A wife whose husband is away asks her decorator to impersonate her husband, to help her deal with a pest. Soon there is quite a web of confusion that also involves the decorator's girlfriend and the wife's suddenly returned husband.

So, this is a movie If you're in the mood for a screwball comedy that doesn't demand a single brain cell, So and Sew might actually hit the spot. It’s light, breezy, and features Lucille Ball doing that thing she does where she looks like she’s trying to hold a crumbling building together with her bare hands. If you ha...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

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"So, this is a movie If you're in the mood for a screwball comedy that doesn't demand a single brain cell, So and Sew might actually hit the spot. It’s light, breezy, and features Lucille Ball doing that thing she does where she looks like she’s trying to hold a crumbling building together with her bare hands. If you hate slapstick or people running into doors, turn this off immediately. You will be miserable. The premise is classic 1930s nonsense. Wife needs a fake husband. Decorator needs to b..."
Dawn O'Day
Charles E. Roberts, Jean Yarbrough
United States

