CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
4.1/10
135
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA man fleeing from a divorce and alimony payments gets a job as a tour guide for five wealthy young women, one of whom is looking to bag a Latin singer she believes is in love with.A man fleeing from a divorce and alimony payments gets a job as a tour guide for five wealthy young women, one of whom is looking to bag a Latin singer she believes is in love with.A man fleeing from a divorce and alimony payments gets a job as a tour guide for five wealthy young women, one of whom is looking to bag a Latin singer she believes is in love with.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Nominado a 2 premios Óscar
- 2 nominaciones en total
Dorothy Kelly
- Mary
- (as Dorothy O'Kelly)
John Albright
- Club Patron
- (sin créditos)
Paul Bradley
- Bartender
- (sin créditos)
George Calliga
- Club Patron
- (sin créditos)
Jack Chefe
- Club Patron
- (sin créditos)
Oliver Cross
- Club Patron
- (sin créditos)
Eduardo Durant
- Orchestra Leader
- (sin créditos)
Sam Finn
- Club Patron
- (sin créditos)
Byron Foulger
- Horace Willpott
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
This is a typically wacky fast-paced Hal Roach comedy padded with some laughably ridiculous musical numbers.
It has everything - coochie dancers, pan-American travelog, Latin crooners, jungle romance, buxom blondes, blackface mammies, mediums, even a midget. The only furnishing it lacks is a suitably funny leading man. George Givot's performance as the obnoxious boob running from alimony payments wont leave you begging for more. Despite the occasional cramp he puts in the fun, the rest of the cast sail through the gags effortlessly.
I hope it shows up as an extra in a DVD package in the future - a true delight.
It has everything - coochie dancers, pan-American travelog, Latin crooners, jungle romance, buxom blondes, blackface mammies, mediums, even a midget. The only furnishing it lacks is a suitably funny leading man. George Givot's performance as the obnoxious boob running from alimony payments wont leave you begging for more. Despite the occasional cramp he puts in the fun, the rest of the cast sail through the gags effortlessly.
I hope it shows up as an extra in a DVD package in the future - a true delight.
Hal Roach's musical streamliners were given plenty of production (FIESTA was even filmed in Technicolor) but were often sorely lacking in the scenario department. There's usually a comedy team of sorts - in this case it's big Ed Gargan and diminutive Jerry Bergen. Marjorie Woodworth is invariably the ingenue in these 5-reelers. I guess Roach must have seen SOMETHING in her. Oh well. The protagonist is George Givot, a longtime vaudevillian who specialized in Greek dialect. Here is plays it straight with the exception of a detour as a blackface mammy with composer Edward Ward matching his dialect on the soundtrack. Little Billy Roy apparently made a hit as a native boy in ALOMA OF THE SOUTH SEAS and he repeats the role singing the Oscar-nominated "Pennies For Peppino". This picture was directed by RKO's early turgedian George Archainbaud and all I can say is, where was Gordon Douglas when we needed him! Very few of the gags work and, in one of the strangest affronts to comedy, hilarious dialectician Benny Rubin - playing a French maitre d - had his voice looped! It's nice to see Norma Varden in an early role and there are plenty of familiar dress extras, including the ubiquitous Ellinor Vanderveer. I'm giving this a rating of 5 because it's only 5 reels. If it had been a longer picture I would have been much more severe in my critique. But it's 47 minutes of amiable entertainment. No harm done.
This Movie, "Flying with Music" was shown on Turner Classics today! It was shown as part of "Movies nominated for Oscars" Month. My Tivo decided it was something I would want to watch...and BOY was my TIVO right! "Flying with Music" is just so bizarrely wonderful. There is something about Roach Studios Movies of the early 40s that captures an essence of the 40s that neither the Large Studios, nor the Poverty Row Studios ever really got. It is hard to put into words, but there is a "reaching" for quality above means, and from the looks of it, "Flying with Music" may have had the largest budget spent on a movie from this Studio.
Everyone sings, everyone dances...there is barely a breath taken between unfamiliar songs with a Latin Beat, or songs simply crooned in the best Bing Crosby manner. There is an endless Lagoon Number number featuring Tribal Beats and scantily clad dancers.
But what you really need to see is sequence with the Oscar nominated song "Pennies for Peppino". It comes out of nowhere, and if you didn't know that THIS is the Oscar nominated song from the movie, you may not give it much thought. A group of children see the cast in the back of a Cart being slowly pulled to town and begin to "beg" for Pennies to be thrown to them ...offering to sing, dance, stand on their heads just for "Pennies for Peppino".
