NOTE IMDb
5,3/10
300
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueBank robbers escape using Wilbur's trailer. Police suspect the bank teller when they find his coat near the safe. Carol says he is too dim to rob banks. The thieves later plot to use Wilbur ... Tout lireBank robbers escape using Wilbur's trailer. Police suspect the bank teller when they find his coat near the safe. Carol says he is too dim to rob banks. The thieves later plot to use Wilbur to kidnap Julie, a copper heiress.Bank robbers escape using Wilbur's trailer. Police suspect the bank teller when they find his coat near the safe. Carol says he is too dim to rob banks. The thieves later plot to use Wilbur to kidnap Julie, a copper heiress.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Margaret Armstrong
- Mrs. Daniels
- (non crédité)
Joseph E. Bernard
- Daniels' Butler
- (non crédité)
Stanley Blystone
- Policeman in Backwards Car
- (non crédité)
Lynton Brent
- Reporter in White Suit
- (non crédité)
Alan Bruce
- Reporter
- (non crédité)
Chester Clute
- Pushy Little Man in Bank
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
The teaming of zany Joe Penner and Lucille Ball might incongruous to many the
two actually make this RKO comedy work. Though how Lucy ever got hitched
to Penner will be one of life's mysteries.
Penner is a dumb as a brick bank clerk who spills the beans on his bank's security measures. When its robbed Penner is thought of as an inside man. Not only that, wouldn't you know it the bank robbers hitch their getaway car to Penner and Ball's new trailer which they just won in a contest. Penner's asleep inside and soon enough the three crooks discover they have a hostage if needed.
Then to Top it all off Penner and the crooks get involved with June Travis who is running away from home to marry Fritz Feld, a no account phony count from some mittel Europa country. And Lucy hooks up with Feld rushing to claim his bride.
The laughs come fast and furious inthis comedy although Penner is something of an acquired taste. He died young and who knows how he might have done on television.
Tom Kennedy who matches Penner in wit and IQ is always a favorite. One of the dumber crooks and/or cops on the big screen when he's on the other side. He's my favorite here.
Lots of laughs in this ancient chestnut.
Penner is a dumb as a brick bank clerk who spills the beans on his bank's security measures. When its robbed Penner is thought of as an inside man. Not only that, wouldn't you know it the bank robbers hitch their getaway car to Penner and Ball's new trailer which they just won in a contest. Penner's asleep inside and soon enough the three crooks discover they have a hostage if needed.
Then to Top it all off Penner and the crooks get involved with June Travis who is running away from home to marry Fritz Feld, a no account phony count from some mittel Europa country. And Lucy hooks up with Feld rushing to claim his bride.
The laughs come fast and furious inthis comedy although Penner is something of an acquired taste. He died young and who knows how he might have done on television.
Tom Kennedy who matches Penner in wit and IQ is always a favorite. One of the dumber crooks and/or cops on the big screen when he's on the other side. He's my favorite here.
Lots of laughs in this ancient chestnut.
Wilbur (Joe Penner) is a bit of an idiot...and his wife (Lucille Ball) is quick to let folks know. This is especially the case after the guy is accused of robbing the bank where he works....and she insists he's just too stupid to have done it! However, the real crooks who did it are holding him prisoner in a trailer he just won...and the police have assumed that because he's missing, he must have stolen the money. Along the trail, the wife gets paired up with a silly gigolo and you know that eventually it all will get straightened out.
This is an okay film. It has some funny moments, but a few times Penner overacts and is a bit insufferable. Add to that an ending involving a runaway trailer (which is NOT done well) and you have a recipe for a film which is a time-passer and nothing more.
This is an okay film. It has some funny moments, but a few times Penner overacts and is a bit insufferable. Add to that an ending involving a runaway trailer (which is NOT done well) and you have a recipe for a film which is a time-passer and nothing more.
The writing was bland and the characters weren't funny at all. A road trip comedy with potential but fell flat. Wilbur's character to me was trying to imitate the three stooges. As much as I love Lucille Ball I'd skip this one.
Well, if the picture isn't generally considered a runaway success, then at least Lucy has an early chance to runaway with the picture.
After proving her comic talents with her supporting role in "Stage Door" (1937), RKO-Radio Pictures expands the billing power for Lucille Ball, casting her in seven pictures in 1938, and "Go Chase Yourself" not only becomes Lucy's first release of the year, but also one of her earliest starring vehicles.
Lucy's leading man, Joe Penner, has by now become a major star on Radio with his zany duck act, and Depression-Era audiences would embrace his film appeal, as well, so expect more than one reference to radio in this film.
Jack Carson, who plays one of Lucy's "Stage Door" lumberjacks in one of his earliest film appearances, returns here in the supporting role of a Rambling Radio Reporter, to add a clueless smile to enliven a series of uncanny festivities.
Now, the term "Go Chase Yourself" coincides with other popular idioms of the day, such as "Scram," "Get lost," "Go fly a kite," "Go jump in the lake," and dismissals along these lines, while the plot of "Go Chase Yourself," may have audiences uttering similar interchangeable phrases, which, of course, adds to the charm of these nonsensical Talkie gems.
In its story, fumbling bank teller Wilbur P. Meeley (Joe Penner) wins a silver trailer in a radio contest, while his responsible and resourceful wife Carol Meeley (Lucille Ball) sees no real purpose to his keeping it especially without an automobile to tow the trailer. After an argument, Wilbur's last option is to sleep in the trailer parked before his residence along curbside.
