Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA woman who owns a boarding house winds up being the "mother hen" to the assorted mobsters and racketeers who live there. Her foster son takes the blame for a murder that was actually commit... Leer todoA woman who owns a boarding house winds up being the "mother hen" to the assorted mobsters and racketeers who live there. Her foster son takes the blame for a murder that was actually committed by his girlfriend. When he's released, her boarding-house pals decide to try to help h... Leer todoA woman who owns a boarding house winds up being the "mother hen" to the assorted mobsters and racketeers who live there. Her foster son takes the blame for a murder that was actually committed by his girlfriend. When he's released, her boarding-house pals decide to try to help her out in order to keep his girlfriend's reputation isn't spoiled.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Mobster
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- John Nedlog
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- Mobster
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- Chippy's Henchman
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- Mobster
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- Policeman
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- Chorus Girl
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- Man in Courthouse Corridor
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- Chippy's Pal
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- Mobster
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Opiniones destacadas
The Remainder of the Film is Not so Exciting as it Clunks along with Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Stiffly going about His usual Non-Acting Performance. Miss Dove is a Curvaceous Creature and Her Wares are on Display but even Her Beauty can't stop Helen from Stealing the Picture.
Heavily Melodramatic as these Embryonic transitional Movies Tend, it is still Worth a Watch for its Fancy Cinematography and a Powerful Central Figure of a Female Mobster.
In its present condition, "One Night at Susie's" runs just over an hour, normal for lower range productions of the period. However, the running time given most often is that of just under 90 minutes - more of a top "Warner Bros-First National" production. The personnel suggests the longer running time, which would indicate substantial missing footage. Since Helen Ware appears to be the star, rather than Billie Dove, it could be that Ms. Dove's part diminished. Dove has a fly crawl on her white hat and coat during her character's first visit to "Sing Sing" prison; since nobody ordered re-takes, perhaps Dove and/or the film got demoted...
A "box office" star during the late 1920s, Dove was improving after a tenuous transition from "silent" pictures. The very busy namesake son of superstar Douglas Fairbanks gets make-up and lighting help. Veteran character actor Tully Marshall (as Buckeye Bill) has fun playing with Ware. Most renowned on stage, this is Ware's story. Director John Francis Dillon moves the play around Ware's mysterious character. Kicking the film up a notch is photographer Ernest Haller. Beginning with Fairbanks' solo work scenes, Mr. Haller engages the viewer with interesting angles and focus. The courtroom scene is a most unusual highlight.
****** One Night at Susie's (10/19/30) John Francis Dillon ~ Helen Ware, Billie Dove, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Tully Marshall
This is a bizarre film. Much of it is because the plot really doesn't make a lot of sense...even for an early talking picture. Additionally, the ending is VERY abrupt and not executed terribly well. As a result of these things and a bit of overacting, it's certainly not an especially good movie. Watchable but that's all.
J F Dillon had been directing silent movies for ages and perhaps he had just got so used to that style of acting that he thought it should be used in the talkies as well? Two years after making this he made the excellent CALL HER SAVAGE, so he did know how to direct a talking picture - unfortunately he doesn't demonstrate any of that skill with this. This is one of those films you get in documentaries showing how difficult it was for some directors to adapt to sound. It's glacially slow - each line is excruciatingly dragged out of the actors as though they are addressing an unfriendly political meeting. There's no natural pace, nobody acts like real people do - they're just actors walking to the middle of the stage where they then deliver their lines.
There's absolutely zero engagement with any of the characters, you couldn't care less about what happens to them because they're not real. Billie Dove, Howard Hughes' latest squeeze, is pleasant enough but she's not particularly memorable. Also making hardly any waves of interest is Douglas Fairbanks Jr - in a few months' time, Mervyn LeRoy would show the world that Fairbanks could act in his LITTLE CAESAR but in this he's less than one dimensional with as much depth and personality as a shadow on a grey slab of concrete. With the bizarre make-up needed for the bright lights, he spends most of this movie looking like a grinning simpleton that someone has given two black eyes to. The only person who does make an impression is the eponymous Susie played by Helen Ware....but it's not a good impression - she is truly terrible! If you want an example of being stagey, over-theatrical and plain awful, look no further. She makes a rather bad film a very bad film.
There is however a couple minutes of brilliance in this and that's the famous court room scene. Presumably they thought that after half an hour all their audience would have fallen asleep so soon to be superstar cameraman, Ernest Haller and J F Dillon had a bash at that expressionist malarkey whilst nobody was looking. Those few dreamlike minutes of shadows disturb you from your comfort creating a jolting sense of isolation, uncertainty and fear of the unknown. You will certainly sit up and start to think you're watching something very interesting but this flash of brilliance is sadly just a flash - it then reverts back to its dull lugubrious pace.
In ONE NIGHT AT SUSIE'S she plays a showgirl who gets involved with a young man (Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.) despite his mother's disapproval. The real trouble is that the mother (Helen Ware) is head of a mob although she has kept her son out of the rackets.
He writes a sketch that Dove gets into a show but she falls into the clutches of a lecherous producer. In an attempted rape, she kills him, but Fairbanks takes the rap to protect her. She goes free and becomes a minor star in the show. Fairbanks writes a full play and she hawks it all over town. When she realizes that his writing is the only thing keeping him alive in prison, she makes a tawdry deal with another producer to get the play into production. She becomes a star.
The mother, of course, is fully aware of all this but realizes that Dove's motives are good. When Fairbanks is finally released from prison, the mobster mother decides to clear the way for her son and daughter in law to have a happy life.
The three stars are good. Dove has a pleasant voice and never overacts. Co-stars include Tully Marshall, John Loder, and James Crane. Dove retired from films in 1932 after finishing BLONDIE OF THE FOLLIES with Marion Davies and Robert Montgomery.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIn a separately filmed trailer, Vitaphone production reel #4032, Billie Dove and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. speak to the audience about the picture.
- ErroresIn the first scene between Mary and Dick in the visiting room at Sing Sing, a fly quite visibly alights and walks across Mary's light colored hat. Neigher principal takes note of its presence.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Mia erotiki nykta
- Locaciones de filmación
- Sing Sing Penitentiary - 354 Hunter Street, Ossining, Nueva York, Estados Unidos(establishing shots)
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 2min(62 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1