Añade un argumento en tu idiomaMargie Blake, who wants to get married young and have two dozen kids, has a flat tire and traveling salesman Tom Wilson, who believes in "loving 'em and leaving 'em" stops to help.Margie Blake, who wants to get married young and have two dozen kids, has a flat tire and traveling salesman Tom Wilson, who believes in "loving 'em and leaving 'em" stops to help.Margie Blake, who wants to get married young and have two dozen kids, has a flat tire and traveling salesman Tom Wilson, who believes in "loving 'em and leaving 'em" stops to help.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
Edward Gargan
- Chuck
- (as Ed Gargan)
Carlyle Blackwell Jr.
- Hotel Guest
- (sin acreditar)
Marjorie Deanne
- Hotel Guest
- (sin acreditar)
Joseph Depew
- Elevator Boy
- (sin acreditar)
Dudley Dickerson
- Hotel Janitor
- (sin acreditar)
Jack Egan
- Hotel Guest
- (sin acreditar)
Bud Geary
- Man Driving Goose Truck
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
This appears to be two movies spliced into one. In the first, ZaSu Pitts is a renegade in a small town. She wants to help the romantic life of Marjorie Woodworth. OK: I'd never heard of her before either. But she and Pitts are in both parts of this concoction.
Before we know it, Pitts is no longer Miss {Polly. She is Emmie. I had to rewind to see if I'd fallen asleep somewhere. I hadn't. She no longer in a small town but on her way to the title Honeymoon destination.
The movie has some cute moments. The first part is better, with roles for what seems to be every third-rate character actress working in Hollywood at the time.
And what of Ms. Woolworth? She sounds a little like Betty Hutton. She sounds a little like Marie Wilson. She's pretty, certainly. But she's no comedienne.
Pitts often was used in very small roles. Here she has the largest role. She's always fun, though this movie made me wonder if a little of her doesn't go quite a long way. (As a comic. When she was a tragic actress in Von Stroheim silents -- "The Wedding March" and Greed" are the two I have seen -- she was brilliant.)
Before we know it, Pitts is no longer Miss {Polly. She is Emmie. I had to rewind to see if I'd fallen asleep somewhere. I hadn't. She no longer in a small town but on her way to the title Honeymoon destination.
The movie has some cute moments. The first part is better, with roles for what seems to be every third-rate character actress working in Hollywood at the time.
And what of Ms. Woolworth? She sounds a little like Betty Hutton. She sounds a little like Marie Wilson. She's pretty, certainly. But she's no comedienne.
Pitts often was used in very small roles. Here she has the largest role. She's always fun, though this movie made me wonder if a little of her doesn't go quite a long way. (As a comic. When she was a tragic actress in Von Stroheim silents -- "The Wedding March" and Greed" are the two I have seen -- she was brilliant.)
Being a fan of ZaSu Pitts comedies, I thought this one looked like it was worth a try. I was quite disappointed.
(The version I saw was on TCM, but consisted only of the Niagara Falls movie; the Miss Polly movie was absent.) The talents of the actors, who give fine performances, is wasted on one of the stupidest stories I have ever had the misfortune of sitting through.
Tom Brown (Tom Wilson) surprised me by being the strongest actor in the show, but the spotlight is hogged by Slim Summerville (Sam Sawyer), who, if he has any talent, didn't demonstrate it here.
ZaSu Pitts (Elly Sawyer) is great, but doesn't have near big enough a part. The biggest laugh in the movie is when she ends up under Sam under a table.
The only one in the movie who has any sense at all is Tom Wilson. Margie (Marjorie Woodworth) is unreasonable in general. While she is physically quite attractive, her personality and attitudes make her completely undesirable. Elly, Sam, and the hotel desk clerk are just complete fools.
Sam and Elly give up their honeymoon suite in the crowded hotel for Tom and Margie. But then they take it back. Sam ends up imprisoning Tom and Margie in their room. Most of the movie is them trying to break out, but Sam, using a rifle, always puts them back again.
Towards the end comes the worst part. Tom, who is finally about to make good his escape, runs into a minister on a lower floor of the hotel. Now the guy, who, as I said, is the only one in the whole movie who has a head on his shoulders, suddenly, for absolutely no reason at all, decides he has to marry Margie!
He drags the minister up to the room he has just escaped from, but Margie doesn't want to marry him. He gives her a kiss, and now, after one kiss, she feels compelled to marry him.
Finally, Sam has the nerve to say to Tom, "You deceived me," when practically the only line Tom had to Sam earlier was, "We're not married," to which Sam replied, "You think I'd believe that?"
Idiotic.
(The version I saw was on TCM, but consisted only of the Niagara Falls movie; the Miss Polly movie was absent.) The talents of the actors, who give fine performances, is wasted on one of the stupidest stories I have ever had the misfortune of sitting through.
Tom Brown (Tom Wilson) surprised me by being the strongest actor in the show, but the spotlight is hogged by Slim Summerville (Sam Sawyer), who, if he has any talent, didn't demonstrate it here.
ZaSu Pitts (Elly Sawyer) is great, but doesn't have near big enough a part. The biggest laugh in the movie is when she ends up under Sam under a table.
