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The Big Broadcast of 1938

  • 1938
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 31min
NOTE IMDb
6,1/10
1,1 k
MA NOTE
W.C. Fields, Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour, Martha Raye, and Shirley Ross in The Big Broadcast of 1938 (1938)
ComédieMusicalRomanceScience-fiction

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe Bellows family causes comic confusion on an ocean liner, with time out for radio-style musical acts.The Bellows family causes comic confusion on an ocean liner, with time out for radio-style musical acts.The Bellows family causes comic confusion on an ocean liner, with time out for radio-style musical acts.

  • Réalisation
    • Mitchell Leisen
    • James P. Hogan
  • Scénario
    • Walter DeLeon
    • Francis Martin
    • Ken Englund
  • Casting principal
    • W.C. Fields
    • Martha Raye
    • Dorothy Lamour
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,1/10
    1,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Mitchell Leisen
      • James P. Hogan
    • Scénario
      • Walter DeLeon
      • Francis Martin
      • Ken Englund
    • Casting principal
      • W.C. Fields
      • Martha Raye
      • Dorothy Lamour
    • 36avis d'utilisateurs
    • 13avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompensé par 1 Oscar
      • 5 victoires au total

    Photos28

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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    W.C. Fields
    W.C. Fields
    • T. Frothingill Bellows…
    Martha Raye
    Martha Raye
    • Martha Bellows
    Dorothy Lamour
    Dorothy Lamour
    • Dorothy Wyndham
    Shirley Ross
    Shirley Ross
    • Cleo Fielding
    Lynne Overman
    Lynne Overman
    • Scoop McPhail
    Bob Hope
    Bob Hope
    • Buzz Fielding
    Ben Blue
    Ben Blue
    • Mike
    Leif Erickson
    Leif Erickson
    • Bob Hayes
    • (as Leif Erikson)
    Patricia Wilder
    Patricia Wilder
    • Honey Chile
    Grace Bradley
    Grace Bradley
    • Grace Fielding
    Rufe Davis
    Rufe Davis
    • Turnkey
    Lionel Pape
    Lionel Pape
    • Lord Droopy
    Virginia Vale
    Virginia Vale
    • Joan Fielding
    • (as Dorothy Howe)
    Russell Hicks
    Russell Hicks
    • Capt. Stafford
    Kirsten Flagstad
    Kirsten Flagstad
    • Specialty: the Metropolitan Opera Company
    Wilfrid Pelletier
    Wilfrid Pelletier
    • Specialty: Conductor of The Metropolitan Opera Company
    Tito Guízar
    Tito Guízar
    • Specialty
    Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm Orchestra
    • Specialty
    • Réalisation
      • Mitchell Leisen
      • James P. Hogan
    • Scénario
      • Walter DeLeon
      • Francis Martin
      • Ken Englund
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs36

    6,11.1K
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    Avis à la une

    7northstar-5

    Amusing enough to watch every few years

    There are momentary gems in this movie, and I recently bought the DVD because I fondly remembered it from its television broadcasts during my childhood. Hope and Ross's "Thanks for the Memory" (that's the actual spelling; it isn't plural) is so well portrayed that it seems they are recalling actual moments from their lives. This is almost the only moment of sincerity in this otherwise farcical fluff-piece. Martha Raye's "Oh, Mama!" is eye-popping primarily because I believe she did her own stunts in it, and she is bandied about like an unlucky mouse caught by a gruesomely playful puss. WC Fields sparks frequent smirks with his ostentatious manner combined with total buffoonery. Dorothy Lamour is only pleasant; I don't believe she had yet found her spark for comedy that was later displayed in the Hope & Crosby Road Movies. Her song (she only gets one but sings it ad infinitum to Leif Erickson), along with the remainder of the musical score, is surprisingly engaging. All in all an enjoyable musical comedy review, designed so audiences could finally see the faces of the performers they invited into their living rooms through the radio.
    6AlsExGal

