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IMDbPro

Tienda de locuras

Título original: The Big Store
  • 1941
  • Approved
  • 1h 23min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.5/10
5.6 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Groucho Marx, Douglass Dumbrille, Margaret Dumont, Virginia Grey, Tony Martin, Chico Marx, and Harpo Marx in Tienda de locuras (1941)
A detective is hired to protect the life of a singer, who has recently inherited a department store, from the store's crooked manager.
Reproducir trailer3:08
1 video
48 fotos
ComediaFamiliaMusicalRomanceSlapstick

Un inepto detective es contratado para proteger la vida de un cantante que ha heredado recientemente unos grandes almacenes, del corrupto gerente de la tienda.Un inepto detective es contratado para proteger la vida de un cantante que ha heredado recientemente unos grandes almacenes, del corrupto gerente de la tienda.Un inepto detective es contratado para proteger la vida de un cantante que ha heredado recientemente unos grandes almacenes, del corrupto gerente de la tienda.

  • Dirección
    • Charles Reisner
  • Guionistas
    • Sid Kuller
    • Hal Fimberg
    • Ray Golden
  • Elenco
    • Groucho Marx
    • Chico Marx
    • Harpo Marx
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.5/10
    5.6 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Charles Reisner
    • Guionistas
      • Sid Kuller
      • Hal Fimberg
      • Ray Golden
    • Elenco
      • Groucho Marx
      • Chico Marx
      • Harpo Marx
    • 54Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 21Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:08
    Trailer

    Fotos48

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    Elenco principal74

    Editar
    Groucho Marx
    Groucho Marx
    • Wolf J. Flywheel
    Chico Marx
    Chico Marx
    • Ravelli
    Harpo Marx
    Harpo Marx
    • Wacky
    Tony Martin
    Tony Martin
    • Tommy Rogers
    Virginia Grey
    Virginia Grey
    • Joan Sutton
    Margaret Dumont
    Margaret Dumont
    • Martha Phelps
    Douglass Dumbrille
    Douglass Dumbrille
    • Mr. Grover
    William Tannen
    William Tannen
    • Fred Sutton
    Marion Martin
    Marion Martin
    • Peggy Arden
    Virginia O'Brien
    Virginia O'Brien
    • Kitty
    Henry Armetta
    Henry Armetta
    • Giuseppe
    Anna Demetrio
    • Maria
    Paul Stanton
    Paul Stanton
    • George Hastings
    Russell Hicks
    Russell Hicks
    • Arthur Hastings
    Bradley Page
    Bradley Page
    • Duke
    Six Hits and a Miss
    • Six Hits and a Miss
    King Baggot
    King Baggot
    • Store Employee
    • (sin créditos)
    Marvin Bailey
    • Member - Six Hits and a Miss
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Charles Reisner
    • Guionistas
      • Sid Kuller
      • Hal Fimberg
      • Ray Golden
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios54

    6.55.6K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    6drexelgal

    Not the best

    By 1941, Groucho didn't want to make any more movies. The Brothers continued to do so just to keep oldest Brother Chico afloat, due to his gambling habits.

    Someone commented earlier about Virginia O'Brien, the deadpan singer in the "rockabye" sequence. The deadpan delivery was her "shtick", and predated a similar approach taken by Keely Smith some years later. Legend has it that the first time a spotlight fell on Ms. O'Brien for an on-stage solo, she froze, an delivered her song with a pre-Botox facial paralysis. The audience thought it was part of the act and roared approvingly with laughter. From then on, Ms. O'Brien sang no other way. (She also sings a few bars of the Jerome Kern song, "A Fine Romance" in the semi-bio, "'Til The Clouds Roll By".) The big store is best remembered (and viewed) for the rousing "Sing While You Sell" piece about 38 minutes into the movie.
    6gridoon2025

    Mixed bag

    When people are asked which is their least favorite Marx Brothers movie, "The Big Store" is one of the most frequent choices. And it's not hard to understand why: this must be the Marx movie with the least comedy content in it - if not in quality, then certainly in quantity. Apart from the hilarious scene near the start where Margaret Dumont tries to explain the case "in detail" to supposedly busy detective Groucho while Harpo is typing loudly and a toaster goes out of control (a sequence that can make you laugh no matter how many times you see it), it's hard to name another classic piece of comedy here. The scene with the 14-member Italian family and the climactic chase inside the store are more chaotic and frenetic than funny (and there's also way too much fast motion used). On the bright side, this film has a better supporting cast than "Go West", "Sing While You Sell" is a grand and catchy number, Harpo and Chico have a delightful piano duet and Harpo's harp-playing scene is pure magic. While in many Marx Brothers movies I find the piano and harp numbers a dull interruption of the comedy, in "The Big Store" they are a welcome relief from the absence of comedy! **1/2 out of 4.
    theowinthrop

