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IMDbPro

Muchachas errantes

Título original: Girls of the Road
  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 1min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.0/10
178
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Marjorie Cooley, Ann Doran, Ann Dvorak, Mary Field, Lola Lane, and Helen Mack in Muchachas errantes (1940)
AcciónAventuraCrimenDramaMisterioRomance

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA story of the great-depression era about women hobos, tramps, job-seekers, fugitives and runaways running from or toward something as they hitch-hiked their way across the United States, do... Leer todoA story of the great-depression era about women hobos, tramps, job-seekers, fugitives and runaways running from or toward something as they hitch-hiked their way across the United States, dodging the police, do-gooders, lustful men and pursuing-husbands in a bad mood. One of them... Leer todoA story of the great-depression era about women hobos, tramps, job-seekers, fugitives and runaways running from or toward something as they hitch-hiked their way across the United States, dodging the police, do-gooders, lustful men and pursuing-husbands in a bad mood. One of them is a killer, another is a girl hitch-hiking to her wedding in order to afford a wedding g... Leer todo

  • Dirección
    • Nick Grinde
  • Guionista
    • Robert Hardy Andrews
  • Elenco
    • Ann Dvorak
    • Helen Mack
    • Lola Lane
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.0/10
    178
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Nick Grinde
    • Guionista
      • Robert Hardy Andrews
    • Elenco
      • Ann Dvorak
      • Helen Mack
      • Lola Lane
    • 12Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 2Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Fotos1

    Ver el cartel

    Elenco principal32

    Editar
    Ann Dvorak
    Ann Dvorak
    • Kay Warren
    Helen Mack
    Helen Mack
    • Mickey
    Lola Lane
    Lola Lane
    • Ellie
    Ann Doran
    Ann Doran
    • Jerry
    Marjorie Cooley
    • Irene
    Mary Field
    Mary Field
    • Mae
    Mary Booth
    • Edna
    Madelon Baker
    • Annie
    • (as Madelon Grayson)
    Grace Lenard
    • Stella
    Evelyn Young
    • Sadie
    Bruce Bennett
    Bruce Bennett
    • Officer Sullavan
    Eddie Laughton
    • Footsy
    Don Beddoe
    Don Beddoe
    • Sheriff
    Howard Hickman
    Howard Hickman
    • Gov. Warren
    Eddie Acuff
    Eddie Acuff
    • Bartley--Bus Driver
    • (sin créditos)
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • Roadhouse Proprietor
    • (sin créditos)
    Helen Brown
    • Mrs. Spencer
    • (sin créditos)
    Lois Collier
    Lois Collier
    • Road Girl
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Nick Grinde
    • Guionista
      • Robert Hardy Andrews
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios12

    6.0178
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    Opiniones destacadas

    6xerses13

    What Happens When...

    ...the major studio you work for does not want you anymore. Just like today back in the 'Golden Age of Hollywood' the shelf life of female Stars was noticeably shorter then their male counterparts. Three (3) of the Stars of GIRLS OF THE ROAD (1940) are more noted for their roles at their home studios. ANN DVORAK and LOLA LANE at Warner Brothers (WB) and HELEN MACK, RKO. When a studio was done with you it was fade away or find work somewhere else. That somewhere this time was at COLUMBIA.

    GIRLS OF THE ROAD is a social commentary picture typical of the time and usually done most successfully at the WB. This effort from COLUMBIA though dated is still entertaining portraying the plight of vagrant women. A Governors Daughter played by DVORAK wishes first hand to find out how to solve the plight of these girls. The bulk of her odyssey is a learning experience and building a friendship with MACK. Concluding with the moral redemption of all including tough girl LANE.

    There were five (5) major studios. M.G.M., PARAMOUNT, RKO, 20TH CENTURY FOX and WARNER BROTHERS. Plus some heavy-weight independents like GOLDWYN or SELZNICK. Now you could move horizontally between these studios and still be on top. The next level would be COLUMBIA, HAL ROACH, REPUBLIC, UNIVERSAL and UNITED ARTISTS. This was still respectable the only problem with working at COLUMBIA was putting up with HARRY COHN who fancied himself Don Juan. It could get worse though you might end up at MONOGRAM, PRC or any of the dozens of poverty row studios that came and went. Some not even lasting a year, fading away just like some their careers.
    10morrisonhimself

    From height of Depression, this social drama is again -- or still -- relevant

    In the city where this movie was made, where Columbia Pictures studio stood, where across the years probably millions of people have sought their dreams, in this year of A.D. 2018, anywhere from 40- to 60,000 people, men and women and children, are homeless.

    Because it is Los Angeles, one of the most corrupt and incompetently run cities in these United States, the homeless are both coddled and harassed by various government bodies.

    But genuine long-lasting help? Not in Los Angeles! One not so famous singer, with his own hands started building "tiny houses," giving them to homeless people of his acquaintance, and of course the city moved in garbage trucks and armed agents and stole at least three of them!

    Eventually they were returned, but with the solar cells missing!

    Private individuals and companies have donated land on which to erect the tiny homes and, again of course, have run into all kinds of bureaucratic obstacles. It is, to repeat, Los Angeles.

    "Girls of the Road" was produced in one of the worst years of the Depression. After several years of the "New Deal," millions more people were out of work, tens of thousands more businesses had collapsed, and the Roosevelt administration, which had sought for answers in Italy, Germany, and Soviet Russia, had concluded only a war could save the situation. And, in the next year, got one.

    In this excellent movie, beautifully written, and superbly acted, desperate people exhibit the best and worst traits one would expect from people who have experienced the worst from other people.

    They have lost all dignity, and have had to beg for hand-outs since, being "road girls," no one will hire them for real jobs.

