John llega a presidente del banco pero ocurre una crisis tras 6 años. Tras mal manejar bonos, el banco quiebra. Él y Maggie venden todo y viven con Lizzy para pagar.John llega a presidente del banco pero ocurre una crisis tras 6 años. Tras mal manejar bonos, el banco quiebra. Él y Maggie venden todo y viven con Lizzy para pagar.John llega a presidente del banco pero ocurre una crisis tras 6 años. Tras mal manejar bonos, el banco quiebra. Él y Maggie venden todo y viven con Lizzy para pagar.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Jackie Lyn Dufton
- Cissy Warren
- (as Jacquie Lyn)
Jack Baxley
- Man Trading Pot Roast
- (sin créditos)
Harry C. Bradley
- Man Whose Pants Need Mending
- (sin créditos)
Edward Brophy
- Ice Cream Salesman
- (sin créditos)
James Bush
- Bank Teller
- (sin créditos)
Claire Du Brey
- Bank Depositor Spreading Rumor
- (sin créditos)
Henry Hall
- Bill, the Man Needing Tires
- (sin créditos)
Edward LeSaint
- Train Conductor
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Prosperity is a comedy/drama that was very timely in 1932. It concerns bank closures. In the last of the Films that Dressler starred in with Polly Moran, she plays a bank president who saves her town. Lots of plots twists but basically a star vehicle for a great star--Marie Dressler. She can ham and mug her way thru anything and always get a laugh, but when Dressler played dramatic scenes, no one could touch her. No art. Nothing arch. Just her her old, worn, wonderful face to put across the feeling. That Marie Dressler is largely forgotten now except for her rather gauche comedy style (a style that Lucille Ball and Carol Burnett borrowed from liberally) is a pity. In Prosperity as well and Min and Bill, Anna Christie, Tugboat Annie, Emma, and Politics, she proves she was a fine dramatic actress. As a comic she ranks among the all-time best.
Polly Moran plays another hateful character, but plays it well. Anita Page, Norman Foster, Henry Armetta, Claire du Brey, and Frank Darien co-star. Rather dark ending is salvaged by low comedy, but somehow it all works.
Polly Moran plays another hateful character, but plays it well. Anita Page, Norman Foster, Henry Armetta, Claire du Brey, and Frank Darien co-star. Rather dark ending is salvaged by low comedy, but somehow it all works.
Marie Dressler is Norman Foster's mother, and Polly Moran is the mother of Anita Page, Foster's wife. Foster runs the bank Miss Dressler runs. When Miss Moran starts a run on the bank, Miss Dressler is confident until she discovers that Foster has used the bonds she keeps as a bulwark to back a building project run by John Miljan, and Miljan is a crook.
Bank runs were a theme at this time, with the best-remembered example being Capra's AMERICAN MADNESS. Director Sam Wood stages his version well.
It's the last pairing of Dressler and Moran, and Miss Page's last movie at MGM. This doesn't stop the usual mix of pathos and comedy that fans had come to expect. They were more than satisfied with the results. So was I.
Bank runs were a theme at this time, with the best-remembered example being Capra's AMERICAN MADNESS. Director Sam Wood stages his version well.
It's the last pairing of Dressler and Moran, and Miss Page's last movie at MGM. This doesn't stop the usual mix of pathos and comedy that fans had come to expect. They were more than satisfied with the results. So was I.
This movie has a propensity towards tedium and confusion. Also a propensity to omit comedy from nearly every situation that required it. It was dull and annoying and unfunny, and raises a cogent question; who wrote this mess?
Aha! a quick scan of the credits reveals that it was written by the sister of Irving Thalberg, Head of Production at MGM. The poor woman apparently had no feel for comedy or continuity, and they stuck Marie Dressler into the abyss, hoping she could make a silk purse out of this sow's ear.
Marie Dressler was one of our premier comediennes of the silent-into-sound era; she may have been The Best, and it's always a treat to see her, even in dreck like this. She got no help from one of her former sidekicks, Polly Moran, who was shrewish and strident in an unrewarding role. I am awarding my rating of four based on the welcome addition into the cast of the great Marie Dressler.
Aha! a quick scan of the credits reveals that it was written by the sister of Irving Thalberg, Head of Production at MGM. The poor woman apparently had no feel for comedy or continuity, and they stuck Marie Dressler into the abyss, hoping she could make a silk purse out of this sow's ear.