    Marx Brothers at half speed - and Douglas proves a comic

    Groucho Marx, in one of the interviews in Richard Anobile's book about the brothers, admitted that the films after the death of Irving Thalberg (he meant after A Day At The Races) were not his favorite, and he considered them the team's worst films. This is not a totally fair evaluation. Two of the films (Room Service and A Night in Casablanca) were as good as Horsefeathers or Animal Crackers. But it must be admitted that At The Circus, Go West, The Big Store, and Love Happy (not to say their unfortunate solo performances in The Story of Mankind)were below par Marx. All had good moments in them - but only moments. If one can cut these films to only highlight their highlights the resulting anthology film would be almost as good as Room Service and A Night in Casablanca.

    Groucho is Wolf J. Flywheel in this film - one of his catchiest pseudonyms. Like his later, tamer film role as Sam Grunion in Love Happy, he is a detective. Like Grunion he is living a hand to mouth existance, owing rent. In the last moments of the film Charles Lane forcibly reposes his car, an ancient vehicle (for 1941 America) with the sign, "Welcome Admiral Dewey, Hero of Manilla" on the back - the battle of Manilla Bay was in 1898, and the car looks like it just arrived on the scene before Dewey died in 1917. Groucho is therefore definitely interested in impressing and romancing his normal foil, Margaret Dumont, for financial security. In the end they and Harpo are in the car as it is towed away.

    It was not the first time that Groucho played a character named Flywheel. In the missing year of 1934, while he and his brothers left Paramount after Duck Soup failed (and when Zeppo decided to become an agent rather than a straight man - a wise decision as he was a very successful agent), Groucho and Chico made a series of radio programs about a firm of shyster lawyers, Flywheel, Shyster, and Flywheel. The tapes of these broadcasts no longer exist (apparently) but the scripts have been published. Many of their routines appear to have been used in these scripts, which are funny. One hopes the tapes will still manage to turn up one day.

    The best moments in the film are those dealing with Groucho trying to impress Dumont, and his confrontations with Douglass Dumbrille, as the conniving, pompous store manager Grover. Harpo's fantasy moment with two other Harpos playing a trio is fine. Chico really does not do too well in the film - nothing in particular standing out. This is not enough to sustain the film, until the final ten minutes.

    The brothers have photographed Grover paying two goons to assassinate Tony Martin (the heir to Dumont, the owner of the store - Dumbrille wants to marry her to get control of the store). Dumbrille tries to get the photo back, and chases the brothers through the deserted departments of the store.

    Douglas Dumbrille was a recognizeable movie villain throughout the 1930s and 1940s. He appeared opposite Crosby and Hope in Road to Utopia, and opposite Abbott and Costello in Lost in a Harem. In such roles he usually just gave the normally competent straight dramatic villainy that he gave in such films as Treasure Island (he was Israel Hands, who tries to kill Jackie Cooper/Jim Hawkins). But it was different with the Brothers, as he appeared in two films with them. He had played Morgan, the racetrack owner in A Day at the Races. Dumbrille was not the only actor who played in several Marx Brother films - Walter Woolf King was Gasparri in A Night at the Opera and was one of the two villains in Go West. Sig Ruman was Herman Gottlieb in A Night at the Opera, Dr. Leopold X. Steimetz in A Day at the Races, and Hans Stubel (the Nazi War Criminal in hiding) in A Night in Casablanca. Margaret Dumont appeared in seven Marx films, and Thelma Todd in Horsefeathers and Monkey Business. Ruman, Dumont, and Todd were all expert comic actors, and perfect foils for the brothers. King was okay, but no more. But Dumbrille was the interesting repeater in the bunch.

    In A Day at the Races, Dumbrille had little to do, except to threaten Harpo for not throwing a race, and looking apoplectic while the brothers demolish his racetrack to prevent a race from occuring before their missing horse can be found. As such, his performance there is little different from his performance in Road to Utopia or Lost in a Harem. But the conclusion of The Big Store is different. Here, he steals the chase from the stars of the film

    It is true that by 1941 the brothers were too old for the stunts needed - and so they use doubles (compare it to Go West a year before, where they still do some of their own stunt work). In some of the tumbles Grover is supposed to take, one can see that Dumbrille has a double too. But the difference is that the director noted that Dumbrille's unsmiling, stiff face can be used to punctuate what a ridiculous figure he could become. For he does become ridiculous, despite the grave reason for his chasing the brothers. Suddenly he has to do such ridiculous things as ride a bicycle in the store (a kid's bike at that) while wearing his floorwalker outfit) to catch the brothers who are on skates. He puts on skates too at one point, and falls into a counter full of ladies hats. He disappears behind the counter, and raises his head to show he is wearing a lady's hat with a flower on top. It's a priceless image, for his expression has not changed.