    One outsider sees a way, and, in this film, is well-enough connected to bring about a partial, and maybe temporary, solution.

    In modern life, governments have destroyed jobs and erected impossible obstacles for the creation of new jobs.

    Supposedly free human beings are required to carry government-issued cards embossed with government-issued numbers, without which those supposedly free human beings cannot even apply for jobs.

    And in many situations cannot even apply for hand-outs from allegedly Christian agencies.

    Helen Mack has long been one of my favorite actresses. Her performance in "The Milky Way" made me think she was perfect in comedy parts, but her performance in "Girls of the Road" showed me she is perfect in any role she wanted to play. She is powerful, mesmerizing, as "Mickey."

    Ann Dvorak is, as usual, also perfect. She was an elegant-looking lady, although she's also been perfect as much rougher characters, and she had a nearly musical voice, very noticeable in this role.

    Having some experience and knowledge of the current problems of homelessness, I was moved to tears by this movie, by the script as well as by the performances.

    Solutions to our problems are not be found in government -- please be sure to listen to what "the governor" says in the opening scenes. It accurately sums up why governments are not to be looked to for answers.

    Voluntary co-operation between and among individual human beings, caring human beings, perhaps working with voluntary organizations, including such loving and generous agencies as the Salvation Army, can, though, immensely lessen these kinds of human problems, sometimes known as "societal problems."

    But they are not "societal." They are human.

    Please do watch "Girls of the Road." Remember the context, the worst years of the Great Depression, and try not to let the too-dark print at YouTube prevent your seeing what great drama and, at the same time, what a great message of hope is presented.
    6Zinjanthropus

    Great fun! Another rarity from Columbia Pictures.

    Once again, Turner Classic Movies has rescued another rough-cut gem from obscurity in the musty vaults of Hollywood! TCM has changed my life by showing the classics that most of us never even knew existed. And "Girls of the Road" is definitely in that category.

    Okay, so it's not "Gone With the Wind," but it's a classic even so. I've never seen anything quite like it. It's about female hobos from the Depression, running from the cops, fighting each other, living the vida loca al camino! Only in this subculture, all the women are young, beautiful and "good on the inside." Closest thing to this story I've seen is the "women in prison" movie genre of the period. There's a social-reform angle to it, as there was in many of the women in prison films. Remember, this was 1940--the Production Code ruled Hollywood. It was not possible to depict any vagrants or criminals in a positive light, at least not until they received a moral makeover.

    Watch it for entertainment, though, not for any particular message. Such as it was, the message was about as substantive as a mouthful of cotton candy. The stars had some funny lines, almost all were good looking, and life didn't look so bad at the end. What more can you ask for?
    dougdoepke

    Streamlined and Sanitized

    The best thing about this highly sanitized expose is that its heart is in the right place. Importantly, the movie serves as a peek into how the uprooted, even women, were treated by local jurisdictions already burdened by their own Depression problems and unwilling to take on new ones. However, the contrast with the gritty, realistic Wild Boys of the Road (1933) could hardly be stronger, thanks mainly to the deadening hand of the Production Code of 1934.

    Note, for example, the general absence of men around these all-girl encampments, rather surprising given the opportunities. But then, including men in the camp mix would have complicated both the tone and the message. Thus, we're left with what looks like an all-girl touring group down on their luck. Note too, how nearly all the well-scrubbed girls are outfitted in the less vulnerable pants instead of dresses at a time when cheap cotton dresses were standard and affordable, (consider Barbara Hershey's cheap little print in the much more realistic Boxcar Bertha {1972}). But most revealing is when one of the girls explains why it's easier being a penniless man than a penniless woman. What she says is true, but, tellingly, she leaves out the one big advantage women-- especially the comely young women of this movie-- have when needing to earn a buck. In fact, as part of its streamlining and sanitizing, the screenplay suppresses altogether what should be the rather obvious topic of prostitution.

    All in all, I suspect the movie reveals more about the state of Hollywood politics, circa 1940, than it does about its subject matter. Nonetheless, I agree that TMC should be congratulated for reviving such obscurities. And though the movie is, I think, far from a classic, it is a provocative window into its time and into a topic many of us didn't know existed. Besides, I sense an underground fan club forming around the sorely neglected Ann Dvorak. With her large, expressive eyes, aquiline nose, and the courage to take on an ethnic stage name-- plus genuine talent-- she merits re-discovery in a big way.
    5preppy-3

    Silly but not uninteresting

    A governor's daughter (Ann Dvorak) is concerned about girls living on the road with no family, no jobs and no money. She becomes one and, almost instantly, becomes friends with a hardened "road girl" named Mickey (Helen Mack). We then see a (purpotedly) truthful version of what girls on their own have to do to survive.

    No budget Columbia picture. In 1940 this might have been a little shocking but today it comes across as silly and not even remotely truthful. Supposedly all these girls have lived on the road without clean clothes, showers or food for days--but they all look well fed, they're in clean clothes and are pretty healthy with makeup and beautiful hair. Even their hideout looks pretty opulent! Also when this film strives to make a message it's so overdone it comes off as comical. The funeral of one of the girls is supposed to be tragic but it comes off as unintentionally funny! Still, it's well done and Mack gives a good performance. It's marginally worth seeing if you're into obscure older movies (like me). I give it a 5.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Mary Booth's debut....
    • Errores
      Though the "girls of the road" are supposed to be broke, sleeping outdoors and living on the thin edge of starvation, they all have perfectly permed hair and plucked eyebrows.
    • Bandas sonoras
      Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
      (uncredited)

      Written by Wallis Willis

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 24 de abril de 1941 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Girls of the Road
    • Productora
      • Columbia Pictures
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 1min(61 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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