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Monte Carlo

  • 1930
  • Approved
  • 1h 30min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,6/10
1,6 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Jack Buchanan in Monte Carlo (1930)
ComedyMusicalRomance

Una condesa huye a Montecarlo el día de su boda, donde es cortejada por un conde que se hace pasar por peluquero.Una condesa huye a Montecarlo el día de su boda, donde es cortejada por un conde que se hace pasar por peluquero.Una condesa huye a Montecarlo el día de su boda, donde es cortejada por un conde que se hace pasar por peluquero.

  • Dirección
    • Ernst Lubitsch
  • Guión
    • Ernest Vajda
    • Hans Müller
    • Booth Tarkington
  • Reparto principal
    • Jeanette MacDonald
    • Jack Buchanan
    • Claud Allister
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,6/10
    1,6 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Ernst Lubitsch
    • Guión
      • Ernest Vajda
      • Hans Müller
      • Booth Tarkington
    • Reparto principal
      • Jeanette MacDonald
      • Jack Buchanan
      • Claud Allister
    • 34Reseñas de usuarios
    • 22Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 3 premios en total

    Imágenes37

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    Reparto principal30

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    Jeanette MacDonald
    Jeanette MacDonald
    • Countess Helene Mara
    Jack Buchanan
    Jack Buchanan
    • Count Rudolph Farriere
    Claud Allister
    Claud Allister
    • Duke Otto von Liebenheim
    Zasu Pitts
    Zasu Pitts
    • Bertha
    Tyler Brooke
    Tyler Brooke
    • Armand
    John Roche
    John Roche
    • Paul
    Lionel Belmore
    Lionel Belmore
    • Prince Gustav von Liebenheim
    Albert Conti
    Albert Conti
    • Master of Ceremonies
    Helen Garden
    • Lady Mary
    Donald Novis
    Donald Novis
    • Monsieur Beaucaire
    Erik Bey
    • Lord Winderset
    David Percy
    David Percy
    • Herald
    Max Barwyn
    Max Barwyn
    • Frenchman
    • (sin acreditar)
    Billy Bevan
    Billy Bevan
    • Train Conductor
    • (sin acreditar)
    Symona Boniface
    Symona Boniface
    • Opera Chorus Singer
    • (sin acreditar)
    Sidney Bracey
    Sidney Bracey
    • Hunchback at Casino
    • (sin acreditar)
    John Carroll
    John Carroll
    • Wedding Guest Officer
    • (sin acreditar)
    Margaret Carthew
    Margaret Carthew
    • Opera Chorus Singer
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Ernst Lubitsch
    • Guión
      • Ernest Vajda
      • Hans Müller
      • Booth Tarkington
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios34

    6,61.5K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    8dave-2395

    Beyond the Blue Horizon

    This time it's the beautiful and witty early Jeanette MacDonald, before Nelson Eddy came along - in an unusual Lubitsch romantic comedy musical! A high society romp involving financially embarrassed Countess Helene (Jeanette MacDonald) bolting during a wedding to stuffy but rich Duke Otto (Claude Allister). Her idea is to escape to Monte Carlo and gamble herself back into the upper circles, without depending on men in her life. It doesn't work out, due to many twists of the wheel as well as the plot, involving Count Rudolph (Jack Buchanan) - and Duke Otto - now both after her. Lots of sophisticated laughs at the antics of the high-born, sort of verbal slapstick. And some great music too, even beyond the blue horizon!
    Kalaman

    Beyond the Blue Horizon is the highlight!

    Though a bit flawed, "Monte Carlo" is still one of Ernst Lubitsch's most dynamic and inventive musicals. A follow-up to Lubitsch's delightful "The Love Parade", "Monte Carlo" regains Jeanette MacDonald but unfortunately it lacks Maurice Chevalier whose Gallic, continental charm was one of the things that made "Love Parade" (and also Lubitsch's later sublime musicals - "The Smiling Lieutenant", "One Hour with You" and "The Merry Widow") such a joy to watch.

    Still, it has one priceless musical number: Jeanette MacDonald rendition of "Beyond the Blue Horizon" while riding a train - a sequence so inventive and spectacular that you forget the rest of the film. It is powerful enough to make the whole countryside alive with song and elation. The song will stick with you long after you completed watching the film.

