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Come and Get It
Directed by
Howard Hawks
,
William Wyler
Passed
1936
1h 39m
Drama
,
Romance
6.8
91%
68%
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An ambitious lumberjack abandons his saloon girl lover so that he can marry into wealth, but years later becomes infatuated with the woman's daughter.
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Where to Watch Come and Get It
There are no locations currently available for this title
Cast of Come and Get It
Edward Arnold
Barney Glasgow
Joel McCrea
Richard Glasgow
Frances Farmer
Lotta Morgan / Lotta Bostrom
Walter Brennan
Swan Bostrom
Mady Christians
Karie Linbeck
Mary Nash
Emma Louise Glasgow
Andrea Leeds
Evvie Glasgow
Frank Shields
Tony Schwerke
Edwin Maxwell
Sid LeMaire
Cecil Cunningham
Josie
Charles Halton
Jed Hewitt
Doodles Weaver
Sourdough Barfly (uncredited)
Fred 'Snowflake' Toones
Snowflake (uncredited)
Harry C. Bradley
Thomas Gubbins (uncredited)
Gino Corrado
Waiter (uncredited)
Robert Homans
Cookie (uncredited)
Russ Powell
Bartender (uncredited)
Lee Shumway
Diner (uncredited)
Jack Pennick
Lumberjack (uncredited)
Robert Lowery
Chicago Restaurant Patron (uncredited)
Bud Jamison
Man in Saloon (uncredited)
Hank Worden
Lumberjack (uncredited)
Stanley Blystone
Lumberjack (uncredited)
Mark Strong
Lumberjack (uncredited)
Theodore Lorch
Lumberjack (uncredited)
Ethan Laidlaw
Lumberjack (uncredited)
Paul Panzer
Lumberjack (uncredited)
Lon Poff
Lumberjack (uncredited)
Harry Tenbrook
Lumberjack (uncredited)
Howard Hawks
Director
William Wyler
Director
Jane Murfin
Writer
Jules Furthman
Writer
Edna Ferber
Writer
Samuel Goldwyn
Producer
Come and Get It Ratings & Reviews
Mister Arn
May 20, 2025
The first half of "Come and Get It" is a buddy film with a bigger-than-life character in Arnold. The second half has lots of cringeworthy moments as he sets his sights on his friend's daughter.
The New Yorker
Richard Brody
Hawks transformed Edna Ferber's historical novel into a sprawling adventure of hard-driving masculine will and a tragedy of its erotic limits.
Classic Film and Television
Michael E. Grost
Stinging look at how big business exploits and destroys Nature.
CinePassion
Fernando F. Croce
Frances Farmer as the hardened beer-hall tart is beguilingly stylized
Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews
Dennis Schwartz
Botched melodrama that's based on the novel by Edna Ferber.
New York Times
Frank S. Nugent
Although there is nothing new in the theme, it has been simply and powerfully expressed by a number of admirable performances, and it has been played against an interesting background.
EmanuelLevy.Com
Emanuel Levy
This melodrama, based on Edna Ferber's novel, is better known for its offscreen facts and scandals. It's a co-directed Oscar-winning film, which gives a rare opportunity to see the acting of Frances Farmer.
Combustible Celluloid
Jeffrey M. Anderson
This drippy material was generally not the kind of stuff that suited Hawks, but he made the best of it with the film's spirited barroom brawls and a delightful scene in which McCrea and Farmer pull taffy together.
Reel Film Reviews
David Nusair
The film may not amount to much, but it's hard to deny the entertainment value of such an over-the-top storyline.
Chicago Reader
Dave Kehr
The first part of the film, the best, is unmistakably Hawks.
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