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Le metteur en scène

Titre original : Free and Easy
  • 1930
  • Passed
  • 1h 32min
NOTE IMDb
5,5/10
1,1 k
MA NOTE
Buster Keaton, Gwen Lee, and Anita Page in Le metteur en scène (1930)
Free And Easy: Make Me Laugh
Lire clip2:16
Regarder Free And Easy: Make Me Laugh
1 Video
43 photos
ComédieComédie musicale

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA bumbling manager tries to get a small town beauty contest winner into the movies.A bumbling manager tries to get a small town beauty contest winner into the movies.A bumbling manager tries to get a small town beauty contest winner into the movies.

  • Réalisation
    • Edward Sedgwick
  • Scénario
    • Richard Schayer
    • Paul Dickey
    • Al Boasberg
  • Casting principal
    • Buster Keaton
    • Anita Page
    • Trixie Friganza
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,5/10
    1,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Edward Sedgwick
    • Scénario
      • Richard Schayer
      • Paul Dickey
      • Al Boasberg
    • Casting principal
      • Buster Keaton
      • Anita Page
      • Trixie Friganza
    • 34avis d'utilisateurs
    • 13avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 2 victoires au total

    Vidéos1

    Free And Easy: Make Me Laugh
    Clip 2:16
    Free And Easy: Make Me Laugh

    Photos43

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 36
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    Rôles principaux30

    Modifier
    Buster Keaton
    Buster Keaton
    • Elmer Butts
    Anita Page
    Anita Page
    • Elvira Plunkett
    Trixie Friganza
    Trixie Friganza
    • Ma Plunkett
    Robert Montgomery
    Robert Montgomery
    • Larry Mitchell
    Fred Niblo
    Fred Niblo
    • Director Fred Niblo
    Edgar Dearing
    Edgar Dearing
    • Studio Gate Guard
    Gwen Lee
    Gwen Lee
    • Gwen Lee - Actress in Bedroom Scene
    John Miljan
    John Miljan
    • John Miljan - Actor in Bedroom Scene
    Lionel Barrymore
    Lionel Barrymore
    • Lionel Barrymore - Director of Bedroom Scene
    William Haines
    William Haines
    • William Haines - Guest at Premiere
    William Collier Sr.
    William Collier Sr.
    • William Collier Sr. - Master of Ceremonies at Premiere
    Dorothy Sebastian
    Dorothy Sebastian
    • Dorothy Sebastian - Actress in Cave Scene
    Karl Dane
    Karl Dane
    • Karl Dane - Actor in Cave Scene
    David Burton
    • Director David Burton
    Jack Baxley
    • Train Conductor
    • (non crédité)
    Edward Brophy
    Edward Brophy
    • Benny - The Stage Manager
    • (non crédité)
    Richard Carle
    Richard Carle
    • Eunuch Crowning Elmer
    • (non crédité)
    Louise Carver
    Louise Carver
    • Big German Woman
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Edward Sedgwick
    • Scénario
      • Richard Schayer
      • Paul Dickey
      • Al Boasberg
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs34

    5,51K
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    Avis à la une

    7AlsExGal

    What you think of it depends on your perspective...

    If you are looking for a study in early talking film and how MGM simply did not know how to utilize Buster Keaton, this is your movie. If you're looking for competition with Buster's great silents of the 20's look away and elsewhere. It's a 9 if you are in the first category, a 5 if you are in the second. I average the two together to get my rating of 7.

    The story is a simple one - Anita Page is a small-town beauty contest winner from the Midwest - Elvira Plunkett. She and her mother (Trixie Friganza) along with Elvira's agent, Elmer Butts (Keaton) are taking the train out west where Elvira will seek a career in movies ... with no contacts ... and no name recognition. What follows are their adventures on the train and in Hollywood once they arrive at their destination. Probably nothing would have happened if not for the fact that Elvira and her mother wind up running into movie star Larry Mitchell (Robert Montgomery) on the train. Larry takes a shine to Elvira and thus gets her invited to his studio - MGM of course - for a look at how films are made.

    This is the fascinating part. You get to see the actual MGM movie factory during the transition to sound. You see a completely inane and awful musical number - maybe intentionally so but I doubt it - that is exhibit A in why audiences rebelled against the early musicals. Poor Robert Montgomery is forced to dress up like a cossack and sing a duet. As Buster is chased through MGM by security guards you get a look at Lionel Barrymore directing a film - he did so for just a few years at MGM - complete with the camera blimps that allowed the cameras to emerge from the static booths and enabled more fluid motion in movies. You also get to see some of MGM's prominent directors of the time in conference, including Cecil B. De Mille who was employed there briefly at the dawn of sound.

    Now for the bad part. Buster is forced into a grueling "who's on first" kind of verbal comedy scene at the middle of the film that simply didn't suit him, is generally depicted as a bumbler when he had always been the innovative problem solver in his silent films, and during the finale musical number his beautiful face is covered in ridiculous clown makeup. The finale musical number is actually pretty good with a catchy tune and Keaton dancing about like a pro, doing his familiar "Highland Fling" if you've seen some of his silents. However, at the very end of the number he emerges as a puppet on a string - emblematic of Keaton's career at MGM. At least the studio let Keaton speak his first film words in front of a train - his favorite film prop.

