Agrega una trama en tu idiomaJeff is the supreme press agent who has his own private club where the rich and powerful meet and drink for free. It is free until they need him and he charges a bundle. Jeff has power, infl... Leer todoJeff is the supreme press agent who has his own private club where the rich and powerful meet and drink for free. It is free until they need him and he charges a bundle. Jeff has power, influence and a beautiful ex-wife. Things change when Jeff saves Minnie after she jumps into t... Leer todoJeff is the supreme press agent who has his own private club where the rich and powerful meet and drink for free. It is free until they need him and he charges a bundle. Jeff has power, influence and a beautiful ex-wife. Things change when Jeff saves Minnie after she jumps into the river. He gives her the fully beauty treatment and a new name, Mona Martine. He also fa... Leer todo
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Elmer - Jeff's Chauffeur
- (sin créditos)
- Attorney in Courtroom
- (sin créditos)
- Aunt Effie
- (sin créditos)
- Police Inspector Burke
- (sin créditos)
- Photographer
- (sin créditos)
- Miss Squires - Jeff's Secretary
- (sin créditos)
- Night Club Patron
- (sin créditos)
- Dress Maker with Measuring Tape
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
He's got a roving eye and wife Madge Evans left him for it. But one night on the ferry to New Jersey Montgomery jumps in the river and saves the life of a would be suicide Sally Eilers. At this point the film takes a Pygmalion like direction.
Eilers is one interesting character herself and the master manipulator gets himself used in some interesting ways. There's a key scene in the film when Eilers gets herself in a nice jackpot she let's down her hair with lawyer Joseph Cawthorn where you get a view of the real character. Takes Montgomery a bit longer to catch on.
If chronology did not label this a pre-Code film the plot would. There are a few things that Mr. Breen's book of rules would not have permitted after 1934.
Eugene Palette as Montgomery's valet is always good, but he's strangely subdued here. I always like to see more of Palette as he appears in My Man Godfrey.
Made On Broadway is a strangely forgotten film and should be better remembered. It definitely could be remade today.
This is a typical B-feature. It's something made just to fill the cinema screen whilst the audience were settling into their seats preparing for the main feature. Being MGM, it's got high quality production values but no great effort has gone into this to make it stand out. Maybe if it had been made by Warner Brothers, who specialised in short, high impact pictures, it might have had more punch - you can imagine James Cagney relishing a role like this.
As has already been commented, the story is similar to CHICAGO/ROXIE HART. That's true but because Sally Eilers' suicidal protagonist is so unpleasant, she's much more like Mae Busch in Laurel and Hardy's COME CLEAN (the one with the chocolate ice cream!) COME CLEAN is however a comedy - this isn't but neither is it a serious drama. You don't feel like you know the characters. You're told what they're doing but we don't really know why and how. Depth and evocative thought were not high on the tick list for most MGM supporting features, they were just an hour of attractive people playing out a simple story.
Jeff Bidwell (Robert Montgomery) was a fixer. He charged top dollar to make corrupt politicians look good. One of his biggest challenges wouldn't be a politician at all but a regular woman he saved from drowning.
When Mona Martine (Sally Eilers) attempted suicide by jumping from a boat, Jeff dove in and saved her. Then he really saved her. He made her his own project. He would clean her up, educate and culture her, then release her upon the world.
"Made on Broadway" was a decent movie for a lazy weekend. The characters were just interesting enough as was the plot. The performances weren't powerful nor did the story have me at the edge of my seat. It had enough of my positive attention and that's a plus.
Free on Odnoklassniki.
But at this time, Screwball was BOUDU SAVED FROM DROWNING, and the Production Code hadn't closed down the sex comedy, which is what made the American screwball comedy. So this movie about how ace press agent Robert Montgomery saves Sally Eilers from committing suicide by jumping off the Staten Island Ferry, makes her the toast of the town and then orchestrates her defense after she shoots someone just misses.
Montgomery is perfect, exuding an air of genial, self-aware corruption, but everyone else seems to be taking matters far too seriously, even the old ladies he hires to pose as Eiler's sniveling aunts in the courtroom.
MGM's Harry Beaumont, their resident expert on making bricks without straw and stars without talent somehow fails... Eilers lacks the subtlety and range for her role, which weights down this work. Madge Evans is present and steady, but the entire movie lacks the sense of madness that infuses screwball. Ah well. Good try.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaJohn Miljan is in studio records/casting call lists for the role of "Tucker," but he did not appear in the movie. Raymond Hatton was reported to be in the cast by Film Daily, but he was not seen either.
- Citas
Jeff Bidwell: Careful, Mike; careful! You are speaking of the lady I almost loved.
Terwilliger: The dames *you've* almost loved would read from here to Chicago--laid end to end.
Jeff Bidwell: [thinks this over a moment] What a...quaint expression.
- Bandas sonorasMy Country 'Tis of Thee
(1832) (uncredited)
Music by Lowell Mason
Based on the Music by Henry Carey from "God Save the King" (1744)
Hummed by Claire Du Brey and Robert Montgomery
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 8min(68 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1