Gable is Mike Anthony, a newspaper reporter always in
competition with his college buddy, Barnabus Pell (Tone) who works for a
rival paper. When Mike attends the wedding of socialite Sally Parker
(Crawford) to a European prince, he becomes her confidante and helps her
escape the nuptials. With Barnabus hot on their trail, Mike and Sally steal
a spy's plane and head across Europe. The spy wants his plane back (and his
secret plans) and Barbabus wants his piece of the story, keeping them on the
run, of course falling in love along the way.
Reviews
Modern Screen, February 1937: ***Here's a merry little item directed in the
fast and furious tradition of W.S. Van Dyke and made terrific by the
presence of such box office champions as Clark Gable, Joan Crawford and
Franchot Tone. The story is an impossible sort of thing, which means that
due credit is herewith handed to the scenarists for turning out a script
full of comical moments and a generous quota of first-class lines. Here's
the set-up: Joan Crawford is a heiress about to marry Ivan Lebedeff, a phony
nobleman, while Gable and Tone are London correspondents for New York papers
assigned to cover the wedding. Joan jilts Ivan at the altar, and Clark
rushes off with her in a plane chartered by Reginald Owen and Mona Barrie,
who turn out to be spies--in fact, international spies. The movies continue
to portray newspapermen as half clown and half faun, so perhaps Gable and
Tone are not to be blamed for falling into pattern. At any rate, they do it
well, with the aid, no doubt, of the Van Dyke touch. Joan Crawford unbends
surprisingly in her high comedy moments and handles the romantic interludes
in her customary manner. Reginald Owen and Mona Barrie sharply define their
spy roles, and Ivan Lebedeff is as phony a count as you could ask for. It's
good fun for all audiences.
Photoplay Magazine, March 1937: Joan Crawford, Clark Gable and Franchot Tone in a deliciously amusing
comedy. All about a bride who leaves her fiancé at the church, tears across
half of Europe pursued by reporters. Swell. Letter to the Editor, Photoplay Magazine, April 1937: With "Love on the Run" we have lately been privileged to witness another of
these so-called sophisticated comedies where the hero is a nit-witted
archeologist, interne, racketeer, writer, artist or editor, and the heroine
has the added attraction of money, money, money and clothes (but of course
she is just folks at heart, though somewhat kittenish until the hero spanks
her), and there is always that little "cute" touch, the teahouse in the lane with
the queer old lady or the mildly drunken cockney, or maybe it is a comic
taxi driver unlike any possible taxi driver, or just an aquarium or skating
rink, or how ducky--Grant's Tomb. But I forget the old sure fire. Where can
a wealthy debutante and a poor boy go and really live. Why some greasy joint
on the edge of town. There they meet another "cute" person, the proprietor,
and they eat hamburgers.
Rabble-baiting, I call it. Some of us are getting pretty sick of these Noel
Coward-Charles MacArthur turns of mind. It began with "Private Lives" and
"Holiday", ran through "Animal Kingdom" and poorer copies. Lately Joan
Crawford and Carole Lombard seem to run this sort of balderdash pretty
regularly.
"Love on the Run" may be funny--oh, dear me, yes it is, but it is also as
false as Judas.
~Russell Davis
Bridgewater, Mass.
Listen to the Radio Commercial
Quote-able Gable
"Never mind, I'll get it. I think it's
for me!" first line
"Well, we're either up 2100 feet and going 175 miles an hour
or we're up 175 feet and going 2100 miles an hour!'
"I'm talking to a fairly attractive dame who's got too much
dough for her own good! Between you and me, I'm beginning to
think that prince is a pretty lucky boy!"
"You're the only girl this side of the moon."
"Would you like to buy a pencil from an ex-newspaperman?"
"An Anthony always goes out the way he comes in!"
"H for how soon are we going to get married?"
last line
Behind the Scenes Gable was assigned to
the role to give Joan Crawford a hit; the only hits she had had
in the past few years had been her films with Gable and her
career was stalling.
Amelia Earhart's $80,000 plane was used in the film.
Gable and Franchot Tone had become friends during the filming of
Mutiny on the Bountyand would play cards between takes.
This irritated Crawford. Her and husband Tone spent most of their
time between scenes fighting. During the course of filming, Tone
moved out of their Hollywood home.
MGM's head of production (and husband of
Norma Shearer)
,
Irving Thalberg, died during the production of this film. An
official day of mourning was called and the set was closed on
September 16, 1936.