as "The Chump," five times married and with no morals. When Slick enters the scene to make a pinch, posing as Tira's husband, the angry Brown decides to leave and expose the two. Before he can get away, he is knocked unconscious by Slick. Mistaking him for dead, Tira and Slick make their getaway, leaving his body in the hallway. After Brown recovers, he discovers he's been robbed. Along with the police, Brown locates Slick at the sideshow and has him arrested. To clear herself, Tira hires Benny Pinkowitz (Gregory Ratoff), a prominent New York City attorney, to handle her pending trial. To obtain the loan, Tira agrees to appear as Bill's latest attraction, the star of a lion taming act, climaxed by putting her head into the mouth of the king of beasts. Because of her renewed success, with the act now playing at Madison Square Garden, Tira becomes the talk of the town. Entering the social scene following her encounter with Kirk Lawrence (Kent Taylor), who happens to be engaged to the jealous Alicia Hatton (Gertrude Michael), his relationship with Tira starts to ruin the family name. Jack Clayton (Cary Grant), Kirk's cousin, decides to pay Tira a visit and buy her off. Instead acquires this lovely product for himself. All goes well until Big Bill hires Slick, recently released from jail, to break up their relationship by posing as Tira's husband dressed in nothing but a bathrobe. Clayton calls off the wedding, leading to a breach of promise suit by Tira.

Songs credited by Gladys DuBois, Ben Ellison and Harvey Brooks, include: "They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk," "No One Loves Me Like That Dallas Man," "I Found a New Way to Go to Town," "I Want You, Need You," and "I'm No Angel" (all sung by Mae West). The title song, sung by West, is heard during the closing casting credits, and before the fade out, has the final say with, "I'm No Angel ... Believe ME!"

Following the success to SHE DONE HIM WRONG, I'M NO ANGEL, which re-teams West with Grant for the second and final time, proved to be an improvement over its predecessor, and to many Mae West fans, her best movie, and it's easy to see why. The courtroom scene where Tira (West) acts as her own attorney in the breach of promise suit, questioning the men in her past and present, and the male jurors who want to become part of her future, is priceless. With the members of the jury seen laughing out loud during Tira's defense sure had it's theater audiences doing the same thing back in 1933. During the course of West's longest movie, 86 minutes, I'M NO ANGEL is a full of memorable one-liners ("When I'm good, I'm very good. When I'm bad, I'm better," "Beulah, peal me a grape," "It's not the men in my life, but the life in my men," plus many more), and suggestive scenes leading only to the imagination of its viewers. I'M NO ANGEL is the movie where she introduced her most famous line, "Come up and see me some time," recited after her courtroom battle while on the telephone talking to the (unseen) Juror # 4. This line was spoken to Cary Grant, here, and in SHE DONE HIM WRONG, but each time in different ways. In spite of Grant's name billed second in the cast, his character appears very late into the story.

I'M NO ANGEL also consists of Mae West's personal traits. For instance, it's been written that West, born under the sign of Leo (month of August, a "hot" month) usually visited her astrologer for advice and never went through the day without reading her horoscope. Her character of Tira does just that, having her fortune told by the Rajah (Nigel De Brulier), who, while looking into the crystal ball, tells her he sees a man in her life. The surprised Tira responds, "Only ONE!" Later on in the story, one of her maids tells says she's a "one man woman." She quickly quips, "Yeah, one man at a time."

