Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn order clerk poses as a millionaire.An order clerk poses as a millionaire.An order clerk poses as a millionaire.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Billy Bletcher
- Ipps
- (non crédité)
Betty Jane Graham
- Child
- (non crédité)
George 'Gabby' Hayes
- Western Union Clerk
- (non crédité)
Edwin Maxwell
- J.W. Rollins
- (non crédité)
Cyril Ring
- Vincent Colgate
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Historically speaking, you couldn't ask for a better cast -- Joe Brown, Frank McHugh, Edwin Maxwell, Bernice Claire. All pros! this was a pretty early talkie, and a couple years before the film code, so they could still make naughty jokes and prance around in their underwear. BUT.... some annoying ingredients here.. I personally find Joe Brown's over-acting annoying, as well as that loud, long noise he makes every couple minutes. and one of the women had that horrible little baby voice that apparently so many women had back then. and did there have to be so many song and dance numbers? really slowed things down. some fun word-play by the cast. and i always like films that have Frank McHugh. Looks like this one was filmed at an actual lakeside resort in Norco California. must have been fun for the cast! directed by Mervyn Leroy when he was just getting started. Pretty good!
early Joe E. Brown vehicle with creaky plot and snappy lines. There are a couple nice musical numbers thrown in. Brown poses as a big shot at a resort and wins the girl and saves the day. But this is one of Brown's better early comedies. He is funny and has a nice dance number with the funny Laura Lee(who is in the Joan Davis/Majorie White mold). Jack Whiting in a solid sidekick, and Bernice Claire is also solid as a leading lady. Throw in Frank McHugh and you have a decent little comedy.
Top Speed has both Joe E. Brown and Jack Whiting as a pair of order clerks at a
brokerage house who decide to see how the other half lives. They pose as young
society blades while Brown is supposed to deliver an order which he misplaces.
Whiting falls for millionaire heiress Bernice Claire and she him. But will it hold once she finds out who he is. As for Brown he's got entertainer Laura Lee very interested in him.
The climax is a motorboat race which is quite the comic event. Evinrude's motors really take a pounding from Brown. And from Frank McHugh in one of his early films where he plays a perpetually soused millionaire/inventor.
A good one for Joe E. Brown fans.
Whiting falls for millionaire heiress Bernice Claire and she him. But will it hold once she finds out who he is. As for Brown he's got entertainer Laura Lee very interested in him.
The climax is a motorboat race which is quite the comic event. Evinrude's motors really take a pounding from Brown. And from Frank McHugh in one of his early films where he plays a perpetually soused millionaire/inventor.
A good one for Joe E. Brown fans.
Two penniless clerks, pretending to be industrial tycoons while staying at a lavish Florida resort, must keep their lies coming at TOP SPEED before their new wealthy girlfriends discover the truth.
Comic Joe E. Brown dominates this little film with his particular brand of slightly naughty physical humor. His agile body, elastic face and tremendous mouth are sure signs to the audience that laughs are on the way. Most of the time he's off the screen you wish he wasn't. He gets to do a little eccentric singing & dancing - ably backed up by energetic comedienne Laura Lee - which makes the rest of the movie's traditional hoofing look dull by comparison.
Jack Whiting plays Brown's buddy, and while a pleasant enough fellow he doesn't generate many chuckles. His romance with pretty Bernice Claire is faintly dull and his lengthy subplot - in which he races a motorboat and matches wits with an elderly extortionist - is interesting but really only serves to fill out the screen time.
Frank McHugh has some funny moments as a wacky inventor; Ward Boteler livens up a few scenes as a single-minded sheriff. Movie mavens will recognize an uncredited Edwin Maxwell as a petulant millionaire.
Ultimately, this is Joe E. Brown's film - another rung up the cinematic ladder to movies in which he would be the main star - both with the comedy and the romantic action.
Comic Joe E. Brown dominates this little film with his particular brand of slightly naughty physical humor. His agile body, elastic face and tremendous mouth are sure signs to the audience that laughs are on the way. Most of the time he's off the screen you wish he wasn't. He gets to do a little eccentric singing & dancing - ably backed up by energetic comedienne Laura Lee - which makes the rest of the movie's traditional hoofing look dull by comparison.
Jack Whiting plays Brown's buddy, and while a pleasant enough fellow he doesn't generate many chuckles. His romance with pretty Bernice Claire is faintly dull and his lengthy subplot - in which he races a motorboat and matches wits with an elderly extortionist - is interesting but really only serves to fill out the screen time.
Frank McHugh has some funny moments as a wacky inventor; Ward Boteler livens up a few scenes as a single-minded sheriff. Movie mavens will recognize an uncredited Edwin Maxwell as a petulant millionaire.
Ultimately, this is Joe E. Brown's film - another rung up the cinematic ladder to movies in which he would be the main star - both with the comedy and the romantic action.
This is an overall mediocre comedy, but it does contain some delightfully risquè lines and situations which could only have happened pre-code. Joe E. Brown is an acquired taste; the real find here is Laura Lee, a peppy comedienne who reminded me of Winnie Lightner (but prettier!) and who, surprisingly, made only a handful of films before retiring. She and Brown fit well together. Warning: the TCM print of this movie is missing a few minutes, which are apparently lost. ** out of 4.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAmong the songs cut from the version which presently survives in in the Warner Bros. library, and which is occasionally shown on Turner Classic Movies, is What Would I Care, sung by Bernice Claire and Jack Whiting at the end of reel five, which is "missing in action".
- GaffesAt the beginning of the film when Elmer is fishing, the bobber on his line is white when seen in the water, but dark when he pulls the line out of the water.
- Versions alternativesThe original 80-minute version, a full musical, was released only outside of the United States. Most of the musical numbers were cut for the domestic version. It is unknown whether a print of this longer version still exists, although the complete soundtrack to the International Sound Version (which includes all of the original songs) survives on Vitaphone discs at the UCLA Film and Television Archives.
- Bandes originalesAs Long as I Have You
(1930) (uncredited)
Music by Joseph A. Burke
Lyrics by Al Dubin
Performed by Bernice Claire and Jack Whiting and chorus
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 20min(80 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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