There is just something about knowing that this little song, in this short sequence, in this "little " movie lost the 1942 Best Song Oscar to White Christmas gives it that tiny bit of majesty.
Everyone sings, everyone dances...there is barely a breath taken between unfamiliar songs with a Latin Beat, or songs simply crooned in the best Bing Crosby manner. There is an endless Lagoon Number number featuring Tribal Beats and scantily clad dancers.
But what you really need to see is sequence with the Oscar nominated song "Pennies for Peppino". It comes out of nowhere, and if you didn't know that THIS is the Oscar nominated song from the movie, you may not give it much thought. A group of children see the cast in the back of a Cart being slowly pulled to town and begin to "beg" for Pennies to be thrown to them ...offering to sing, dance, stand on their heads just for "Pennies for Peppino".
There is just something about knowing that this little song, in this short sequence, in this "little " movie lost the 1942 Best Song Oscar to White Christmas gives it that tiny bit of majesty.
Okay, so it isn't Oscar material. Okay, so all the leads are completely unknown to today's audiences. Okay, so the plot is silly and laughable. But when you see the extent that was gone to, to put together this musical, with all the sets and the songs, you have to appreciate this really precious little minor musical. It's really a shame that movie makers don't have the impetus to concoct entertainment of this type any more. Commnents such as 'but it was an innocent time' don't deserve credence. It's all around us, the stuff that exists to put together something of this caliber. The girls are beautiful, the sets are interesting and colorful and the songs are a lot of fun. The musical is so reminiscent of it's era that is literally a time capsule of this nation in the grips of World War II and how it was being coped with. It's well worth the time spent viewing and should be converted to DVD to send the message.
"Flying with Music" is a film with an overall rating of 4.0. However, despite this a couple reviewers gave this one 10s...which I just don't understand...especially since 4.0 seems, if anything, a bit generous.
There is not a whole lot of plot in the film...mostly because it is a musical and clocks in at only 46 minutes. The scant plot finds Don running to Latin America from authorities for back alimony payments. Simply paying the money would have ended it...but instead he poses as a nerdy tour guide for some hot to trot young ladies and their fun-hating chaperone. Along the way is a bit of romance and MANY forgettable musical numbers and a particularly bad male singer. It also sports a tacky black-face portion...which just made me cringe.
Because of the silly and thin plot and the overabundance of musical numbers, I actually found this film pretty dull. It's also one of the lowest rated 'Streamliners' from Hal Roach Studios...ultra-short B-movies that they made in the early 1940s. Worth seeing if you love these sorts of movies, but if you must watch some Streamliners, try the military films with William Tracy and Joe Sawyer or the taxi films with William Bendix and, again, Joe Sawyer...all quite enjoyable and with a few laughs.
There is not a whole lot of plot in the film...mostly because it is a musical and clocks in at only 46 minutes. The scant plot finds Don running to Latin America from authorities for back alimony payments. Simply paying the money would have ended it...but instead he poses as a nerdy tour guide for some hot to trot young ladies and their fun-hating chaperone. Along the way is a bit of romance and MANY forgettable musical numbers and a particularly bad male singer. It also sports a tacky black-face portion...which just made me cringe.
Because of the silly and thin plot and the overabundance of musical numbers, I actually found this film pretty dull. It's also one of the lowest rated 'Streamliners' from Hal Roach Studios...ultra-short B-movies that they made in the early 1940s. Worth seeing if you love these sorts of movies, but if you must watch some Streamliners, try the military films with William Tracy and Joe Sawyer or the taxi films with William Bendix and, again, Joe Sawyer...all quite enjoyable and with a few laughs.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis film was first telecast in New York City Saturday 3 July 1948 on WPIX (Channel 11), in Los Angeles Tuesday 21 December 1948 on KTLA (Channel 5), in Chicago Sunday 16 January 1949 on WBKB (Channel 4), and in Philadelphia Sunday 24 July 1949 on WCAU (Channel 10), as part of their newly acquired series of three dozen Hal Roach feature film productions, originally theatrically released between 1931 and 1943, and now being syndicated for television broadcast by Regal Television Pictures.
- Bandas sonorasIf It's Love
Written by Edward Ward, Chet Forrest and Bob Wright
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Flying with Music
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución46 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Rotana (1942) officially released in Canada in English?
Responda