    Frank Tashlin pays an homage to this sequence in his hilarious 1956 musical "Hollywood or Bust": a number called "A Day in the Country", a duet between Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis.
    9lugonian

    The Countess of Monte Carlo

    MONTE CARLO (Paramount, 1930), directed by Ernst Lubitsch, starring Jack Buchanan and Jeanette MacDonald, is a witty, sophisticated musical comedy with continental charm, which at times resembles some of the latter films starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers for RKO Radio. Lubitsch, who had recently scored a big hit with MacDonald in THE LOVE PARADE (Paramount, 1929), once again uses her to good advantage, presenting this promo dona as not only a good singer, but a fine comedienne. Although MacDonald would be charmed by Chevalier's smile in three more musicals, this would be her only venture opposite the British import of Jack Buchanan, whose career in early Hollywood musicals (1929-1930), would be short-lived. Although debonair, he failed to click with American audiences, and would spend most of his career in his native England on both stage and screen. Maybe his occasional but sometimes annoying laugh in this production might have found 1930s audiences finding that he is no threat to Chevalier's charm and smile, but on and all, he gets by. Today, Buchanan is best known for his latter Hollywood role supporting Fred Astaire and Nanette Fabray in the lavish Technicolor 1953 musical, THE BAND WAGON.

    The story begins during a rain storm where a wedding is about to take place. The stuffy Prince Otto Von Leibeneheim (Claude Allister), the husband-to-be, is awaiting at the church for his future bride, Countess Helene Mara. As the choir sings, Otto receives a "Dear John" letter from Vera, making this the third time that he has been stood up by her. The next scene finds Vera, still wearing her wedding gown, accompanied by her maid, Bertha (ZaSu Pitts), running to catch the next train. Because she is down to her last francs, she decides to make her next stop to Monte Carlo and try her luck at the gambling tables, with much success. While there, she encounters Count Rudolph Fallieres (Jack Buchanan), a ladies man who becomes interested in her. Feeling that caressing her hair will bring him luck at the gambling tables, Rudy succeeds in keeping his identity a secret and getting her to hire him as her hairdresser, later promoted to be her personal servant and chauffeur. Eventually love blossoms, until Prince Otto locates her.

    Being mainly a production that consists only of singing, with music and lyrics by Richard Whiting, W. Franke Harling and Leo Robin, the tune fest musical program is as follows: "Day by Day" (sung by church choir); "She'll Love Me and Like It" (sung by Claude Allister and wedding guests); "Beyond the Blue Horizon" (sung by Jeanette MacDonald); "Give Me a Moment Please" (sung by Jack Buchanan and Jeanette MacDonald); "Trimmin' the Women" (sung by Buchanan, Tyler Brooke and John Roche); "Whatever It Is, It's Grand" (sung by Buchanan and MacDonald); "She'll Love Me and Like It" (reprise by Claude Allister, sung by MacDonald); "Always in All Ways" (sung by Buchanan and MacDonald); "Give Me a Moment Please" (reprise by Buchanan); "Always in All Ways," "Monsieur Beauclair Opera Sequence" (with selections sung by Donald Novis); and "Beyond the Blue Horizon." In spite of "Beyond the Blue Horizon" being the film's most remembered and admired song, the one that would obviously get an Academy Award nomination had the Best Song category been around in 1930, "Always in All Ways" is also a delightful tune that shouldn't go without mention. It's even the underscore heard during the movie's opening screen credits and closing THE END logo.

    MONTE CARLO also includes a running gag throughout the story in which some members of the cast tell each other a riddle: "She comes from a wedding, she has nothing on, she left her husband behind, she has no ticket, she has no idea where she wants to go, and she goes to Monte Carlo. How old is the husband?" Eventually, when this riddle reaches poor Otto, it slowly but finally dawns on him that it's pertaining to Vera and himself when he goes to tell this same riddle to another.

