Un detective tiene la misión de capturar a un escurridizo ladrón llamado Arsene Lupin.Un detective tiene la misión de capturar a un escurridizo ladrón llamado Arsene Lupin.Un detective tiene la misión de capturar a un escurridizo ladrón llamado Arsene Lupin.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 3 premios ganados en total
- Laurent
- (as James Mack)
- Louvre Tour Guide
- (sin créditos)
- Party Guest
- (sin créditos)
- Louvre Guard
- (sin créditos)
- Party Guest
- (sin créditos)
- Gendarme
- (sin créditos)
- Mother at the Louvre
- (sin créditos)
- Party Guest
- (sin créditos)
- Detective
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Arsene Lupin seems to enjoy making a fool out of the authorities and out of Guerchard in particular just as much as he enjoys the thrill of stealing and also the high life. When Guerchard paroles a particularly charming thief, Sonia (Karen Morley), so she can show up naked in Lupin's bed unexpected and charm Lupin into revealing something, Lupin simply charms her and gets her to fall in love with him so that her loyalties shift.
Guerchard has a month until he's eligible for his pension, but his superior states that if Lupin is not caught in a week, he'll be discharged and thus not get his pension. Complications ensue.
The Barrymore brothers were great in this film, and the ending was unexpected. I will say I would doubt the authenticity of the denouement if there were any other two actors involved. They made it work.
I wonder if Arsene Lupin was the inspiration for the infamous Savoir-Faire from the Klondike Kat cartoon. For those who don't know, Savoir-Faire was a French-Canadian mouse who also happened to be a master thief. Probably not but I love imagining Lionel Barrymore saying "Savoir-Faire is everywhere."
However, the film under review – which I had first acquired via a TV-to- VHS-to-DVD conversion of poor quality, but which I eventually upgraded (albeit still culled from a TCM screening) – remains perhaps the most popular rendition of this debonair figure; by the way, I also have in my collection its direct but-as-yet unwatched 1938 sequel ARSENE LUPIN RETURNS. Incidentally, such gentlemen crooks were a regular feature of pulp fiction (notably the similarly much-filmed "Raffles": I own versions of it dating from 1917 – starring, as here, John Barrymore – 1925, 1930 – alas, only a TV-to-VHS copy – and 1939!) until they made way for more ruthless and ambitious criminal masterminds such as Fantomas and Dr. Mabuse.
Anyway, this classy production – best-known for first teaming John with his elder brother Lionel (they would appear together 5 times in 2 years, on one of which they were even joined by sister Ethel!) – is most enjoyable, with a plot which has since become a cliché: the protagonist's duality (hiding under an air of respectability and, at one point, the guise of an aged flower-seller to pull off a daring 'job' at the Louvre); the analogous deception by the woman in his life (or, more precisely, the one he finds in his bed – a delightfully racy scene for an MGM picture but, then, this was a "Pre-Code" release – during a reception!); Lupin's tenacious, but ultimately sympathetic, antagonist (whose physical attributes – including a prominent limp – actually fit the description of the 'villain' as given by an eye-witness!); the ultra-modern gadgets (a safe without the proverbial combination but 'armed' with an electrical charge), etc.
John Barrymore's famed good looks ("The Great Profile" was 50 at the time) and up-till-then infrequently-tapped comic timing (though he would increasingly come to rely upon it for the rest of his career!) make him, respectively, ideal casting and a pleasure to watch; for what it is worth, I have as many as 23 titles of his still to go through even if only 4 fall into my current exercise of movie viewing based on all-time best polls and the higher ratings bestowed by Leslie Halliwell and Leonard Maltin!
John & Lionel Barrymore costarred together for the first time in a motion picture in this intriguing crime drama. Alike and yet so different, they are the perfect counterpoint to each other. John plays his role with suave sophistication (when not in disguise) and Lionel is earthy & common in his portrayal, each obviously having a wonderful time trying to out act the other. Helped by a generous script, the outcome is pretty much a draw, with the viewer the clear winner.
Although upstaged by the two male stars, Karen Morley is intriguing as the mystery woman John finds naked in his bed. Tully Marshall gives a colorful performance as a silly nobleman with much to lose to the master criminal. Henry Armetta & George Davis are very enjoyable as two seriously inept security guards. John Miljan provides a sturdy presence in his small role as the police prefect.
Movie mavens will recognize an uncredited Mischa Auer as a guide in the Louvre during the climactic scene dealing with an attempted heist of the Mona Lisa.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe selling point at the time of the film's release was the first joint screen appearance of brothers John and Lionel Barrymore. Their chemistry was so strong that they would be co-assigned four more times by MGM in the next two years, in Grand Hotel (1932), Rasputin and the Empress (1932), Esposa de un piloto (1933), and Dinner at Eight (1933), the last of which gave them no scenes together. Rasputin and the Empress (1932) marked the only time that all three Barrymore siblings - Lionel, Ethel and John - appeared in the same film.
- ErroresLupin steals the Mona Lisa by wrapping the canvas around his umbrella. The Mona Lisa is painted on a wood panel.
- Citas
Arsène Lupin: [fetching Sonia's evening gown from the maid and holding it up to admire it] Well, here we are. It's very nice! It's a little naughty. It's very ni - Do you think your father the general would approve of this?
Sonia: My father the general always said that a gentleman was a man who never went to bed with his spurs on.
Arsène Lupin: Isn't that a pity. I'm so fond of horses. I could give up riding...?
Sonia: Give me that dress!
Arsène Lupin: You can't get into it alone
Sonia: The maid will help me.
Arsène Lupin: The maid? I know more about unhooking than any maid in Paris.
Sonia: Yes, but I want this one hooked.
[she reaches for the dress, which he holds out of reach]
Sonia: I'm going to stay right here in this bed until you leave this room!
[Chamerace walks over to the window and prepares to toss out the dress]
Sonia: What are you doing?
Arsène Lupin: Well, if you're going to stay in bed you won't need the dress.
- Créditos curiososThe opening title doesn't list the Barrymores separately, but instead as a pair, "John and Lionel Barrymore."
- ConexionesFeatured in Biography: The Barrymores (2002)
Selecciones populares
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 433,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 24min(84 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1