Frank (Bradley Page), Nails (Richard Lane) and Icebox (Tom Kennedy), meanwhile, team to burglarize the bank of Wilbur's employ and frame the witless teller in the process. They decide to elude police by hooking their getaway car to the isolated silver trailer in which Wilbur sleeps, in order to disguise themselves as tourists.
Well, Mr. Hamilton Halliday (Granville Bates) attempts to enlist Carol's assistance to track down Wilbur and the loot, but she knows as little about what transpires as does her husband's employer. So, she obtains her clues from radio reports and acts accordingly.
Heiress Judy Daniels (June Travis), meanwhile, decides to elope with her suitor, Count Pierre Fountaine de Louis-Louis (Fritz Feld), to whom Judy's father, Mr. B.H. Daniels (George Irving) objects to her marrying. When the faux Count's automobile breaks down in the camping park at which Wilbur and the burglars hide out, Judy and Pierre get mixed up with the crew.
And when Rambling Reporter Warren Miles (Jack Carson) interviews campers at the mountain park, Carol finds herself with another ally in Mr. B.H. Daniels.
So, by the time in which Carol is able to track down Wilbur and the heiress and her suitor in the trailer, the thugs are searching for their missing loot, which Wilbur has somehow unknowingly misplaced.
But will Carol, Wilbur, Judy and Pierre be able to stop the silver trailer once it becomes unhitched from the getaway car and rolls out of control down the mountain road with passengers inside?
After proving her comic talents with her supporting role in "Stage Door" (1937), RKO-Radio Pictures expands the billing power for Lucille Ball, casting her in seven pictures in 1938, and "Go Chase Yourself" not only becomes Lucy's first release of the year, but also one of her earliest starring vehicles.
Lucy's leading man, Joe Penner, has by now become a major star on Radio with his zany duck act, and Depression-Era audiences would embrace his film appeal, as well, so expect more than one reference to radio in this film.
Jack Carson, who plays one of Lucy's "Stage Door" lumberjacks in one of his earliest film appearances, returns here in the supporting role of a Rambling Radio Reporter, to add a clueless smile to enliven a series of uncanny festivities.
Now, the term "Go Chase Yourself" coincides with other popular idioms of the day, such as "Scram," "Get lost," "Go fly a kite," "Go jump in the lake," and dismissals along these lines, while the plot of "Go Chase Yourself," may have audiences uttering similar interchangeable phrases, which, of course, adds to the charm of these nonsensical Talkie gems.
In its story, fumbling bank teller Wilbur P. Meeley (Joe Penner) wins a silver trailer in a radio contest, while his responsible and resourceful wife Carol Meeley (Lucille Ball) sees no real purpose to his keeping it especially without an automobile to tow the trailer. After an argument, Wilbur's last option is to sleep in the trailer parked before his residence along curbside.
Frank (Bradley Page), Nails (Richard Lane) and Icebox (Tom Kennedy), meanwhile, team to burglarize the bank of Wilbur's employ and frame the witless teller in the process. They decide to elude police by hooking their getaway car to the isolated silver trailer in which Wilbur sleeps, in order to disguise themselves as tourists.
Well, Mr. Hamilton Halliday (Granville Bates) attempts to enlist Carol's assistance to track down Wilbur and the loot, but she knows as little about what transpires as does her husband's employer. So, she obtains her clues from radio reports and acts accordingly.
Heiress Judy Daniels (June Travis), meanwhile, decides to elope with her suitor, Count Pierre Fountaine de Louis-Louis (Fritz Feld), to whom Judy's father, Mr. B.H. Daniels (George Irving) objects to her marrying. When the faux Count's automobile breaks down in the camping park at which Wilbur and the burglars hide out, Judy and Pierre get mixed up with the crew.
And when Rambling Reporter Warren Miles (Jack Carson) interviews campers at the mountain park, Carol finds herself with another ally in Mr. B.H. Daniels.
So, by the time in which Carol is able to track down Wilbur and the heiress and her suitor in the trailer, the thugs are searching for their missing loot, which Wilbur has somehow unknowingly misplaced.
But will Carol, Wilbur, Judy and Pierre be able to stop the silver trailer once it becomes unhitched from the getaway car and rolls out of control down the mountain road with passengers inside?
While this may not be the greatest movie ever, it is a lot of fun to watch. Joe Penner is hilarious, and Lucille Ball is also great. It's too bad Mr. Penner had to die so young, he was a bit of a comic genius. If you like good clean family fun, then this is a movie not to be missed.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis is the first of three films in which character actor Granville Bates appeared on screen alongside Lucille Ball. Each film in which they appeared together was released in 1938 and starred Ball as the female lead. The other films to include the two actors were Ah ces vedettes! (1938) and Ma femme en feu (1938).
- GaffesWhen Judy is in the convertible with her parents, about a half hour into the picture, she turns around to say good-bye to Wilbur when a moving reflection of the boom microphone is visible on the trunk of the car. Usually in that era of film, a car's finish is dulled, dirtied or matte to prevent this. Earlier in the scene, what appears to be a man standing beside the camera rig is also reflected in the polished finish of the same car.
- Crédits fousNo character names are credited with the cast list; Joe Penner's surname is spelled both as "Meeley" and "Meely" within the film.
- Bandes originalesI'm from the City
(1938)
Music and Lyrics by Hal Raynor
Played during the opening credits
Sung a cappella by Joe Penner (uncredited) and Richard Lane (uncredited)
Meilleurs choix
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Marido ambulante
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 10 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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