I'M NO ANGEL was thankfully produced before the production code went into effect, thus making this a "pre-code" comedy that has stood the test of time. It had become one of many Mae West/Paramount comedies of the 1930s to be distributed on video cassette in 1992. to commemorate West's centennial birth (1892). I'M NO ANGEL, along with SHE DONE HIM WRONG, became the movie package acquired by Turner Classic Movies, with I'M NO ANGEL having made its premiere on that station on January 6, 2001. For anybody who has never seen a Mae West comedy, especially her two prime comedies released 1933, I'M NO ANGEL should make a good introduction, and a suitable companion piece with SHE DONE HIM WRONG, both co-starring the only actor to appear opposite West on screen more than once. His name, of course, being Cary Grant. (**1/2)
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6/10
"Find 'em, fool 'em, and forget 'em!"
utgard145 December 2014
A circus performer (Mae West) lives by her horoscope, which tells her she is destined to fall for a wealthy man with dark hair and brown eyes. When a man comes along who fits that description, she thinks he's the one. Then she meets his friend (Cary Grant) and falls for him. This is the second starring film for Mae West after She Done Him Wrong. Both were released in 1933 and both costar Cary Grant. Many people think 'She' is the better film but I prefer this one. It's less stagy, the story's better, and Mae has more funny lines. 'She' had some funny spots but it mostly just felt like an exercise in vanity for Mae. This is directed by Wesley Ruggles, younger brother of wonderful character actor Charlie Ruggles. How much you'll like this depends on how you feel about Mae West. Chubby and middle-aged horny women aren't exactly the stuff of sex symbols today. I confess I don't find her particularly appealing but I give her points for self-confidence. I also give her points for talent. At a time when it was very uncommon, she was a comedienne who both wrote and starred in her own movies. Regardless of how you feel about her brand of comedy, at least she was her own woman and not the creation of the Hollywood PR machine.

It's a pretty good movie. Mae's funny and she also sings...but the less said about that the better. Cary Grant is fine here. He doesn't show up until over halfway through the picture and he doesn't get anything funny to do. Edward Arnold has a small part. The story takes a few more twists and turns than your average comedy for the period. Mae West fans will certainly like it. Cary Grant fans might want to see it just to catch him early in his career.
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4/10
Didn't much enjoy this
Philipp_Flersheim21 March 2022
Mae West is Tira, a dancer at a provincial circus whose act turns the head of all male customers. The circus boss (Edward Arnold) persuades her to add a new number to her repertoire: She is to appear as a lion tamer and put her head in a lion's mouth. Big success. Fame, money and rich admirers follow... Strange to say, this mediocre comedy was the big box office success of 1933. That's not to say that there are no positive sides. West has some great lines (for example 'When I'm good I'm very good. But when I'm bad I'm better'). She occasionally breaks into song, and I liked that. Ralf Harolde is good as a pickpocket who takes advantage of her act to relieve the audience of their valuables and has some other dirty tricks up his sleeve. Towards the end there is a good courtroom scene that made me decide to rate the film four stars rather than three. On the downside: On balance and despite her singing, I found West with her waddling walk and habit of never keeping still pretty off-putting. That seems to be part of what people in the 20s and early 30s liked about her (apart from her free talk) - ideals change, obviously. Ossi Oswalda, who appears in some early Lubitsch comedies and whom contemporary critics praised to high heaven did not appeal to me either. That's how it is. More importantly, the plot of 'I'm no Angel' is poor. There is no other word. For at least the first 45 minutes it is going nowhere, or rather, it meanders from one hole to the next. What's the role of Benny Pinkowitz (Gregory Ratoff), for example, whom West phones so urgently early in film? He does not have anything to do except towards the end, where he does something entirely unrelated to that phone call. The male lead Jack Clayton (Cary Grant) appears only in the last half hour or so and has got as good as nothing to do - almost as little as Ratoff. In sum, I did not much enjoy this picture and don't think I will return to it.
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9/10
Best of Mae West
willowgreen17 February 2003
Easily one of the funniest comedies of the 193O's, this pre-code West-ern is a real treat. La West plays Tira, a carny gal who's been around the block a few times: in order to raise some dough, she sticks her head into a lion's mouth - and basks in the attention she receives from various fans. The scene between Mae and Gertrude Michael is hilarious: "You haven't a shred of decency in you!" spouts the snobbish Michaels to which Mae retorts "I don't show my good points to strangers!" A young Cary Grant is one of Tira's many admirers and Edward Arnold is memorable as Tira's loud, gruff boss, Big Bill Barton. Mae's courtroom plea, where she puts every man in his place - and wins the admiration of the judge is a gem. This film was made just after Mae's sensational hit SHE DONE HIM WRONG. Feeling indebted to West because the film's success single-handedly saved Paramount Pictures from impending bankruptcy, mogul Adolph Zukor promised Mae that she could do anything she wanted for her next film. Because she had been fascinated by lions since childhood, she had her fantasy written into the movie's plotline.
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7/10
"When I was born with this face, it was the same as strikin' oil."
classicsoncall12 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Can it be said that Mae West in her movies was a caricature of herself? I can't recall if I've ever seen her in a movie before, but if so, she far surpasses in this one in what appears to be a defining effort. Throwing her feminine pulchritude around with sashaying abandon, West spouts more quotable one liners in this film than any one I've ever seen before, with the possible exception of Bogie in "The Maltese Falcon". The odd thing is though, I don't think she's all that good looking. She's got that slinky look and attitude going on, while appearing a bit frumpy at the same time. Without the glam attire, she might have been just another so-so actress during the era. I certainly couldn't get what Cary Grant would have seen in her if this were a real life situation, but it wasn't, so you'll just have to go along with the story and enjoy the ride. Circus performer Tira (West) has a personal motto that suggests 'find 'em, fool 'em, and forget 'em' as it pertains to the men in her life, but when Grant's character appears on the scene, she's smitten beyond the good fortune he brings to the table. It's upended when the weaselly Slick Wiley (Ralf Harolde) interferes, leading to a not quite credible courtroom scenario, but what the heck, audiences in the Thirties weren't particularly interested in realism. Everything eventually resolves in Tira's favor, proving once again for the unflappable film star, that "When I'm good, I'm very good. But when I'm bad, I'm better".
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3/10
impossibly bad casting
planktonrules16 July 2005
I have never understood the appeal of Mae West. Apart from a funny smarmy comment here or there, most movies feature her being pursued by countless love-struck (or possibly just horny) men. And here is where the problem lies! How can the producers get anyone to seriously believe that men are so attracted to West?! She is, without a doubt, the most unappealing female lead in Hollywood history (I can't count Lassie in this category because as most of us know, this dog was actually played by male Collies). Old, bloated and sleazy to me are not exactly attractive qualities and it is completely unbelievable she could play much of anything other than an over the hill prostitute. The ridiculousness of her love affair with young and handsome Cary Grant completely undermines the movie. They played in a couple movies together and not for one moment could I believe Grant would even look twice at a woman like West. However, despite this, he and several other men spend most of the movie chasing after her like sex-crazed weasels! This is an incredibly one-note and over-rated film that stands up poorly over time.

