What Families Love

Just for Mom

160x600
Disney Baby Little Character Contest

Movie Review: Irving Berlin's Easter Parade (1948)

Charming love story plus great song and dance.
From our provider: CommonSenseMedia
Common Sense Rating:  for ages 6+ Stars: 5 out of 5 (About Common Sense Ratings)
MPAA Rating: NR  Studio: MGM/UA Directed By: Charles Walters  Cast: Fred Astaire, Judy Garland, Peter Lawford  Running Time: 104 min  Release Date: 07/08/1948  DVD Release Date: 03/15/2005 Genre: Musical 

What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that this light movie contains no truly worrisome content. Kids might learn that reinventing yourself for someone else can be a costly compromise of your individuality.

  • Families can talk about formulaic storylines. Does this movie follow the typical boy-meets-girl blueprint? Were there any unexpected plot twists?

After Don Hewes (Fred Astaire) loses his partner (Ann Miller) to the lure of a solo career, the renowned dancer spots pretty chorus line member Hannah (Judy Garland) and vows to mold her into Nadine's equal within a year -- in time for the big Fifth Avenue Easter Parade. Hannah needs work, so they work, but their act just doesn't fly. When Don stops trying to force his ex-partner's style on Hannah and allows her to be herself, the two finally form a true creative partnership. Things get complicated when Don's friend Johnny (Peter Lawford) falls in love with Hannah, because Hannah's in love with Don, and Don, it seems, is still carrying a flame for Nadine. But this is no tragic opera, it's an MGM musical. Things are bound to work out in the end.

Loaded with great Irving Berlin songs, this 1948 spectacular will grab children with its wholesome, uncomplicated story and mesmerize adults with its pairing of superstar talents in their sole screen appearance together."The Happiest Musical Ever Made," EASTER PARADE's promotional trailer declares, and director Charles Walters appears to have put in plenty of overtime trying to live up to that grand promise. He gives us Oscar-winning musical scoring, inventive choreography, and plenty of Irving Berlin songs.

But what really makes this movie sing and dance is the once-in-a-lifetime pairing of Fred Astaire and Judy Garland. Whether cane-twirling to "Steppin' Out with My Baby" or reeling through a toy store pounding on every drum in sight, Astaire is mesmerizing. Beside him, Judy Garland is absolutely radiant -- and that's not just the Technicolor. For family entertainment, this is a hard one to beat. It's spirited, easily digestible, and fun. Don't worry about that sticky love situation; it resolves without much fuss, and all in time for the big Easter Parade.

Singin' in the Rain
Oklahoma!
Meet Me in St. Louis



Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.
empty star empty star empty star empty star empty star Rate This Article
Print

Member Comments On...

Movie Review: Irving Berlin's Easter Parade (1948)

Be the first person to add your comment.

Spring Into Ideas

Enjoy the sun and let your imagination soar.
300x250

The Possibility Shop

300x250
null data...
promoObjectId (null)
promoObject.title ()
promoObject.contentType ()
promoWidth ()
promoHeight ()
promoContainerId (editorialPromo3)
promoCSS (on_travelTips_aggregate)
this displays when the floating stack report is on
728x90
Please log in ...
Close
You must be logged in to use this feature.

Thank You!

Thank you for helping us maintain a friendly, high quality community at Family.com. This comment will be reviewed by a community moderator.

Flag as Not Acceptable?

We review flagged content and enforce our Terms of Use, in which content must never be:

See full Terms of Use.