    If you see this make sure you watch the documentary "So Funny It Hurt: Buster Keaton & MGM". It really helps put Keaton's MGM career in context and explains, as narrator James Karen says, "how Buster Keaton came to MGM as one of the greatest comics in the whole world, and ended up being regarded as totally unemployable just five years later."
    6bkoganbing

    Keaton The Schnook

    Free And Easy is another variation on the Merton of the Movies type film where unknown schnook goes to Hollywood and winds up a comedy star. It worked fine for Glenn Hunter on stage and Stu Erwin on the screen. The lead in Free And Easy was a part that was perfect for Eddie Cantor. But Buster Keaton got it and it wasn't quite right for him.

    Keaton, known in Hollywood as the Great Stone Face, was one of the greatest pantomimists the screen ever knew. Why you would star someone in a film that has musical numbers, though you would not classify it as a musical is beyond me. That title song which Keaton croaks would have been perfect for Eddie Cantor.

    In watching it I thought I recognized the plot of this film. It was part of the story line of Pepe, the great Cantinfas all star production from thirty years later. Keaton is in love with young Anita Page who is the young screen hopeful from his home town. But she's got eyes for the flawed young movie star Robert Montgomery.

    Like Pepe, a number of folks on the MGM lot made guest appearances as themselves. One of the most interesting was William Haines who at that time competing with Robert Montgomery for juvenile parts. Haines of course was one of the first film stars outted as gay and his fall was a lucky break for Montgomery's career.

    Best in the film is Trixie Friganza, a great vaudeville star who played Page's number. She really harries and harasses poor Keaton. Page has won some kind of contest and for reasons I can't explain the Chamber of Commerce of their hometown has appointed Keaton as her agent and manager. Like they have the right and the power. No wonder Trixie's mad at him.

    If you've seen Pepe, you know how this turns out.
    5Doylenf

    Buster Keaton and Anita Page in early sound film trifle...

    BUSTER KEATON and ANITA PAGE are saddled with some lame dialog and tacky situations in this hokey comedy about an aspiring beauty contest winner (Page) who travels to Hollywood with her mother in hope of becoming America's next motion picture sweetheart. It's a look at early Hollywood and for that reason alone it's fairly entertaining.

    ROBERT MONTGOMERY is featured as Larry Mitchell, a movie star who takes an interest in Page after a chance meeting on the train to Hollywood. Keaton is his usual bumbling self but the script is a mess with dialog that is painfully unfunny. Nobody can really save the comedy/musical from being way less than ordinary. Keaton with stilted lines is less funny than when he's pantomiming it up in silent films.

    Robert Montgomery is dubbed for a couple of awkward musical numbers, all done in the early style of MGM talkies before a word like "finesse" could be assigned to them. The tinny sound recording is no help.

    Best excuse for watching is to see how things improved rapidly in the late thirties and forties, but this one has to be regarded as strictly a curiosity piece for fans of Buster Keaton and early sound films.

    Painfully unfunny in an amateurish kind of way for a film from MGM. Interesting only for a glimpse of early Hollywood pioneering.
    4Igenlode Wordsmith

    The question is -- why Keaton?

    As a twist on the old 'innocent makes it big in the movies' theme, it's not a bad plot: a pretty blonde beauty queen from a sleepy provincial town comes to Hollywood in the chance of a lifetime... only, instead of Elvira winding up as a star, it is her Olympian harridan of a mother and incompetent booby of a would-be manager who end up with contracts -- as comic relief.

    Trixie Friganza provides a wonderful performance as the stage-door mother from hell, with the bonus of some very attractive costume routines in the film-within-a-film. Anita Page is naive and sweetly shy as the unambitious Elvira, establishing sympathy and character in a relatively small part. Robert Montgomery is competent but unremarkable as the caddish movie star she falls for, and who ultimately repents and offers her the prize of every good girl's virtue: marriage.

    But the question one is inevitably left asking concerns the casting of Buster Keaton as 'Elmer Butts', the shambling idiot. Nominally, this is a "Buster Keaton Production"; but in fact, his character is probably the biggest reason not to watch it, since most of the time Elmer is just embarrassing. Once you hide 'the great stone face' under sad-clown makeup, so that he can't use it to act with, and conceal the trained grace and expression of his body under tent-like trousers or padded tights, so that he can't act with that either, and then give him semi-moronic dialogue to recite so that he can't even act with his voice -- you have to ask yourself: why hire the talents of Keaton, of all people, in the first place?

    Presumably, given a scene in which the character gets repeatedly hit in the face and flung to the ground by a succession of muscular ladies, it helps if you employ an actor who can take a fall without getting hurt. Keaton manages to work in a few trademark variations on the basic tumble during this tedious sequence, and elsewhere in the film there are a couple of acrobatic moments of note: when Elmer launches himself straight into a horizontal tackle at neck-height at Elvira's seducer, and the illusory dive into a shallow tank of water. In the final dance sequence he forgets to shamble, and gives us a glimpse of crisp vaudeville steps despite the obliterating handicap of the costume. Otherwise, the part doesn't appear to demand his particular skills at all.

