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Killer Diller

  • 1948
  • 1h 13min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.5/10
166
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Reet, Petite, and Gone (1947)
ComedyDramaMusicMusical

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAn all-Black comedy and dance revue with stars of stage and screen.An all-Black comedy and dance revue with stars of stage and screen.An all-Black comedy and dance revue with stars of stage and screen.

  • Dirección
    • Josh Binney
  • Guionista
    • Hal Seeger
  • Elenco
    • Dusty Fletcher
    • George Wiltshire
    • Butterfly McQueen
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.5/10
    166
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Josh Binney
    • Guionista
      • Hal Seeger
    • Elenco
      • Dusty Fletcher
      • George Wiltshire
      • Butterfly McQueen
    • 12Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 1Opinión de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Fotos28

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    + 23
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    Elenco principal27

    Editar
    Dusty Fletcher
    • Dusty
    • (as Dusty 'Open the Door Richard' Fletcher)
    George Wiltshire
    • Dumdone - the Manager
    Butterfly McQueen
    Butterfly McQueen
    • Butterfly
    Nellie Hill
    • Lola - His Fianée
    Freddie Robinson
    • Sarge
    William Campbell
    • Policeman
    Edgar Martin
    • Policeman
    Sidney Easton
    • Policeman
    • (as Sid Easton)
    Augustus Smith
    • Stage Hand
    • (as Gus Smith)
    Moms Mabley
    Moms Mabley
    • Self
    • (as Jackie Mabley)
    Ken Renard
    Ken Renard
    • The Great Voodoo
    Andy Kirk and His Orchestra
    • Themselves
    James Clark
    • Self
    • (as The Clark Brothers)
    Steve Clark
    • Self
    • (as The Clark Brothers)
    Nat 'King' Cole
    Nat 'King' Cole
    • King Cole
    • (as King Cole Trio)
    The Four Congaroos
    • Themselves
    The King Cole Trio
    • Themselves
    Andy Kirk
    • Self
    • Dirección
      • Josh Binney
    • Guionista
      • Hal Seeger
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios12

    5.5166
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    Opiniones destacadas

    5yonhope

    Good movie, great entertainers, no budget

    Hi, Everyone, The best part of this is the dance routine, make that two dance routines by The Clark Brothers. They are gorgeous to watch and they move like boneless puppets on rubber strings. How can they keep smiling when they have to be pooped? Nat Cole is the biggest name here. This was about two years before he became a huge name in the world of show business when he recorded "Mona Lisa." He had a lot of fame already when he appeared here from earlier, but lesser hits like "Sweet Lorraine" and more notably, "The Christmas Song," which eventually would become his biggest seller. He was only 17 years from the end of his career. He would die in 1965.

    The songs he sings here are good from a musicianship standpoint, but they suck for the listener. If he had done "Nature Boy" or "Ramblin' Rose" or "Pretend" this movie would have been a real winner. I guess they weren't written yet.

    Some of the other musical numbers and comedy entries are just barely acceptable, including "Moms" Mabley, who would become a wonderful comedy actress and act in her later years. It is hard to believe she was past 50 when this was made. Her style was taking shape, but her writing was not there yet.

    The twosome that does an impression of The Ink Spots is enjoyable and I would like to have seen them with some great material. Perhaps a script would have helped.

    The basic story is OK and it keeps one amused with a Keystone Kops type troupe, but the sets are not quite as grandiose as one might see in Ben Hur or Pee Wee's Big Adventure.

    There is a lot to like here. It is wonderful some early footage like this exists to show what vaudeville was and where some of the big names came from.

    Nat was more enjoyable in Cat Ballou. I once had the pleasure of watching him perform in person at NBC TV in Hollywood for his TV show. He was great with a live audience. He stayed for about an hour after the show was over to perform for the audience in the theater.

    Tom Willett
    5Terrell-4

    Some great entertainers...and take the time to read about the history of these Hollywood all-black movie

    Killer Diller is one of the hundreds of films Hollywood churned out in the Thirties and Forties with minimal budgets, usually limited skills with the behind-the-camera personnel and with all-black casts. As soon as the pictures were in the can they were sent out to play in the movie equivalent of the old vaudeville chitlin' circuit...movie theaters in the South that played to segregated black audiences and movie theaters in the north that played to almost exclusively black audiences. The movies might have been second rate but the artists seldom were. Hollywood might now be incessantly patting its back about how liberal and open- minded it is toward black actors (we won't get into the situation with Latinos), but a generation ago just about the only opportunity for talented and skilled black entertainers were in these unofficially segregated movies. If we want a better understanding of Hollywood movie-making, we need to see some of these films. For many of the entertainers featured, these films are the only record we have of what they could do. On the one hand, these movies make a sad and discouraging story. On the other, what wonders these artists could perform.

    Killer Diller has the slightest of story lines, something about Mortimer Dumdone (George Wiltshire), the impresario of a theater who is presenting a variety show, somehow seeing his fiancé, Lola (Nellie Hill) disappear in a magic trick with a string of expensive pearls around her neck. A fake magician (Dusty "Open the Door, Richard" Fletcher), pretending to be Voodoo Man, is responsible. Dumdone's secretary, Butterfly McQueen, calls in the cops, who turn out to be a quartet of bumbling, falling, sprawling incompetents. Now forget all that. The point of the movie is the variety show, and it's a lot of fun. Basically, the director set up his camera facing the stage and then took a long lunch break. Let's see...there's Andy Kirk and His Orchestra doing some great, driving swing numbers featuring jazz saxophones...vocalist Beverley White, a cross between Pearl Bailey and Ethel Waters, singing...

    "I don't want to get married / for when you're single you have so much fun.

    I don't want to get married / 'cause two don't live as happily as one.