    It is Dumbrille who makes the forced chase worth watching - it was (perhaps) his finest moment as a comic actor. I wonder if the brothers (especially the critical Groucho) ever stopped to realize how they had briefly abdicated their movie to a supporting player.
    6AlsExGal

    Weak comedy from the Marx Brothers

    When crooner Tommy (Tony Martin) inherits his father's lucrative department store, he hopes to sell it to open a music conservatory for disadvantaged boys. Shady store manager Mr. Grover (Douglass Dumbrille) has been embezzling from the place, so he tries to have Tommy killed before the deal can take place and reveal Grover's malfeasance. Tommy's aunt Martha (Margaret Dumont) hires private detective Wolf J. Flywheel (Groucho Marx) to be Tommy's bodyguard, and along with Flywheel's assistant Wacky (Harpo Marx) and Tommy's pal Ravelli (Chico Marx) they get into all sorts of trouble in the department store.

    The Marx Brothers declared that this would be their last film together, and I can see why they wanted to give it up after this substandard outing. The jokes fall flat, and too much time is spent on other characters and Tony Martin's singing numbers. It's not a complete bust, and there are a few chuckles scattered about like rare gems. Groucho's scenes with Dumont are still funny. The Brothers eventually made a couple more together as finances necessitated it, but they never matched their early 30's heyday.
    8bkoganbing

    "Flywheel's in Command."

    After Zeppo Marx refused to move on with his brothers to MGM from Paramount, the Marxs usually secured the services of another player, usually a singer to function in Zeppo's nondescript place. Usually that person had a lot more personality than Zeppo did. It was Allan Jones in two films, Kenny Baker in one and in The Big Store it was Tony Martin.

    The still very much alive, but retired Tony Martin, had one of the great voices of the last century. He never made the screen impact that other singers did, though he was in some very good films. His main media outlets were records, radio, and as one of the premier nightclub attractions, especially when he appeared with his second wife Cyd Charisse. Martin had two songs to sing in The Big Store, the much maligned Tenement Symphony and a really nice ballad, If It's You.

    Martin is the heir to one half of Phelps Department store. The other half is owned by his aunt Margaret Dumont. The Hastings Brothers, who own a chain of department stores, are looking to buy this one.

    Manager Douglass Dumbrille has been doing a little embezzling on the side and he's afraid that if Martin sells his half, he's taking a stretch up the river. After Martin becomes the victim of an attempted murder, Dumont hires who else, detective Wolf J. Flywheel who is of course Groucho Marx.

    By a happy coincidence, Groucho has Harpo as a sidekick and Harpo's brother in the film Chico is a friend of Martin's. So now we have all the Marx Brothers working at the store.

    The Big Store is usually dismissed as one of the Marx Brothers lesser films, but it's always been a favorite of mine. Another reviewer said there were too many musical numbers. I don't think there were any more or less than in other films of their's. The running time is a bit short so it might seem like there's more.

    The highlight for me is always the final chase seen through the store, especially since Douglass Dumbrille joins in the fun. Dumbrille on screen usually plays some serious villains, probably his best known part is that of Mr. Cedar the lawyer who is milking the estate that Gary Cooper is inheriting in Mr. Deeds Goes to Town.

    Dumbrille is just as successful dealing with the Marx Brothers over embezzlement as he is with Gary Cooper. But here this very serious and obviously classically trained actor joins right in the slapstick fun. Dumbrille looks like he's having a ball. Later on he would really cut loose in a couple of Abbott and Costello films.

    A question to all movie fans. Who do you think had the most inventive screen character names, W.C. Fields or Groucho Marx?

    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Seventh and final film teaming of The Marx Brothers with Margaret Dumont.
    • Errores
      Obvious doubles for the main characters during the finale chase sequence (except for close-ups).
    • Citas

      Mr. Grover: What experience have you had at a department store?

      Wolf J. Flywheel: I was a shoplifter for three years.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Classic Comedy Teams (1986)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Tenement Symphony
      (1941)

      Music by Hal Borne

      Lyrics by Sid Kuller and Ray Golden

      Sung by Tony Martin (uncredited) and St. Luke's Episcopal Church Choristers (uncredited),

      with Chico Marx (uncredited) and Harpo Marx (uncredited)

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    • How long is The Big Store?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 10 de diciembre de 1941 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Italiano
    • También se conoce como
      • The Big Store
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, Estados Unidos(Studio)
    • Productora
      • Loew's
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 23min(83 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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