    chaotic musical starring the best of Paramount musical comedy talent

    The "plot" of this slapdash musical concerns a transatlantic ship race between two new "super-ships", the Gigantic and the Colossal. On board the former, S.B. Bellows (W.C. Fields), the brother of shipping line boss T. Frothingill Bellows (also Fields), tries to ensure that his ship wins, although he spends most of his times in drunken calamities. Also on board is entertainment host Buzz Fielding (Bob Hope), who takes time in between introducing musical acts to rekindle romance with one of his ex-wives (Shirley Ross), while his current girlfriend (Dorothy Lamour) falls for handsome ship radioman Bob (Leif Erickson). Things get even more chaotic when Bellows' daughter Martha (Martha Raye) comes aboard. Also featuring Ben Blue, Grace Bradley, Lynne Overman, Patricia Wilder, Rufe Davis, Lionel Pape, Virginia Hale, James Craig, Richard Denning, Monte Blue, Mae Busch, Leonid Kinskey, Bernard Punsly, and Russell Hicks.

    Seemingly assembled from bits of different movies awkwardly stitched together, there's some funny stuff here, but no kind of pacing or interesting narrative. Fields, who was making his final Paramount film here, is funny, and his golf game and billiards game scenes are top notch. Bob Hope, making his feature debut, sings his signature song. I was pleasantly surprised to see future Road co-star Lamour already working with him. Martha Raye gets a rather impressive song and dance number that gets acrobatic and she obviously didn't use a double. The music numbers are an odd lot, too, with a couple of songs by Mexican star Tito Guizar, a performance from Norwegian opera diva Kirsten Flagstad (doing Wagner's "Brunnhilde's Battle Cry"), and Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm Orchestra doing "This Little Ripple Had Rhythm" which combines live action with animation to show the "origin" of the "rippling rhythm", which apparently was an ambulatory blob of swamp water that separates from a bog and walks to Fields' band and teaches them. It makes as much sense as it sounds. The movie won the Oscar for Best Song ("Thanks for the Memory").
    6csteidler

    Uneven hodgepodge has its moments

    The trans-Atlantic race is on between the two great ocean liners, the Colossal and the Gigantic. On board the Gigantic (or is it the Colossal? Not even all of the passengers are sure) is an assortment of characters who present us with a sort of variety show over the course of the voyage:

    • W.C. Fields, ship's owner. He stops on the way to the pier for a game of golf ("Stand clear, keep your eye on the ball," he tells his large team of caddies) and so has to catch up with the ship by flying in on his mini-helicopter. He's nuts. He has a daughter...


    • Martha Raye: According to pop Fields, "She's an unfortunate girl….Seven years ago, she crashed an aeroplane in a mirror factory. Broke 9,831 mirrors."


    • Bob Hope: A radio announcer broadcasting updates on the race, he is accompanied on the journey by his three ex-wives, who intend to prevent prospective wife number four from cutting into their alimony checks ("She can't chisel me down to any 25%....").


    • Dorothy Lamour, who has second thoughts about becoming that fourth wife when she meets…


    • Leif Erickson, handsome and brilliant young engineer who has designed the special propulsion system for the ship.


    • Shirley Ross, one of the ex-wives. She and Hope get to chatting and can't quite remember why they ever divorced in the first place.


    The plot is an uneven mishmash, but some good songs stand out. Lamour sings "You Took the Words Right Out of My Heart," a lovely ballad. Raye does one called, "Mama, That Moon Is Here Again," which builds into a wild acrobatic dance in which sailors toss Martha all around the deck. The performance by Hope and Ross of "Thanks for the Memory" is truly excellent—it's a bittersweet song that we all know and yet it actually means something in its context of two old lovers hashing over regrets and falling back in love. It's a wonderfully touching and low key performance.