Update: Since doing this review, I got an email telling me that I was stupid for disliking this film--especially since I actually liked TALLADEGA NIGHTS. Perhaps they have a point--especially since so many people have marked my rant "not helpful". I just don't like Mae West and despite seeing several of her films, she never converted me to believing she was a great actress. Maybe one day I'll try watching I'M NO ANGEL again, but considering how much I truly disliked the film and how miscast Cary Grant was, I doubt it. It's all a matter of taste, and this lover of classic Hollywood comedies just doesn't enjoy her films.
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West's masterpiece
thornton-53 November 1999
This movie, which West had complete creative control over, is her masterpiece. While 'She Done Him Wrong' is uneven and confusing 'I'm no Angel' is brilliant throughout. West is all woman without a bit of cat or mouse, and there is delicious chemistry between West and Grant (although this movie was made the same year as 'I'm no Angel', Grant looks older and his acting is stronger). And as much fun as it is to see masters at work in 'My Little Chickadee' (and imagine West and Feilds writing together), this movie outshines even that. If you want to know what Mae West is all about, this is the film to see.
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7/10
One of Mae West's best roles and films - with Cary Grant
SimonJack7 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of two very good films that Mae West made, with her finest roles. The other is "My Little Chickadee" with W. C. Fields. "I'm no Angel" has more of a plot than most of her 13 films. And, this is the only film in which West actually falls for one guy. That guy, of course, is Cary Grant.

West plays Tira and Grant is Jack Clayton. Edward Arnold leads a very good supporting cast as Big Bill Barton, head of Barton's famous circus shows. Tira goes from being a tantalizing sex symbol to draw men to the tent show, to a fearless lion tamer who puts her head inside a lion's mouth. She has some live action with several lions in the big cage. Clayton is the head of a family business and is worried that a cousin, Kirk Lawrence (played by Kent Taylor) may be throwing away his career and fiancé over his infatuation with Tira. Lawrence also has been lavishing expensive gifts on Tira.

