NOTE IMDb
6,6/10
332
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA man finds himself the father, by proxy, of a ten-month-old baby and becomes involved in the turbulent lives of the child's family.A man finds himself the father, by proxy, of a ten-month-old baby and becomes involved in the turbulent lives of the child's family.A man finds himself the father, by proxy, of a ten-month-old baby and becomes involved in the turbulent lives of the child's family.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 3 victoires au total
Herbert Ashley
- Cop
- (non crédité)
Hooper Atchley
- Executive
- (non crédité)
Wade Boteler
- Detective
- (non crédité)
Harry C. Bradley
- James Travers
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
East Side of Heaven is one of two pictures Bing Crosby did for Universal. In exchange. I believe Paramount got the services of Allan Jones for The Great Victor Herbert and Honeymoon in Bali. Crosby's second film for Universal was If I Had My Way.
This one for Universal was done on the same skimpy budget that Paramount normally gave 1930s Crosby vehicles. But loan outs are good to see because you get a chance to watch a leading star with players that are not from his home base. Crosby gets a spirited leading lady in Joan Blondell in their one and only film together. Similarly he has supporting players like Mischa Auer, Irene Hervey, C. Aubrey Smith and Jerome Cowan who are all very good and also never worked with Crosby again.
Crosby is first a singing telegraph messenger and later a singing taxi driver who's going out with Joan Blondell and she's a switchboard operator at a radio station. Jerome Cowan who plays a Walter Winchell like columnist has eyes for her. An old friend of Bing's, Irene Hervey who married a wealthy heir, deposits her baby with Bing while she sorts out her marital problems caused by her meddling father-in-law, C. Aubrey Smith. The baby is believed kidnapped and the fun begins.
Bing has four good songs to sing, written by Jimmy Monaco and Johnny Burke. Two of his patented philosophical numbers, Sing a Song of Sunbeams and Hang Your Heart on a Hickory Limb, a ballad East Side of Heaven and the hit of the movie That Sly Old Gentlemen sung to put Baby Sandy to sleep.
The plot involving a potentially kidnapped baby was very relevant with the news of the Lindbergh baby fresh in everyone's mind. Fortunately all is righted at the end.
IF you love Bing as I do, see this movie.
This one for Universal was done on the same skimpy budget that Paramount normally gave 1930s Crosby vehicles. But loan outs are good to see because you get a chance to watch a leading star with players that are not from his home base. Crosby gets a spirited leading lady in Joan Blondell in their one and only film together. Similarly he has supporting players like Mischa Auer, Irene Hervey, C. Aubrey Smith and Jerome Cowan who are all very good and also never worked with Crosby again.
Crosby is first a singing telegraph messenger and later a singing taxi driver who's going out with Joan Blondell and she's a switchboard operator at a radio station. Jerome Cowan who plays a Walter Winchell like columnist has eyes for her. An old friend of Bing's, Irene Hervey who married a wealthy heir, deposits her baby with Bing while she sorts out her marital problems caused by her meddling father-in-law, C. Aubrey Smith. The baby is believed kidnapped and the fun begins.
Bing has four good songs to sing, written by Jimmy Monaco and Johnny Burke. Two of his patented philosophical numbers, Sing a Song of Sunbeams and Hang Your Heart on a Hickory Limb, a ballad East Side of Heaven and the hit of the movie That Sly Old Gentlemen sung to put Baby Sandy to sleep.
The plot involving a potentially kidnapped baby was very relevant with the news of the Lindbergh baby fresh in everyone's mind. Fortunately all is righted at the end.
IF you love Bing as I do, see this movie.
Did you ever see Bachelor Mother, the 1939 comedy that deals with the mix-up of a little baby? Well, East Side of Heaven isn't as cute or funny, but it is cute and funny in its own right, so give it a try if you want something light and sweet in the afternoon.
Bing Crosby delivers singing telegrams, but when he upsets a bigwig, C. Aubrey Smith, he gets fired. Joan Blondell, his telephone operator girlfriend who's constantly pursued by radio man Jerome Cowan, is devoted and sweet to Bing, even when he's unemployed and struggling to pay his bills. Luck quickly comes his way, because he gets the coolest job as a singing taxi driver! The cab company has only one driver who serenades his fares, and each time you're lucky enough to get him, you also get a free ride. That way, people will always want to hail that company's cabs for the chance to hear Bing! Isn't that genius?