Marie Dressler was one of our premier comediennes of the silent-into-sound era; she may have been The Best, and it's always a treat to see her, even in dreck like this. She got no help from one of her former sidekicks, Polly Moran, who was shrewish and strident in an unrewarding role. I am awarding my rating of four based on the welcome addition into the cast of the great Marie Dressler.
In 1925, childhood friends Marie Dressler (as Maggie Warren) and Polly Moran (as Lizzie Praskins) oversee the wedding of their children, Anita Page (as Helen) and Norman Foster (as John). Before the celebration, Ms. Dressler turns the reigns of her small town bank over to her son, Mr. Foster. Six years later, the Great Depression brings many bank closures, and financial insecurity. Banker Foster is able to survive, due to mother Dressler's wise planning. But, Ms. Moran is worried about her fortune, and loudly demands a complete withdrawal. Other "Warren Bank" customers hear Moran's rant, and start questioning their own solvency. Soon, the family is in financial crisis.
Dressler's huge critical and financial film hit "Emma" had been released early in the year, and MGM had to have wanted to get a new Dressler film out as soon as possible. Dressler's 1931 hits, "Reducing" and "Politics" were still making a lot of money; and, Dressler had become 1932's US #1 Box Office Star, according to the industry standard list compiled by Quigley Publications. "Prosperity" certainly celebrated Dressler's status, but the production appears uncharacteristically sloppy, and rushed. The cast does well, considering. Some more care in direction and editing, and some retakes, would have helped apparently, they needed it in theaters for the holidays.
**** Prosperity (11/12/32) Sam Wood ~ Marie Dressler, Polly Moran, Anita Page, Norman Foster
Dressler's huge critical and financial film hit "Emma" had been released early in the year, and MGM had to have wanted to get a new Dressler film out as soon as possible. Dressler's 1931 hits, "Reducing" and "Politics" were still making a lot of money; and, Dressler had become 1932's US #1 Box Office Star, according to the industry standard list compiled by Quigley Publications. "Prosperity" certainly celebrated Dressler's status, but the production appears uncharacteristically sloppy, and rushed. The cast does well, considering. Some more care in direction and editing, and some retakes, would have helped apparently, they needed it in theaters for the holidays.
**** Prosperity (11/12/32) Sam Wood ~ Marie Dressler, Polly Moran, Anita Page, Norman Foster
What drags Prosperity down is the repeated insertion of low comedy gags involving Polly Moran, a successful silent-era slapstick comedienne whose humor didn't play very well with sound. Far too much footage is wasted in setting up lame punch lines or overdone sight gags. These tedious distractions, unfortunately, also tend to involve the film's star, Marie Dressler, who could easily have done without them in her otherwise impressive portrayal of a small-town bank president who weathers the storm of economic depression by a combination of ingenuity and what they used to call gumption. The plot involves Dressler's struggle with entangled financial and familial crises.
Her son is played by Norman Foster who was an able actor but had no distinctive traits to set him apart from a host of other nice looking young male performers. Anita Page, just past her brief burst of major stardom, is cast as Foster's wife in an undemanding supporting role.
This film is less successful than "American Madness," released the same year, which is also about the travails of a small town banker during the Depression.
Her son is played by Norman Foster who was an able actor but had no distinctive traits to set him apart from a host of other nice looking young male performers. Anita Page, just past her brief burst of major stardom, is cast as Foster's wife in an undemanding supporting role.
This film is less successful than "American Madness," released the same year, which is also about the travails of a small town banker during the Depression.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaOne of a number of early 1930s films such as American Madness (1932) and Manhattan Tower (1932) made on the subject of business corruption and banking practices in the wake of the Stock Market Crash of 1929 and the onset of the Great Depression. When reviewing the screenplays of these films prior to production, the censors demanded that such films must inculcate "confidence in banking institutions" and "big business" in the average American. The studios begrudgingly obliged.
- ErroresWhen John goes to leave Lizzie's house, Maggie stops him at the front door. John is between Maggie and the door. In the next shot, Maggie is between the door and John.
- Citas
Lizzie Praskins: One more word from you and I'll forget I'm a lady.
[lifts plate to throw at Maggie]
Maggie Warren: Why not? Everybody else has.
- Bandas sonorasBridal Chorus (Here Comes the Bride)
from "Lohengrin"
Written by Richard Wagner (1850)
Played by pianist and violinist at the wedding
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 628,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 27 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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