Of course, when Clayton meets Tira, he falls for her himself and soon jostles Lawrence to the side. The attraction is mutual with Tira, and the two become a genuine couple. At least, more genuine than she has been able to be before, and than audiences have ever seen before. This is one of the few films in which Grant plays the piano, and he's quite good.

As with some of her other work, Mae West did most of the writing for this film. It was her story and screenplay, and her dialog, with just suggestions from one other writer. West's telltale writing is evident in her dialog. She is most known for her one-line zingers with appropriate glances or peers, and an accompanying bump, swagger or other body movement. She seldom has any lines of substance in any of her films. Just those that may be necessary to tie pieces together of whatever plot there may be.

I rate this film Mae West's best just for one thing - the courtroom scene. She has some zingers here, but mostly her dialog pries answers out of witnesses that cause much of the laughter. I think this also is among the best films with comedic court scenes. Following are some of the funny lines with Mae West zingers from this movie.

Alicia Hatton (played by Gertrude Michael), "I suppose you know why I'm here?" Tira, "Hardly! You see, I'm a lion tamer not a mind reader."

Beulah (the maid, played by Gertrude Howard, "Miss we was thinking you're a one-man woman." Tira, "I'm one man at a time."

Alicia, "Then it might refresh you to know that I'm Kurt's fiancé." Tira, "There's nothing refreshing about that." Alicia, "You want me to swear?" Tira, 'Never mind. I can do that myself."

Tira, "Oh, Beulah!" Beulah, "Yes, ma'am." Tira, "Peel me a grape."

Tira, "When I'm good, I'm very good. But when I'm bad, I'm better."

Tira, "It's not the men in your life. It's the life in your men."

Tira, "Somewhere there's a guy with a million waitin' for a dame like me."

Tira, pointing to a picture and telling her maid about her jewelry, "He gimme 'em."

Tira, "When I was born with this face, it was the same as strikin' oil."
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7/10
When I'm bad, I'm better
HotToastyRag8 January 2021
"Why don't you come up sometime, and see me?" Everyone knows the quote - even people who don't know who said it and have never seen a movie older than 1980. But have you seen the movie? Even though it was used on the publicity poster for I'm No Angel, it actually comes from She Done Him Wrong, another Mae West comedy costarring Cary Grant, with his old teeth.

This one is still worth watching, though. I'm No Angel boasts more funny one-liners from comic legend Mae West than you can shake a stick at. From "When I'm good, I'm very good. But when I'm bad, I'm better," to "I see a man in your future--" "What, only one?" you'll be howling with laughter every time Mae opens her mouth. In this movie, she plays a circus performer with a great sense of humor who wants nothing more than to find a millionaire for her sugar daddy. She visits a fortune teller who describes her perfect man, and the search is on! You'll see Edward Arnold in the supporting cast, as well as Hattie McDaniel, in the role that first got her noticed and remembered. Yes, she made a career of maids, but this is the one that started it all. Want to see Mammy give as good as she gets to Mae West? Then you've got to rent I'm No Angel.
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9/10
"It Ain't The Men In My Life, It's Life In My Men"
bkoganbing18 July 2007
When Mae West selected a young contract player from Paramount named Cary Grant as her leading man, a star was definitely born. But make no mistake about it, this film and She Done Him Wrong are her films and no one else's

In I'm No Angel Mae spends the entire time of the film proving she definitely ain't. Every man in the film is completely captivated by her free and easy sexuality. As this was pre-Code you have to listen hard to the dialog because Mae comes out with a gem every five minutes or so.

Mae's a circus performer here and after her manager Edward Arnold persuades her to stick her head in a lion's mouth, her gate attraction increases with her notoriety. Young millionaire Cary Grant is the last of several in the film captivated by her. She's falling for him to, but Arnold breaks it up for his own reasons.

The end of the film is a breach of promise suit brought by Mae against Cary and when she takes over the cross examination of the witnesses the results are a comedy milestone. Not that her lawyer, Gregory Ratoff, isn't capable enough, but he's rather distracted by her as well. Ratoff's performance in fact is the best one among the supporting cast.

