Today I am continuing reviews of The Thin Man movie with Myrna Loy and William Powell.
This time around, we have the second movie, After The Thin Man. W.S. Van Dyke returned to direct the second film.
We start this sequel right where we left off at the end of the first movie.
In that movie, we ended with Nick and Nora Charles heading back to California from New York City where Nick solved a case in his old stomping grounds.
A little recap, on who Nick and Nora are. Nick is a former private detective who married Nora, an heiress. She inherited a bunch of money from her family so he now manages that money for her and has retired from being a PI.
Nora wants Nick to get back into being a private investigator again so she pushes him into helping out the family of a former client in the first movie.
The movie opens with Nick and Nora still on the train back from New York. When they get off the train, journalists are waiting for them and want to know all about the case Nick solved. Nick and Nora are exhausted, though, so they just want to get home and take a nap.
The only problem with this is that when they get back to their house a party is going on. Their staff is holding a party to welcome them home.
Even before the party is over, they still want sleep but they aren’t going to get it because Nora’s Aunt Katherine calls and asks them to come to a New Year’s Eve party at her house that night.
We soon learn that Nora’s cousin Selma needs help finding her missing husband, who is also a philandering jerk.
In this movie, we see a lot more of Nora’s family and find out that not only are they totally crazy, but they also don’t like Nick. At all.
Nick is very “common” to them and Nora’s aunt especially looks down on him.
There is a hilarious scene toward the beginning of the movie that underscores this perfectly and even had my teenager – who only watched that scene — laughing.
Nick and Nora arrive at the aunt’s house and there are a bunch of other elderly relatives there who become horrified when Katherine says Nora is coming with her husband.
“Oh my! Not him! You said you’d never invite him again!” one woman says with a gasp.
When the butler announces their arrival, Katherine reminds everyone to be nice and one woman says, “I really feel for poor Nora.”
Outside the door, Nick is grumbling and mumbling next to Nora.
Nora asks, “What are you muttering to yourself?”
Nick replies, “I’m trying to get all the bad words out of my system.”
There are so many funny moments in this one, but there is also a very intriguing, and somewhat dark mystery. You will realize how dark the mystery is when you reach the end of the movie.
This movie is also one of Jimmy Stewart’s earliest movies. He plays a close friend of Nora’s cousin. It’s interesting to see him so young and he really stretches his skills in this one, foreshadowing his future as a leading man.
Asta, the Charles’ dog, plays a bigger role in this one. The movie starts with him finding out his dog wife has cheated on him with the neighbor dog and has puppies by him. Yes…it’s a bit of an awkward bit, but Asta chases the neighbor dog back home a couple of times during the movie.
Asta’s real name was Skippy, by the way, which I mentioned in my post about The Thin Man. The dog also appeared in Bringing Up Baby with Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn and The Awful Truth with Cary Grant and Irene Dunn.
He was sometimes called Asta instead of Skippy in public appearances and in movie credits.
Skippy, a Wire Fox Terrier, portrayed Asta for the first three movies. Other Wire Fox Terriers trained by his trainers appeared in the other three movies.
Sometimes sequels to movies aren’t as good as the first one but that’s not the case for this one.
“After the Thin Man belongs on a short list of great sequels that, while recycling elements that made the original popular and worthy of a sequel in the first place, also expands on that foundation,” said Brian Eggert from Deep Focus Reviews.
Of Myrna and William Eggert wrote: “The two exude limitless chemistry and sophistication in their sharing of countless private jokes, endearing flirtations, blissful irresponsibility, deftly comic asides, and, of course, their ever-partying lifestyle, lubricated by regular doses of alcohol.”
Dashiell Hammett, who wrote the book the first movie was based on, was asked back to help husband and wife writers Albert Hackett and Frances Goodrich work on the screenplay.
Sadly, he’d started drinking in between the first and second movies and started making demands that every secondary character from the first movie be called back for the second.
That couldn’t be done since the production was moved from New York to San Francisco.
Tension then began to develop between him and the studio and he was fired.
TCM.com shares this story about Hammett and Myrna: “In her book Being and Becoming, co-written with James Kotsilibas-Davis, Loy recalls a memorable evening with the famous detective writer: “Hammett was an attractive kind of angular man, compelling and rather like the operatives of his stories. He told me that he’d fashioned Nora after his friend Lillian Hellman, which I found interesting….As we talked that evening, Dash drank heavily and began turning a little green. He went on and on about Lillian, while aiming overt passes at me, lunging and pawing, with my lover beside us….Dash could be intransigent, but, by God, they got him downstairs and sent him home in a studio car. That was a great disappointment to me, because I really wanted to talk to the man. I never got the chance again — Metro let him go soon after that. Apparently, he couldn’t handle the job.”
I thought it was weird that despite being nominated for an Oscar for writing the first movie, Hackett and Goodrich wanted to kill Nick and Nora off at the end of After The Thin Man so they wouldn’t have to write another movie in the series.
When the studio rejected this, they did something else at the end of the movie that they thought would kill the series. I won’t share what so if you haven’t seen the movie, you will be surprised.
Suffice it to say, their attempt to sabotage the series failed. The next movie, Another Thin Man, came out in 1939.
Getting Myrna and William for the sequel was a bit of a challenge because Myrna’s worth was higher by then. She’d been named Queen of the Movies since the last movie and after being paid half of what William was in the first movie she asked for a salary closer to his.
Because Myrna and William had already had four previous movie successes beyond The Thin Man movie, MGM gave her what she wanted.
Sources:
https://www.tcm.com/articles/27608/after-the-thin-man
https://crimereads.com/thin-man-movies/
https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2005/08/the-movie-review-the-thin-man/69449/
https://www.deepfocusreview.com/reviews/after-the-thin-man/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skippy_(dog)
If you want to find clips and thoughts about vintage movies and TV, you can visit me on Instagram on my Nostalgically Thinking Account (https://www.instagram.com/nostalgically_thinking/) or on my YouTube account Nostalgically and Bookishly Thinking here: https://www.youtube.com/@nostaglicandbookish

















































