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The Sin of Harold Diddlebock is a 1947 American comedy film written and directed by Preston Sturges, starring the silent film comic icon Harold Lloyd, and featuring a supporting cast including female protagonist Frances Ramsden, Jimmy Conlin, Raymond Walburn, Rudy Vallee, Arline Judge, Edgar Kennedy, Franklin Pangborn, J. Farrell ...
- $1,712,959 (est.), or $2.4 million
- Preston Sturges, Howard Hughes, (both uncredited)
- Werner R. Heymann, Harry Rosenthal (uncredited)
- Harold Lloyd
4.7K views 2 years ago. Watch the 1947 Hollywood classic movie, The Sin of Harold Diddlebock aka Mad Wednesday. Twenty years after his triumphs as a freshman on the football field, Harold...
- 89 min
- 4,8K
- Hollywood Classics
While a disappointing whole (it was re-issued in 1950 in a shortened version renamed MAD Wednesday), the film does contain a number of undeniable gems: his romantic attachment to every female member of one particular family (all of whom happen to work for the same firm over a 20-year period); his first encounter with Conlin, with the two of ...
- (1,7K)
- Comedy
- Preston Sturges
- 1947-04-04
Meglio un mercoledì da leone ( The Sin of Harold Diddlebock) è un film del 1947 scritto e diretto da Preston Sturges che lo produsse insieme a Howard Hughes. È l'ultimo film interpretato dal grande comico Harold Lloyd . Indice. 1 Trama. 2 Il film. 3 Riconoscimenti. 4 Voci correlate. 5 Altri progetti. 6 Collegamenti esterni. Trama.
- The Sin of Harold Diddlebock
- inglese
Director Preston Sturges coaxed legendary silent comedian Harold Lloyd out of retirement to star in The Sin of Harold Diddlebock (1947, aka Mad Wednesday), a film that he wrote with Lloyd in mind.
- Preston Sturges, Barton Adams
- Harold Lloyd
Mad Wednesday. Let go from his job, unmarried and with little money in his pocket, Harold Diddlebock (Harold Lloyd) needs a life makeover. He receives one thanks to a powerful drink served by a...
- Comedy
Though it tested well upon its first release, Sin of Harold Diddlebock was abruptly withdrawn from circulation by its co-producer Howard R. Hughes, who spent four years reediting and sometimes reshooting the film before finally releasing it through RKO as Mad Wednesday.