I'm No Angel is arguably Mae West's best film and I'm not one to argue.
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6/10
Mae West Found a Niche Character
view_and_review17 January 2024
I really like Mae West. In prescribed dosages. She's wonderful as a supporting actress, but not as the main actress carrying the whole movie. In that case she's a bit too much. She's still good, but the script has to be very creative to not get tired of her.

"I'm No Angel" could be called "She Done Him Wrong 2." Mae West plays the same exact character as Lady Lou (her character in "She Done Him Wrong") with NO variation. When I say no variation, I mean zero difference. If you were to close your eyes you'd think she was playing Lady Lou or Maudie Triplett ("Night After Night").

In "I'm No Angel" she played Miss Tira (pronounced Tyra), a sassy circus performer. Just like Lady Lou in "She Done Him Wrong," she had men tripping over themselves to be with her. They were forking over whatever money they had to shower her with gifts just to be in her sphere. She was cool, suave, flirtatious, and dismissive to all of them. With just a smile, a purr, and a word she could turn any man into Jello. She turned on the charm and the flirting when they had something she wanted, otherwise they got no play.

Tira moved up in the world when she agreed to do a very dangerous circus stunt. She put her head in the mouth of a lion as a part of her act. The stunt was so extreme it garnered the attention of thousands more than when she was simply shaking her hips. She was receiving so much money and gifts from adoring male fans that she was able to move into a penthouse and hire four maids to wait on her hand and foot.

She met and fell in love with Jack Clayton (Cary Grant) via her relationship with Kirk Lawrence (Kent Taylor). Kirk was engaged to be married, but he was ready to kick his fiance to the curb for Tira. Jack went to Tira to beseech her to leave Kirk alone and fell under her spell like every other man before him.

I like Mae West's swag and moxie, but I'd be lying if I said it didn't get old. She was featured in just the right amount in "Night After Night," while she was a bit too much in the two movies she starred in in 1933. Mae West is iconic, she was a trend setter, and she was definitely something different. She had a lot of zingers that were outright hilarious, although I resented her calling her maid Beulah (Gertrude Howard) "shadow." The name had a double entendre, but given America's history I have no doubt it was meant in a racial context. Other than that Mae West, to me, is like Elvira. She has a certain character that's a hit even if it won't smash the box office or garner her an Oscar.

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10/10
Mae West made it
netwallah16 June 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Mae West's second film with Cary Grant, story and dialogue and screenplay all by West. She's Tira, a circus performer who graduates from sultry songs to lion-taming and fame. Fame brings her silk-hat suitors; Grant shows up to persuade her to let his friend Kirk go back to his fiancée and falls for her himself, and the relationship goes full steam ahead ("I'm crazy about you, Tira." "I know... I made you that way.") They plan to marry, until an old dishonest beau, Slick, cons him so he thinks Tira's seeing other men and the marriage is off. West then takes over the breach of promise case in court and triumphs, much to the surprise of her attorney Pinkowitz (Gregory Ratoff). During the trial Grant learns she's always loved him and the engagement is renewed. West was forty and perhaps a bit heavy when this film was made, but she still walks that walk, still says "Mmmmm" like nobody else, still owns the double entendre franchise, and still looks pretty hot. This is the film where she tosses off the deathless line, "Beaulah, peel me a grape." There are many others, but they go by too fast to write them down. Nobody can resist her, and she knows it. Funny.
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7/10
The legend struts her stuff.
st-shot31 March 2022
Man hungry, lion tamer Tira (Mae West) agrees to a dangerous circus act with the big cats that catapults her to the big time and the attention of her favorite past time, wealthy men. It's only natural she would fall hard for the likes of Cary Grant but first she must put her knowledge of jurisprudence to test in some hilarious cross examinations in order to save her reputation.