    Regardless, MONTE CARLO, looks strictly modern with its lavish sets and advanced camera technique. In fact, it looks even better than the previous Lubitsch/MacDonald collaboration of THE LOVE PARADE or anything else from 1929. The only slow spot is the final ten minutes set during its prolonged opera theater sequence, but otherwise, a grand show not to be missed. If the story and leading man are forgettable, the sequence where MacDonald sings "Beyond the Blue Horizon" from her window of the train while looking at the countryside, with others such as farmers joining in the rendition as the train passes by them, will remain in memory long after the movie is over. Seldom broadcast since New York City's public television showing on WNET's Cinema 13 during the 1980s, MONTE CARLO has turned up on DVD around 2009 before having its long overdue cable television broadcast on Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere: December 21, 2012). How fortunate that this, among many films of the early sound era, have not to be among the "lost" movies from that bygone era. (****)
    7fwmurnau

    Minor Lubitsch, fun at times

    Even minor Lubitsch rates a 7. His comedic sensibility was unique in its poetry and effortless sophistication.

    One doesn't expect an iron-clad plot in musical comedy, but MONTE CARLO's fails to fulfill even the minimal requirements of the genre. It simply makes no sense and creates no tension, erotic or otherwise. A nobleman falls for a runaway countess, and for absolutely no reason he pretends to be a commoner for the duration of the film.

    Lubitsch is normally so good at plot construction, it's surprising that this one is so flat. Zasu Pitts, who can be so delightful, makes no impression here. Even the dialogue discouragingly fails to sparkle.

    The film's other problem is the leading man, Jack Buchanan, who simply doesn't come across well on-camera and has absolutely no chemistry with MacDonald. Compared to the robust, lusty Maurice Chevalier in other Lubitsch/MacDonald films, Buchanan here is fey and sexless. MacDonald does her best, though, and acquits herself well.

    No Lubitsch film is without its pleasures. It's worth seeing, but it's no MERRY WIDOW.
    7Spondonman

    The son of a gun ain't nothing but a Count

    This was Jeanette Macdonald's 4th film in all and 2nd for director Ernst Lubitsch – both getting into their sound-stride and both with many classics still ahead of them, after all – their lives had only begun. Print quality on the DVD is marvellous for a 1930 film, making me wonder why it was never shown on UK TV in the days when they used to cater for people like me.

    In the gambling dens of Monte Carlo Countess Jeanette pretends to be rich when she's poor and the guy who fancies her, Count Jack, pretends to be poor when he's rich so as to be her hairdresser. Later famous variations in Paramount films were with Chevalier as her (nothing but a) tailor unintentionally masquerading as a Baron in Love Me Tonight directed by Mamoulian and the fake Baron and Countess in the sublime Trouble In Paradise directed by Lubitsch. The story goes in a few unexpected directions but ultimately all's well that ends well – this was the Golden Age of course. Out of the seven songs only Beyond The Blue Horizon and Always In All Ways were truly memorable, but all were listenable to and pleasant. Zazu Pitts was as sadly underused as Jeanette's maid as was Barbara Leonard as Mitzi's in One Hour With You and Jack Buchanan managed to keep it a dark secret why he was such a big star; the film only lost a little momentum at the opera but overall everything worked well. The sets and costumes were relentlessly beautiful – in fact an extremely colourful black and white. Jeanette looked radiant with her gorgeous hair – Roll Over Madonna!

    A lovely little film and a window on 1930 – it's not a classic but it was another building block for those to come from Paramount in the next few years.

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    Sinfonías del corazón
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    El forajido
    6,6
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    Argumento

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    • Curiosidades
      The song "Beyond the Blue Horizon," introduced here, became Jeanette MacDonald's theme song for the rest of her life. During World War Ii she changed the line, "Beyond the blue horizon lies the rising sun" to " ... lies the shining sun" because the Rising Sun was the symbol of America's enemy, Japan.
    • Pifias
      Jeanette MacDonald is referred to as a blonde early on in the dialogue. She was actually a redhead, and no attempt was made to lighten her hair to make her look blonde. Her hair photographed the dark grey red hair usually reproduced as on the black-and-white film used in 1930.
    • Citas

      Train Conductor: Are you the lady who jumped on this train after we had started?

      Countess Helene Mara: Yes, and I shall complain about it. Trains don't go until I get on them!

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Legendy mirovogo kino: Jeanette MacDonald
    • Banda sonora
      Beyond The Blue Horizon
      (uncredited)

      Music by Richard A. Whiting and W. Franke Harling

      Lyrics by Leo Robin

      Sung by Jeanette MacDonald

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 27 de agosto de 1930 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Francés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Монте-Карло
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(Studio)
    • Empresa productora
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 726.465 US$ (estimación)
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      1 hora 30 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White

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