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<reviews itemIdentifier="ArrangingThe">
  <review review_id="5411">
    <review_id>5411</review_id>
    <reviewbody>In which we learn that behaving as if you have obsessive-compulsive disorder is the best way to make your tea guests feel at ease. "Exactness in details helps tremendously to ensure a sense of perfection," is a direct quote. If you only own a white linen tablecloth, but not a lace or embroidered one, then you might as well throw in the towel right now, because your tea will be an excruciating failure and you will lose all your friends. Have fun!&#13;
Ratings: Camp/Humor Value: ***. Weirdness: ***. Historical Interest: ****. Overall Rating: ****.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>Arranging the Tea Table</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>Christine Hennig</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2003-07-29 15:05:02</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2003-07-29 15:05:02</createdate>
    <stars>4</stars>
  </review>
  <review review_id="5761">
    <review_id>5761</review_id>
    <reviewbody>Oh my god.&#13;
With Arranging the Buffet Table and now Arranging the Tea Table, the makers of the film reach a zenith in high strangeness educational films. Using the same characters as was in 'Buffet Table" (eg Dim Witted Lady &amp; Grey Haired Lady), the film takes a ridiculously complex approach about how to set the Tea table. Centerpiece EXACTLY in center! Candlabra alligned! Coffee urn and milk containers in the EXACT position please! Wow. In the middle, dim witted woman starts bending down. I totally thought she was bending down to grovel at the feet of Grey Haired Lady.&#13;
&#13;
But she was just getting cups.&#13;
&#13;
This is a MUST SEE on this site!</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>Watch where you put the Candlabra Missy!</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>Spuzz</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2003-08-22 07:49:58</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2003-08-22 07:49:58</createdate>
    <stars>5</stars>
  </review>
  <review review_id="5779">
    <review_id>5779</review_id>
    <reviewbody>Never have I seen etiquette presented in such an oppressive fashion (except in the companion film, "Arranging the Buffet Supper"). There are rules, rules, and still more rules (even down to arranging the silverware and stacking the cups). No wonder nobody does teas anymore!</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>Symmetry is not optional!</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>K.P. Lee</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2003-08-22 22:52:39</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2003-08-22 22:52:39</createdate>
    <stars>5</stars>
  </review>
  <review review_id="9180">
    <review_id>9180</review_id>
    <reviewbody>Obsessive compulsive personality disorder comes to the small screen!  See an old biddy teach a young biddy how to meticulously set up a tea table adhering to an endless array of petty rules.  The result is a symmetrical arrangements lacking any sense of esthetics.  As you watch this, notice that Mother Time consistently makes minor corrections to her student by moving the tableware a faction of an inch this way or that way.  Ya just wanna slap her!</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>It's just tea... GET OVER IT!</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>DrKnapp</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2004-02-04 13:21:23</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2004-02-04 13:21:23</createdate>
    <stars>3</stars>
  </review>
  <review review_id="9226">
    <review_id>9226</review_id>
    <reviewbody>Arranging the Tea Table, is a 1946 film that spells out all too depressingly the upcoming era of domesticity that characterized the 1950s. An older woman instructs a younger woman on how to arrange a formal tea party. Why would these women, who probably built tanks and flew planes during World War II just a few years earlier, waste their time on something so inane as this tea party? We are shown in excruciating detail how to choose a tablecloth, select a flowered centerpiece, place candelabras, position teapots and arrange dainty sandwiches and napkins. We see the womens lips move, but we never hear their voices, which have gone unrecorded. Instead, a male voice-over describes what the women are doing. The narrator talks a lot about the need for the women to show caring and consideration and to behave in a way that avoids accidents and embarrassments. Ostensibly, its the older woman who is in control of this pathetic tea party, but as the film goes on, one cant help thinking that the bombastic male narrator is the one who is really in charge. Obviously now that the war was over, it was time to culturally put women back in their place. Women, deprived of their voices, are the actual objects of re-arrangement in this dispiriting film.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>Arranging the Postwar Tea Table</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>Marysz</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2004-02-05 19:49:47</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2004-02-05 19:48:50</createdate>
    <stars>3</stars>
  </review>
  <review review_id="36593">
    <review_id>36593</review_id>
    <reviewbody>Anyone who has gone to a buffet or tea, and has been unable to obtain food without knocking something over or bumping into someone else trying to extract their cutlery from a disorderly pile might wish their host had watched this film.  Of course it is a product of its day, but there isn't anything here that wouldn't be taught to employees of a good, modern catering company.  My only puzzle is why the film makers thought it neccesary to make this film and the one about a buffet.  They seem almost identical.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>Good advice</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>PRG</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2005-03-29 01:57:31</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2005-03-29 01:57:31</createdate>
    <stars>3</stars>
  </review>
  <review>
    <reviewbody>Produced by the Atlanta School Board in 1946 this educational film is a wonderful bit of history.  It shows the young woman who wants to host a tea party how to correctly set the table for a formal gathering.  In the twenty-first century there are still formal occasions but very little instruction about how to conduct them or arrange for them which leaves the host/hostess having to rely on books or parents for advice.  A delightful period piece from a by-gone generation.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>Arranging the Tea Table</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>Big Boomer</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2008-04-20 19:16:39</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2008-04-20 19:16:39</createdate>
    <stars>4</stars>
  </review>
  <review>
    <reviewbody>I showed this to the Super Bowl crew that came over to watch the game before putting the snacks and finger food out. It helped a great deal. Someone lined up all the pork rinds to spell "Bite Me Cardinals" and the chips in the nachos were set up in an exact 360 around the cheese and peppers. When Duke stacked his empty Miller Lite cans next to his chair, they were perfectly grounded to the side arm.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>Arranging The Super Bowl Table</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>pkkms</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2009-02-20 21:31:57</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2009-02-20 21:31:57</createdate>
    <stars>4</stars>
  </review>
  <review>
    <reviewbody>Made in 1946, after W.W.II, there were many woman who didn't have to work and had more leisure time to do such things. Such formality is not needed in today's busy world. </reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>When ladies had time</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>ERD.</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2009-02-21 01:34:27</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2009-02-21 01:34:27</createdate>
    <stars>3</stars>
  </review>
  <info>
    <num_reviews>9</num_reviews>
    <avg_rating>3.78</avg_rating>
  </info>
</reviews>