Mae West was a living breathing caricature, a truly one and only that her audience was more than willing to go along with her outrageous stride through the real world. It paid off in reams of laughter as she dished out lines that she authored causing a moral overhaul of the film industry's moral code. There's very little to take serious and the broad performances of all involved simply add to this over the top burlesque as they make way for diva Mae who does not disappoint. Her performance is more stand-up than role and that's just fine, as she fires off memorable one-liners in no need of repeating given their classic status nearly a century later. I'm no Angel is one funny cartoon.
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8/10
What good are clothes if I haven't got my head?
hitchcockthelegend30 May 2009
Mae West co-wrote this piece based on an un-produced screenplay called The Lady And The Lions, it charts the rise of Tira {West} from carnival crowd pleaser to massive circus headliner. Tho I would be doing a disservice to a very strong and on form supporting cast by not praising them heartily, this really is pure and simply a Mae West tour de force, full of ego and show business swagger, she not only tames the lions here, she also tames everything else that happens to have a pulse, be it the characters in the film or the multi sexed viewing public, she defines the word diva whilst poking all in the ribs with comic knowing comic aplomb. I personally only purchased the film because it stars one of my favourite actors in Cary Grant, yet come the end of the film I was in no doubt who ran the show here. I was very interested to read that Grant often stated that West was the most awkward actor he ever worked with, what isn't in doubt is that he surely would of been taking notes backstage on the art of comic timing. It should also be noted for the record that Grant and West were friends to a degree, certainly Grant visited West much later in life as they both entered old age.

Containing an array of quotable lines and put downs, I'm No Angel is essential viewing for anyone interested in classic cinema, it matters not if West's style isn't really your cup of tea, because lets face facts here, the lady was a star, and here you get to watch her defend herself in court, and it's here that the lady showcases why she is often termed as a golden age legend.

PS: The supporting cast are great as well by the way! 8/10
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9/10
Cary Grant and Mae West are incredible together
facelessdummy11 August 2001
Mae West turned in a wonderful performance in this one. This movie starts out well but once Cary Grant appears (roughly 1/2 way through) this movie really becomes outstanding. The plot is a simple one that basically boils down to all men in the film chasing after the Mae West character. The courtroom scene toward the end was easily the best scene of the film. Mae West at her absolute best.
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10/10
One of the Mae's Best Comedies
zardoz-137 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Mae West's second starring role in director Wesley Ruggles' romantic comedy "I'm No Angel" surpasses her previous picture "She Done Him Wrong." Mae exerts more control of her surroundings and the people surrounding her in this film. She is not the kept woman she was in "She Done Him Wrong." Mind you, she still has the same mindset with regard to diamonds, but she isn't presented as a high class streetwalker. If she doesn't want to do something, she doesn't do it, but no man can spurn her affections. Furthermore, her romance with Cary Grant seems more plausible here than it did in "She Done Him Wrong." This lively little yarn about a singer-turned-female lion tamer named Tira who takes a wealthy, society gentlemen (Cary Grant)to court for breach of promise features some of Mae West's best dialogue. Incidentally, Mae wrote the screenplay without the interference from any collaborators as she had endured in "She Done Him Wrong." Okay, the credits state that West took some suggestions from playwright Lowell Brentano. Moreover, unlike "She Done Him Wrong," "I'm No Angel" boasts a better plot. The courtroom scenes during the last quarter hour are truly hilarious,especially when Mae decides to defend herself.

Tira performs a hootchie coochie act in Big Bill Barton's Wonder Show, a carnival where she wiggles her hips as little as possible (no doubt to please the Production Code censors) in a song & dance routine on stage while wolfish-looking guys crowd around to leer at her with lust in their loins while she shimmies behind a veil in front of her. About the only things that Tira does is raise her arms so she can flaunt her shaved armpits and swap cracks with the guys. After she finishes her song and dance routine, Big Bill (Edward Arnold of "Three on a Match") tries to persuade her to work the lions, but Tira refuses. She is tired of grinding her hips and has her eye on a chump. Before she heads out for town, she checks in with the carnival's astrologer, Rajah the Fortune Teller (Nigel D. Brulier of "The Green Goddess"), and he informs her that she is going to have a bad night, what's left of it, but her future looks fabulous.

