Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueBarbers Nilly and Glub reluctantly become ambassadors for an Indian nation at a peace conference in Geneva. Facing sabotage from an ammunition executive, they persevere through romantic enta... Tout lireBarbers Nilly and Glub reluctantly become ambassadors for an Indian nation at a peace conference in Geneva. Facing sabotage from an ammunition executive, they persevere through romantic entanglements and setbacks to represent their people.Barbers Nilly and Glub reluctantly become ambassadors for an Indian nation at a peace conference in Geneva. Facing sabotage from an ammunition executive, they persevere through romantic entanglements and setbacks to represent their people.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Bouncer
- (non crédité)
- Schmerzenschmerzen
- (non crédité)
- Delegate to Peace Conference
- (non crédité)
- Ship's Passenger
- (non crédité)
- Butler
- (non crédité)
- Delegate to Peace Conference
- (non crédité)
- Indian Chief
- (non crédité)
- Ship's Passenger
- (non crédité)
- French Vamp
- (non crédité)
- Deaf Dowager
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
The story begins with the pair lamenting their opening up a barber shop on American Indian land. The natives don't have beards and don't need their services...but they do, for some inexplicable reason, want Willy and Hercules (Wheeler & Woolsey) to represent them at the Geneva peace conference. After all, they wonder why the Indian nation isn't being represented and they want peace. However, a baddie (Louis Calhern) is bent on preventing the pair from addressing the conference, as he wants war...though they never really say why!
The film is, like "Duck Soup" from the Marx Brothers (which debuted a few months later), a film that is actually deadly serious. It makes fun of the peace conferences of the day because they pointed out that these conferences really achieved nothing to protect mankind...and the film even ends on a very, very dark note. In many ways, it's very intelligent in addressing this YET it also is very dopey and filled with tons of jokes...many of which fall a bit bit flat. It's also very unusual in that the film's dialog is often sung. Overall, a good film that occasionally misses the mark...but also often succeeds.
By the way, I need to address the proverbial elephant in the room with this film. It is filled with politically incorrect stuff that will horrify some viewers. Hugh Herbert plays a Chinese man, the American Indian tribesmen and sexy tribeswomen are ridiculous and the final scene at the peace conference is a giant black-face number!! It is offensive....a product of its times, of course! But, all in all, I still enjoyed it in spite of everything.
Also, do NOT freak out at the swastikas in the opening credits. American Indians (as well as Asians) used the symbol for many, many, many years before the Nazis ever began in Germany....and it's not meant as a Nazi reference.
Wheeler & Woolsey take a plot ridiculous even by their standards and manage to get some solid laughs out of it. The Boys (Bert Wheeler is the little fellow with the curly hair; Robert Woolsey is the skinny guy with the cigar & glasses) are always tremendous fun to watch, but the viewer who tries to find anything meaningful or coherent in this film would be wasting their time. However, in its own goofy way, DIPLOMANIACS holds its own against DUCK SOUP & MILLION DOLLAR LEGS, two contemporary films with which it shares an hysterical point of view.
The Boys are given a fine supporting cast, each of whom get to shine for a few moments, as they are given no chance for any real character development: Louis Calhern as the suave master spy; Edgar Kennedy as the harried head of the Peace Conference; elderly Richard Carle as an inebriated ship's captain; spunky little Marjorie White as Wheeler's violent love interest, choking him into submission (a very funny comedienne nearly forgotten today, a tragic car wreck would claim her life two years after the release of this film); and Hugh Herbert as an inscrutable proverb-spouting Oriental. Movie mavens will spot Charlie Hall as an eager beaver valet.
Wheeler & White fight their way through `Sing To Me' - while the Boys vocalize with `On The Boulevard' and `No More War.'
Cue a swipe at every possible stereotype concerning the various peoples and countries of the world, from the Chinaman who wants to return to his wife, who he hates; to the Swiss national costume (don't ask), and even a number, 'No More War', in blackface! And Robert Woolsey even surfaces from sleep with a cigar; the guy must have gone through hundreds of them...
The songs, more of them than usual for one of their movies, are high points amongst the bizarre plot (including one sequence where Bert Wheeler recreates his old vaudeville act with 'Annie Laurie'). In support, Phyllis Barry is a hoot as smoke-breathing siren Fifi, while Marjorie White sizzles as Bert's violent love interest (brilliant number for them in 'Sing to Me'). Louis Calhern and Hugh Herbert also appear.
I know that this movie in particular annoys some commentators who see it as politically incorrect, but viewed in the context of the time, and accepting its mischevious spirit, it has enough good points to keep it watchable today. An excellent comedy classic!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis film was a modest success for "RKO," resulting in a profit of $65,000 ($1.27M in 2018) according to studio records.
- Citations
Dolores: Sing to me!
Willy Nilly: How about "One Hour with You"?
Dolores: Sure! But first--sing to me!
- Crédits fousOpening card: There are three important things we should know about the noble red man... an Indian never shaves, because he has no beard, he has no left whisker, and he has no right whisker.
- ConnexionsFeatured in 100 Years of Comedy (1997)
- Bandes originalesOod-Gay Eye-bay
(1933) (uncredited)
Music by Harry Akst
Lyrics by Edward Eliscu
Performed by Bert Wheeler, Robert Woolsey and chorus
Meilleurs choix
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 242 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée1 heure 1 minute
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1