Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThe story of Johann Strauss the elder and younger. Senior thinks little of Junior's musical abilities while Junior is torn between baker's daughter Resi and countess Helga who both contribut... Leer todoThe story of Johann Strauss the elder and younger. Senior thinks little of Junior's musical abilities while Junior is torn between baker's daughter Resi and countess Helga who both contribute to his composing the famous "Blue Danube".The story of Johann Strauss the elder and younger. Senior thinks little of Junior's musical abilities while Junior is torn between baker's daughter Resi and countess Helga who both contribute to his composing the famous "Blue Danube".
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Lady's Maid
- (as Betty Huntley Wright)
- Engine driver
- (sin créditos)
- Mme. Fouchett
- (sin créditos)
- Domeyer
- (sin créditos)
- Carl
- (sin créditos)
- Boy
- (sin créditos)
- Secretary
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
What makes this film notable is that the director is Alfred Hitchcock. Alma Reville is listed as one of the writers.
From the opening scene, the film is unusual. The film starts with a closeup of a fire team racing to a fire in a confectioner's shop. The scene is obviously fake because of the background and the fake horses. The actors jostle about and spout wisecracks. At the scene of the fire, we see a madhouse of onlookers and employees. The employees are taking tables and chairs out of the shop and setting them up in the street to avoid losing customers. The confectioner is in a panic as he tries to save a huge wedding cake. Smoke billows from the building but upstairs there is music and singing as Strauss and Rasi go through one of his compositions. The sequence is manic, full of pratfalls and sight gags.
At a dress shop across the street the countess is trying to buy a dress but the models are all watching the fire. When a bumbling fireman carries Rasi down a ladder, she tears her dress off and must run to the dress shop for clothing. She meets the countess who is asking to meet the man playing that piano. Thus begins the triangle.
Almost as a subplot, we get the adversarial relationship between the father and son since the film really focuses on the "love story." Although Hitchcock always thought this film his worst, there is much to enjoy. The pacing is brisk. The dramatic story is lightened by comic episodes. The direction is very fluid (if not florid) like the music, and the music is terrific, especially the climactic "Blue Danube" number.
Also notable are the sets. You would expect very fussy, claustrophobic rooms filled with furniture and ponderous draperies but the sets are mostly spartan, white, softly lit. In one scene the countess sits having coffee in a huge white room before huge curtainless windows. Not what you'd think of for 1850s Vienna.
The acting is uneven, with Matthews and Knight overacting and Gwenn and Compton underacting. The comic scenes are very broad and involve pratfalls into cakes, slapping, falling down stairs, etc. Yet it all seems to work.
Matthews hated this film and Hitchcock. England's premiere musical star of the time doesn't get to dance and only warbles here and there. She definitely takes a backseat to the Strauss music, but she's at her prettiest in this film. Esmond Knight's character reminded me of Marius Goring's manic composer in THE RED SHOES right down to the hair cut. Gwenn, for all his billing, gets less screen time than Matthews, Knight, and even Fay Compton.
Hitchcock described this film as "the lowest ebb of my career", and it's arguably the least-shown of his sound films, and the only one that I had not seen until now. It's not as bad as I expected, but it won't find too many fans, either. Despite some of Hitchcock's directorial flourishes popping up now and then, this movie still resembles many British productions of the time, which all seem to have a certain indefinable remoteness to them. Perhaps it's the lack of close ups or a certain flat lighting technique or just the style of acting, but I find myself rarely becoming engaged in the onscreen action. As I said though, I didn't find this movie to be a complete bore or waste of time, as some of the shooting is inventive, the costumes and sets are good, and there's the music, of course.
*** (Out of 4)
Sweet little movie which proves that masterful director can turn quite shallow script into somewhat enjoyable entertainment.
It is a fictionalised account of Johann Strauss Jr and his composition of the Danube: how the lyrics were (according to this film!) written by an upper-class countess, and how this collaboration made his girlfriend Resi jealous and how he very nearly gave it all up for her. (She wanted him to join her confectionery business because she felt left behind by his music fame.) There is also a subplot about his father - Johann Strauss Sr - refusing to countenance his work, but relenting at the end, realising that "youth marches forward".
A perfectly satisfying, nice, interesting slice of history. I wouldn't say it's a fantastic HITCHCOCK film, but it is a good film. There are some witty moments ("your mother didn't let me kiss her until six months after our wedding!", says Resi's father. "Now I know why you were 50 when you had me.")
And there's a lovely moment at the end when a young girl asks Strauss Sr for an autograph and he is genuinely humbled. He calls her back to sign "Senior", accepting that he is not the only Strauss but he does still have fans!
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIn his interview with François Truffaut in 1964, and in many other interviews, Sir Alfred Hitchcock referred to this movie as "the lowest ebb of my career."
- ErroresThe plot centers around the composition of the "Blue Danube" waltz and its place in the rivalry between Johann Strauss Jr. and his father. While the rivalry between them was real, the "Blue Danube" was composed in 1866; Johann Strauss Sr. died in 1849, and hence could not have been late to the premiere of the "Blue Danube," since he was "late" already.
- Citas
Johann Strauss, the Younger: Oh Resi, stop please, you- you must let me explain, I- Oh listen Resi, I- I'll give up my music altogether. It's the only thing to do.
Resi Ebezeder: You mean you'd really give up your music for me?
Johann Strauss, the Younger: Of course I will, you mean more to me than- than ambition or anything.
- Créditos curiososThe opening credits expounds on the source material as "the great Alhambra London success".
- ConexionesFeatured in Reputations: Hitch: Alfred the Great (1999)
- Bandas sonorasRadetsky March
Composed by Johann Strauss Sr.
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Strauss' Great Waltz
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 121
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 21 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1