    The song and dance numbers raised a few -- I suspect not all intentional -- laughs, but tended to drag, an ongoing problem. Many of the dialogue scenes outstay their welcome, including the seduction sequence with its repeated cuts back to the chase, and almost all Elmer's allegedly amusing stand-up exchanges: I suspect you could shorten at least ten minutes out of this film and it would only be an improvement.

    Comedy-wise, it's effective from time to time. I was surprised into a few genuine laughs, including a couple where Keaton gets to slip in a dry sotto-voce aside -- an acting style that would clearly have suited him much better than the verbose mumbling and misunderstandings he has to labour through in this script. I'm not familiar enough with Buster Keaton's voice to tell how much of the slurred delivery here was produced for 'comic' effect and how much was his natural vocal range... but frankly, in a number of scenes he sounds quite simply drunk, an effect that can't possibly have been wanted!

    The ending, meanwhile, appears to lack effective resolution, and left me somewhat up in the air as to what message it was supposed to convey. Elvira marries her actor, as Elmer's stumbling attempts to confess his own love inadvertently contrive to bring together the estranged pair; but the film, mis-paced as ever, doesn't end at this point. Instead Elvira, still innocently unaware of Elmer's feelings for her, kisses him in gratitude, laughs at him, and sends him back out in front of the cameras to be comic (which, as ever, he fails in any noticeable degree to achieve)... and then we have yet another musical number, with the two love-birds caught up in each other's eyes, and Keaton just standing there immobile, grotesquely painted and (presumably) heartbroken.

    Is it supposed to be funny? Is it trying for some ironic depth hitherto unheralded by the rest of the film? Are we supposed to feel sorry for Elmer -- and if so, just what sort of a comedy ending is that?

    (Plus, an unpalatable point: if one of your actors has a mutilated forefinger, then don't have him fidgeting with the stump throughout in the foreground of a dialogue scene! In Buster's own films, spot-the-finger is an endearing game to be played by those in the know, with a complicit wink; here, it's painfully obvious.)

    There were moments, at the beginning, when I thought this film might have potential; it was never going to be a classic, but it might have been an unpretentious contemporary spoof. The script needs tightening up throughout, often wasting its laughs by labouring the point instead of cutting out a line or two in favour of a reaction shot. But the outcome is basically doomed from the moment that the plot starts dressing the miscast Keaton up: he might just have carried Elmer off as a deadpan role in ordinary clothing, but in third-rate pier end farce he hasn't got a hope. And no amount of proclaiming on screen that the result is the biggest thing in comedy is going to help.
    7rap-39

    Well worth watching!!

    The first 2/3 of the flick has Buster Keaton rambling around movie sets, pretty much getting into trouble. While the last roughly 1/3 of the movie focusing on the "Free and Easy" dance presentation, very entertaining (at least to this writer). If you are at all interested in the 1930's movies then this is a must have for your collection, and you WILL enjoy it!

    Incidentally, it's easy to see why background dancer, Ann Dvorak went from an 18 year old dancer in this film to co-starring in a major movie (Scarface) only two years later. She really captures your attention – a beautiful gal!!

    Regarding the singer/dancer listed as "Marion Shilling", IMDb indicates that Marion Shilling is the "Singer and Dancer in 'The Free and Easy' Number (uncredited)". The girl dancing with Keaton most decidedly is not Marion Shilling.

    "Free and Easy" was released March 22, 1930. I have a number of DVD's featuring Marion Shilling in co-starring roles: "Shadow of the Law'with William Powell (released a couple months later on June 6, 1930). I also have DVD's of Marion Shilling in "Rio Rattler" (released Aug 1, 1935) and "I'll Name the Murderer" – Jan. 27, 1936. The dancer with Keaton in "Free and Easy" bears little resemblance to the Marion Shilling that co-starred in the DVD's I list above.

    In his review of Free and Easy, Kidboots states: "Elmer is teamed with a cute dancer (Estelle Moran)". This may well be; however I could find no movies or pictures of an actress named Estelle Moran (or "Estelle Morgan") from that period. So the identity of the singer/dancer remains unclear – except it is not Marion Shilling. Perhaps if you listed the dancer as "Unknown" it would be more accurate.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Talkie debut for Buster Keaton.
    • Gaffes
      When Larry orders his car, a visible mike descends from the upper right hand corner of the frame while he says his line, then rises out of sight again.
    • Citations

      Ma: From now on we're going to manage ourselves, Mr. Butts! Oh, I've never been so humiliated in my life. I'm ashamed to show my face.

      Elmer Butts: I don't blame ya.

    • Connexions
      Alternate-language version of Estrellados (1930)
    • Bandes originales
      The Free And Easy
      (1930) (uncredited)

      Lyrics by Roy Turk

      Music by Fred E. Ahlert

      Played during the opening credits

      Sung and danced by Buster Keaton, Doris McMahon and chorus

      Copyright 1930 Robbins Music Corporation

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 2 janvier 1931 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Allemand
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Free and Easy
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 500 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 1h 32min(92 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White

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