The only one in the movie who has any sense at all is Tom Wilson. Margie (Marjorie Woodworth) is unreasonable in general. While she is physically quite attractive, her personality and attitudes make her completely undesirable. Elly, Sam, and the hotel desk clerk are just complete fools.
Sam and Elly give up their honeymoon suite in the crowded hotel for Tom and Margie. But then they take it back. Sam ends up imprisoning Tom and Margie in their room. Most of the movie is them trying to break out, but Sam, using a rifle, always puts them back again.
Towards the end comes the worst part. Tom, who is finally about to make good his escape, runs into a minister on a lower floor of the hotel. Now the guy, who, as I said, is the only one in the whole movie who has a head on his shoulders, suddenly, for absolutely no reason at all, decides he has to marry Margie!
He drags the minister up to the room he has just escaped from, but Margie doesn't want to marry him. He gives her a kiss, and now, after one kiss, she feels compelled to marry him.
Finally, Sam has the nerve to say to Tom, "You deceived me," when practically the only line Tom had to Sam earlier was, "We're not married," to which Sam replied, "You think I'd believe that?"
Idiotic.
At Niagara Falls, oil tycoon Slim Summerville (as Sam Sawyer) attempts suicide but is stopped by peanut vendor Tommy Mack. We flashback to view his story
Though older than most newlyweds, Mr. Summerville and bride Zasu Pitts (as Emmy) are on their way to a hotel. They meet younger couple Marjorie Woodworth (as Margy Blake) and Tom Brown (as Tom Wilson) on the road, with car trouble. At the "Falls View Hotel", Ms. Pitts wants to have sex with her groom, but Summerville becomes involved with Ms. Woodworth and Mr. Brown. Summerville thinks the other couple is bickering, and endeavors to reunite them. But Woodworth and Brown are not even married. It's all silly, but short.
**** Niagara Falls (10/17/41) Gordon Douglas ~ Slim Summerville, Marjorie Woodworth, Tom Brown, Zasu Pitts
**** Niagara Falls (10/17/41) Gordon Douglas ~ Slim Summerville, Marjorie Woodworth, Tom Brown, Zasu Pitts
I have been watching lot of 30s and 40s classics. I came across this and this was so much fun. If you are ok with appreciating the values more than 8 decades ago, I think this is so much fun as a screwball comedy of errors.
This was a laugh riot from start to finish. All the characters- the young "couple", the old couple and the hotel manager were all very funny.
Too many people are bothered that this doesn't seem to be shot in Niagara Falls. I don't know if people were expecting this as a romantic movie based in the Niagara Falls. This is just a sweet and funny comedy. Best 40 minutes of my time spent.
This was a laugh riot from start to finish. All the characters- the young "couple", the old couple and the hotel manager were all very funny.
Too many people are bothered that this doesn't seem to be shot in Niagara Falls. I don't know if people were expecting this as a romantic movie based in the Niagara Falls. This is just a sweet and funny comedy. Best 40 minutes of my time spent.
First I want to start by saying that Niagara Falls is lovely even in black and white. Zasu Pitts and Slim Somerville play anxious newlyweds Sam and Emmy Sawyer...a farmer and a farmer's daughter who have wanted to marry for twenty years and finally did it. They arrive at the beautiful Niagara Falls misunderstanding a bickering young couple for newlyweds like themselves, Sam gives them their honeymoon suite thinking it will help solve their problems. Not only are the two not married but they don't get along, which they found out on the road where they met over a flat tire.
"Get away from me you wolf! You picked the wrong little red riding hood."
"Why I wouldn't pick you up if I was starving and you were a ham sandwich!"
He is a young bachelor enjoying being young and playing the field..."he who loves and leaves learns to love another day"...and she wants to get married young and have "oodles and oodles of children" with no divorce.
Misunderstandings abound as everyone thinks the young bickering couple is married...Sam goes so far as to lock them in the honeymoon suite together thinking this will help them work out their differences.
This was so great! Good comedy and an underlining love story. It's a short...and I just wanted more!
"Get away from me you wolf! You picked the wrong little red riding hood."
"Why I wouldn't pick you up if I was starving and you were a ham sandwich!"
He is a young bachelor enjoying being young and playing the field..."he who loves and leaves learns to love another day"...and she wants to get married young and have "oodles and oodles of children" with no divorce.
Misunderstandings abound as everyone thinks the young bickering couple is married...Sam goes so far as to lock them in the honeymoon suite together thinking this will help them work out their differences.
This was so great! Good comedy and an underlining love story. It's a short...and I just wanted more!
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis is one of the "streamliners" produced by Hal Roach in the '40s. He thought this new format of short features running roughly 45 minutes was the wave of the future. He was so sure that he discontinued the Our Gang and Laurel & Hardy series.
- PifiasWhen Slim Summerville is pulled off Zazu at about the 24-minute mark, she yells, 'Slim' instead of calling him by his character name, Sam.
- ConexionesFollowed by Miss Polly (1941)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- No Paraíso dos Noivos
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 105.770 US$ (estimación)
- Duración43 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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