    In between these highlights is a lot of nonsense, some of it amusing. The plot doesn't exactly buzz along—it stops and starts too much before ultimately drawing to a rather hasty resolution at the end of the voyage. It is kind of like of a big broadcast, a radio all star variety program, I suppose. Taken as a whole, it's really not that great a picture—but it's certainly worth seeing for the sake of its numerous highlights.
    9mgunning

    A Big Broadcast indeed

    This movie is very dear to me. I saw it on late-night TV when I was about 12 years old, tape-recorded the sound track and listened to it over and over again. This is a movie that has everything: wacky W. C. Fields bits like his golf and pool routines, Bob Hope bombing out with the crowd on the ship (imagine, in his first movie role he can't even raise a laugh!), bizarre but charming performers like Shep Fields with his Rippling Rhythm orchestra (whom Lawrence Welk obviously ripped off), accompanied by an even more bizarre animated segment.

    It's almost like watching a '30s stage revue of really gifted and varied performers, including a Mexican singer so beautiful he must be gay, and Martha Raye doing her foghorn bit. But the crowning glory of this film is the funny and poignant duet, Thanks for the Memory, with Bob Hope and Shirley Ross.

    Most people know the tune as Bob's theme song, but few know the clever, tender, almost Dorothy Parker-like lyrics. This is the story of a sophisticated but madcap couple, not unlike Nick and Nora Charles, running through money like water, traveling the world, and finding bliss in bed. Each verse tells a little bit more of their story in an arch, clever way that is never too trite because of Shirley Ross's marvelous acting. Her facial expressions reveal the deeper story underneath the actual events, a couple who were madly in love but stormy and tempestuous, with fights that may have included screaming and hair-pulling.

    Shirley makes reference to "the night you came home with lipstick on your tie", making it sound like an uproarious joke, while Bob rolls his eyes in discomfort. He sings of "that weekend in Niagara when we hardly saw the falls," and Ross murmurs, "How lovely that was." "Thank you," Bob replies.

    This is a fresh and sensitive take on what could be a very sentimental song, and I can never see it without tearing up at the end. This movie is worth renting or buying, if you can find it, as a great example of '30s entertainment with the bonus of a truly great "love-lost" song.
    7tavm

    W.C. Fields and Bob Hope are probably the reasons anyone would still watch The Big Broadcast of 1938

    This was my third time in watching this movie when I popped the DVD in just now. It's notable as W.C. Fields' last for Paramount, and Bob Hope's first feature after years of doing shorts. It also marked the first time Hope performed what became his theme song-"Thanks for the Memory"-which, as performed here, was originally a bittersweet ditty of a love that had its ups and downs with Shirley Ross providing a nice share of wit in duetting with Hope in singing it. Fields is funny whether playing golf, pool, or trying to run the ship though I admit I rewinded some of his scenes to try to understand what he's saying! Two future Hope co-stars, Dorothy Lamour and Martha Raye, provide some charms along the way with Ms. Lamour singing a nice romantic ballad and Ms. Raye doing some great comic banter and slapstick. There's also some amusements from Ben Blue and a forgotten lady named Patricia Wilder as a Southern belle doing deadpan shtick. Oh, and an animated sequence produced by Leon Schlesinger though since he was just a money man, it could possibly have been helmed by whoever was the "supervisor" under him at the time like Fred "Tex" Avery, Robert Clampett, or Frank Tashlin. No great shakes but The Big Broadcast of 1938 is worth a look for historical reasons and if you find the people I mentioned entertaining.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Bob Hope's big break in feature films occurred after Jack Benny turned down this role.
    • Gaffes
      Near the end of the movie the helmsman said that the S.S. Gigantic was diesel powered. That would mean that the liner's proper name would be MV (Motor Vessel) Gigantic as opposed to SS (Stream Ship) Gigantic.
    • Citations

      First reporter: Say, do you know anything about electricity?

      S.B. Bellows: My father occupied the chair of applied electricity at State Prison.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Hollywood and the Stars: The Fabulous Musicals (1963)
    • Bandes originales
      This Little Ripple Had Rhythm
      (uncredited)

      Music by Ralph Rainger

      Performed by Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm Orchestra

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    FAQ18

    • How long is The Big Broadcast of 1938?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 30 mars 1938 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Radioparaden 1938
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Eastern Service Studios, Astoria, Queens, New York City, New York, États-Unis(sequence: Kirsten Flagstad aria)
    • Société de production
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 31min(91 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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