Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA vaudeville magician act is hired to right a wrong. Some comedy relief.A vaudeville magician act is hired to right a wrong. Some comedy relief.A vaudeville magician act is hired to right a wrong. Some comedy relief.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Slim Summerville
- Bill Ambrose
- (as "Slim" Summerville)
Ed Brady
- Stage Manager
- (non crédité)
Wallace MacDonald
- Theater Manager
- (non crédité)
Frank Mills
- Pilot
- (non crédité)
Frank O'Connor
- Detective
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
The Great La Salle is a stage mentalist who impresses audiences with his routine. A man sees their act and impressed by their vaudeville act..and offers them money to expose a faker...Dr. Portman (Ralph Morgan). It seems that Portman has an unusual hold over a widow and he seems to be a con man...and La Salle and his friends go to see her and, hopefully, stop Portman. But something odd happens when La Salle's partner (Zasu Pitts) is in her trance...she REALLY does receive a message from the dead husband! What's next? And, what's RALLY going on here?! And, could the woman who is being bilked actually be in dancer?!
During the 1930s, Hollywood made hundreds or, perhaps, thousands of B-mystery movies. Most have a very strong sameness about them...but not "Their Big Moment"...which turns out to be very well written, very well acted and is much better than I might have expected. And, most importantly, it's a very smart film that doesn't rely on the usual cliches!
During the 1930s, Hollywood made hundreds or, perhaps, thousands of B-mystery movies. Most have a very strong sameness about them...but not "Their Big Moment"...which turns out to be very well written, very well acted and is much better than I might have expected. And, most importantly, it's a very smart film that doesn't rely on the usual cliches!
Julie Haydon's husband died in a plane crash. She has since come under the domination of fake spiritualist Ralph Morgan. Her sister Kay Johnson and brother-in-law Bruce Cabot hire stage magician William Gaxton and his company of Slim Summerville and Zasu Pitts to destroy morgan's authority. It does not go as planned.
Gaxton tries to play it big and stagy, yet doesn't really succeed. His is odd, because he was a stage performer who had a big Broadway career, often starring with Victor Moore. That explains his infrequent movie appearances. Here, however, I was subject to the thought that this was a role intended for Edmund Lowe..... who was working for Fox.
Which leaves us with Summerville and Miss Pitts. Enjoying them is, I understand, a matter of individual taste. Happily, I enjoy them a great deal.
Gaxton tries to play it big and stagy, yet doesn't really succeed. His is odd, because he was a stage performer who had a big Broadway career, often starring with Victor Moore. That explains his infrequent movie appearances. Here, however, I was subject to the thought that this was a role intended for Edmund Lowe..... who was working for Fox.
Which leaves us with Summerville and Miss Pitts. Enjoying them is, I understand, a matter of individual taste. Happily, I enjoy them a great deal.
An interesting thirties film with the better character actors of that decade. As usual Ralph Morgan plays the heavy, while Zasu Pitts and Slim Summerville give the laughs to a light motion picture.
Actually the plot concept was better developed in, THE NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES, 1948, in a more involved story written by Cornell Woolrich.
Actually the plot concept was better developed in, THE NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES, 1948, in a more involved story written by Cornell Woolrich.
Grief-stricken Fay Harley (Julie Haydon) is comforted and controlled by fake spiritualist Dr. Portman (Ralph Morgan) after the death of her husband. Her sister Eve Farrington (Kay Johnson) is desperate to get her away from the charlatan. Eve's husband has an idea, vaudevillian magician The Great La Salle (William Gaxton). Bill Ambrose (Slim Summerville) and Tillie Whim (Zasu Pitts) are his two assistants.
This could be a fun scammer vs scammer idea. That part has some good aspects, but I would need for some better tricks and counter-tricks and debunking of the tricks. It seems rather rudimentary, but it goes well. This turns into more a murder mystery. By going this way, the movie opens itself up for some questioning. All in all, this has some interesting aspects.
This could be a fun scammer vs scammer idea. That part has some good aspects, but I would need for some better tricks and counter-tricks and debunking of the tricks. It seems rather rudimentary, but it goes well. This turns into more a murder mystery. By going this way, the movie opens itself up for some questioning. All in all, this has some interesting aspects.
Report from Cinesation 2006: THEIR BIG MOMENT (***) A 1934 RKO comedy-mystery directed by James Cruze, which apparently is kept off TCM by rights problems with the original play. William Gaxton (a big stage star), Zasu Pitts and Slim Summerville are a magician and his assistants who get hired as fake mediums to try to get a rich widow out of the clutches of another fake (Ralph Morgan). The plot meanders and needed some ironing out, but some genuinely funny bits and a good cast made this a pleasant find. (I was especially taken with the actress playing the widow, Julie Haydon, and wondered if she'd ever done anything else; she sure did-- she originated the daughter in The Glass Menagerie on Broadway.)
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWalter C. Hackett's play, "Afterwards," opened in London on 7 November 1933. It had no Broadway production.
- GaffesAt the house on Long Island Bill and La Salle are talking about what to do next and decide on another drink. Bill has his hat in one hand and a glass in the other as they start towards the bar table and the glass and hat switch hands between shots.
- Crédits fousHuntley Gordon's given name is misspelled as "Huntly" in the opening credits, but is correct in the end credits.
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 8min(68 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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