A sleazy pickpocket who works with Barton and sometimes teams up with Tira on scams, Slick Wiley (Ralf Harolde of "Dixiana"), grows both jealous and suspicious when Tira tells him that she is going into town to get a hotel room. Actually, Tira has a date with Ernst Brown (William B. Davidson of "Murder on the Waterfront") who flashed his pinkie ring with a diamond in it at her during her song & dance act. Brown and she are about to get it on when Slick lets himself in and threatens to call the cops on Brown for messing with his wife. Tira tells Brown that she isn't Slick's wife and Slick slugs Brown (off camera) and they believe erroneously that Slick has croaked him. Tira orders Slick to put Brown's body out in the hall and they leave, but not before Slick steals Brown's pinkie ring with the diamond in it. When the police revive Brown, he screams that his diamond ring has been pinched. Meanwhile, Tira pleads with Barton to give her money while she calls a New York lawyer, Benny Pinkowitz (Gregory Ratoff of "Skyscraper Souls"), to help her. She agrees to work the lions if Barton will ante up some dough and agrees to stick her head in a lion's mouth. "Flea' Milligan (Russell Hopton of "Elmer, The Great") convinces Barton that Tira's lion taming act could put them in the big time, so Barton hands over the cash.

Naturally, Tira's act as a lion tamer who sticks her head in the lion's mouth is a success in New York City, a wealthy admirer comes calling after the show. The problem with Kirk Lawrence ("Blond Venus") is that he engaged to marry Alicia Hatton (Gertrude Michael of "Night of Terror"), and Kirk's buddy Jack Clayton (Cary Grant of "Blond Venus") intervenes and talks Tira into giving Kirk the cold shoulder. As it turns out, Jack becomes infatuated with Tira and they are heading to the altar when the conniving Barton and jealous Slick get together to sabotage Tira's plans to marry Clayton. Slick slips in and informs Clayton that he has come back for Tira. Actually, Slick and Barton have bribed Tira's chauffeur to stall her from getting back to her apartment to meet Jack. Idiotically, Clayton believes Slick and decides to leave town for several weeks. This is the weakest point in "I'm No Angel" because neither Tira nor Clayton follow up with a face-to-face meeting after Slick pulls his stunt. As it turns out, they don't discuss Slick's sneaky act until after Clayton has granted Tira the full amount of money that she sought in the court suit against him. As she did in "She Done Him Wrong," the Mae West character marries the Cary Grant character and they live happily ever after.

As usual, Mae saunters around with her hands braced on her hips as if she were a football coach concocting schemes on the sidelines. Again, the dialogue contains several memorable lines. One of the best is: "Always remember, honey. A good motto is: "Take all you can get and give as little as possible. Don't forget, honey. Never let one man worry your mind. Find 'em, fool 'em and forget 'em!" Another equally quotable gem is:"It's not the men in your life that counts, it's the life in your men." Men gravitate to Tira like bees to honey. Mae's casual but confident attitude and her haughty demeanor along with her velvet-like delivery with bits of improvisation made her a force to be reckoned with in Hollywood. Only the great W.C. Fields could match her. Mae was not the only sex pot goddess of the cinema but she was the most notorious.
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Witty, Strong, Ultra glamorous, and Talented
MOSSBIE17 January 2011
When I look at this film, first of all, I am astonished no one bothers to mention the costumes she wears which are not only revealing but incredibly original and almost better than designers of today. Edith Head is rumored, but she has a controversial reputation as having put her name on a lot of designs while at Paramount where this film was made and where Head remained as chief designer right through the years Audrey Hepburn brought in Givenchy and though he got special billing, when Hepburn worked, she always chose the advice of Givenchy and it supposedly drove Piaf up the wall. Those people who think of West as "ridiculous" seem to forget that she was writing on her own against the most powerful writers in films and theater, and she skirted the laws by her clever use of the double entendre. When I was invited to her house at the Ravenswood for tea, she was well into her 80's and was as sharp and smart and hilariously funny as she was 50 years before the women's movement, and even woman's suffrage. She was idolized by both men and women because she insisted that "the brain was the best seducer of men".That is sadly lacking in the female of today. West was also an avid reader and ridiculed sex experts with many quotes which never were published.She was an amazing talent who was 40 when she did this film, but she was a seductress to audiences.
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