    Now I might want to stay out late some times all the way next day

    And I don't want to be worried about what my husband's going' to say."

    There's Patterson and Jackson, two large and very round singers, one a first-rate tap dancer, who manage among their other bits to do a wonderful impression of the four Ink Spots...Moms Mabley, that rough-voiced, dry-witted comedienne, serves up laughs and a song...The Clark Brothers, two young men who are all fast taps and smooth moves, never let up in a long tap routine...The King Cole Trio performs three numbers. Nat Cole already is as stylish and distinctive a vocalist as he was a great jazz pianist. There's also a dancing chorus and a blow-'em-away finale that brings the Trio and the Andy Kirk Orchestra together in a big, flashy swing number.

    Every now and then we check back to see how the plot line is going.

    Dusty Fletcher, the fake magician, is a comic actor with great timing. He also, like so many black comedians way back when, uses all the black exaggerations in the book to get laughs, just as so many Jewish comedians have used all the stereotyped "Jewish" characteristics. It seems that when an ethnic comedian uses stereotypes to get laughs from his or her own ethnic group, it's accepted, even if uneasily at least by those not of the group. But a comedian not of the ethnic group using those same comedy lines and voice inflections just seems odious. It's an uncomfortable and understandable situation. We might make a joke about our Aunt Bertha, but we don't want to hear a joke about her coming from the neighbor down the block. Yet I still felt awkward seeing Fletcher saying and doing the kind of eye- rolling exaggerations that made Amos and Andy popular back then and which seem extraordinarily condescending now. The saving grace, I suppose, is that Fletcher may be playing an unschooled charlatan, but the man's as sly as a fox, as shrewd as a Washington lawyer and a heck of a lot funnier than either Amos or Andy.
    5artpf

    Curio from the All Black Closet

    Very interesting movie made when there were all black films made exclusively for all black theatres in the 40s. The films featured popular black acts of the day.

    The director of this movie also directed a number of all black movies including Hi De Ho, which is a classic.

    The story is thin, but the action keeps moving forward at a good pace. Most notable is a young Mom Mabley (actually in her 50s with teeth!) and Nat King Cole, as well as Butterfly McQueen.

    Parenthetically, the Wiki listing of Mom's Mabley is very confusing. It says she came out as a lesbian in 1921 at aged 27, which is not only hard to believe, but also doesn't explain how she had a bunch of kids and grand kids.

    It's not a great movie, but is worth watching as a way to remember how things were in the past during segregation when producers found a profitable market with all black audiences. Interestingly, some of the action might be considered racist or stereotyped today, but one must remember that these acts played this way for black audiences and these movies were not even seen by whites until recent years when the movies were release on DVD!
    4fubared1

    Not as good as it sounds

    Don't be fooled by the other reviewers. Although this film contains an impressive array of talent, the material they present leaves a great deal to be desired. Nat King Cole's 3 numbers are pretty lame and not even close to his later efforts, though he does impress with his piano playing. 'Moms' Mabley is not a bit funny, though I remember her as a very entertaining talk show guest from my youth. Actually, the best performances are from a couple of fat guys who impress with a lively tap dance and a Four Tops takeoff, and the jazz band itself, especially in the number featuring the bass player. The print itself is pretty poor quality, and the wonderful Butterfly McQueen is totally wasted in the wraparound plot.
    7tavm

    Variety revue Killer Diller worth seeing for many black entertainers both legendary and obscure

    Continuing to review movies featuring African-Americans in chronological order for Black History Month, we're now at 1948 with a revue presented on film by the All-American News company. What plot there is concerns Dusty "Open the Door, Richard" Fletcher being chased by some bumbling cops because of some ridiculous situation I don't feel like discussing here. The only funny parts of these segments were when one of those policemen said he knows where Dusty went because "I saw this picture before!" not to mention when another of them said "Let's do that again", the film went backward before the same running action ran as before. There was an amusing appearance by Jackie "Moms" Mabley on stage when discussing Old Mother Hubbard's gin or scatting to the song "Don't Sit on My Bed". Otherwise, it was mostly great musical acts like the Big Band-flavored Andy Kirk and His Orchestra, vocalist Beverly White, and The King Cole Trio with Nat himself playing great piano while singing "Ooh, Kickeroonie" and "Now He Tells Me" and then member Johnny Miller doing great bass on the instrumental "Breezy and the Bass". Also, Patterson and Jackson entertainingly impersonate The Ink Spots on "If I Didn't Care" before one of them does a tap dancing routine. Another duo of that sort are The Clark Brothers doing the kind of stuff The Nicholas Brothers had already done in several major shorts and features. And then there's the jitterbugging Four Congaroos which feature a couple of male-female pairs energetically doing what was the dance style of the day. Many of these acts, other than The King Cole Trio, aren't very well known today and appeared in few other films. The same could be said of many of the supporting actors though an exception would be Ken Renard, who plays the The Great Voodoo here, who subsequently appeared in many features and TV shows. In fact, I just watched him in the 1969 True Grit in which he was Yarnell Pointdexter, Mattie Ross's guardian during the hanging sequence when she was played by Kim Darby. Oh, and one more player here who had done many major features but would soon quit since she didn't like the stereotyping she endured was Butterfly McQueen who wasn't funny here. She would appear in Ms. Mabley's last film appearance of Amazing Grace in 1974. Okay, so on that note, I highly recommend Killer Diller if you're a curious enough film buff. P.S. Another player, Augustus Smith, was a native of Jacksonville, FL, which was where I once lived at from 1987-2003.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Conexiones
      Edited into SanKofa Theater: Killer Diller (2017)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Breezy and the Bass
      Music by Nat 'King' Cole and Johnny Miller

      Performed by The King Cole Trio, featuring Johnny Miller

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    Detalles

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    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Productora
      • All-American News
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 13 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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