For that reason alone, this movie is worth seeing. Every cab company should do that! The rest of the movie is pretty cute, and the fast paced story doesn't drag. Mischa Auer plays Bing's silly roommate, and while I would have preferred Felix Bressart, some of Mischa's lines are funny anyway. Bing and Joan are adorable, the plot is intriguing, and with the exception to one lengthy number, the songs are cute. And if you like babies, this one is extremely well-behaved and well-trained. Check it out!
Bing Crosby delivers singing telegrams, but when he upsets a bigwig, C. Aubrey Smith, he gets fired. Joan Blondell, his telephone operator girlfriend who's constantly pursued by radio man Jerome Cowan, is devoted and sweet to Bing, even when he's unemployed and struggling to pay his bills. Luck quickly comes his way, because he gets the coolest job as a singing taxi driver! The cab company has only one driver who serenades his fares, and each time you're lucky enough to get him, you also get a free ride. That way, people will always want to hail that company's cabs for the chance to hear Bing! Isn't that genius?
For that reason alone, this movie is worth seeing. Every cab company should do that! The rest of the movie is pretty cute, and the fast paced story doesn't drag. Mischa Auer plays Bing's silly roommate, and while I would have preferred Felix Bressart, some of Mischa's lines are funny anyway. Bing and Joan are adorable, the plot is intriguing, and with the exception to one lengthy number, the songs are cute. And if you like babies, this one is extremely well-behaved and well-trained. Check it out!
"East Side of Heaven" isn't a particularly deep or fancy film, but it is fun and is a nice little family film. It's so nice, it's almost worth giving this one an 8.
Bing Crosby plays a struggling singer. He can't find a good job, so he first takes one as a singing telegram man and then as, oddly, a singing taxi driver. During the course of his job, he meets a desperate young lady and her obnoxious and very rich father-in-law (C. Aubry Smith). The old man is determined to take the child away--even though the mother is very competent. So, in desperation, she hides the cute kid with a friend--Bing and his roommate (Mischa Auer). The plot doesn't get a whole lot deeper than that, but it helped that Joan Blondell was on hand to play Bing's fiancée and that the baby was so freakin' adorable. All in all, fluff--but incredibly enjoyable, well written and well made fluff.
By the way, this film is included on the same disc as Bing's "If I Had My Way"--a film that is even better! A wonderful DVD and one worth having in your collection.
Bing Crosby plays a struggling singer. He can't find a good job, so he first takes one as a singing telegram man and then as, oddly, a singing taxi driver. During the course of his job, he meets a desperate young lady and her obnoxious and very rich father-in-law (C. Aubry Smith). The old man is determined to take the child away--even though the mother is very competent. So, in desperation, she hides the cute kid with a friend--Bing and his roommate (Mischa Auer). The plot doesn't get a whole lot deeper than that, but it helped that Joan Blondell was on hand to play Bing's fiancée and that the baby was so freakin' adorable. All in all, fluff--but incredibly enjoyable, well written and well made fluff.
By the way, this film is included on the same disc as Bing's "If I Had My Way"--a film that is even better! A wonderful DVD and one worth having in your collection.
Easy-going Bing (Denny) has a job as a singing telegram and is engaged to receptionist Joan Blondell (Mary). However, things go wrong for Bing when he is tricked into singing Happy Birthday to the influential and controlling character that is C Aubrey Smith (Barrett Snr). He loses his job but gets another as a singing cab driver! They had some weird ideas in those days. The plot takes a crazy turn about halfway through when Bing is charged with looking after a baby and all kinds of confusion and misunderstandings ensue before the film resolves itself into a happy ending.
It's an easy-to-watch film that passes the time enjoyably with 2 points to note. The first is that the baby isn't annoying. In fact, the baby is a scene stealer as you watch her interactions with the characters - it is quite fascinating as she reaches to grab Blondell's hair or casts loving looks at Bing hoping he will croon and cradle her again. I usually can't stand children in films but this one is ok. The second is that Mischa Auer (Nicky) isn't annoying. He plays Bing's roommate and he is actually quite funny. I didn't expect that as he is usually very odd, playing for comedy and never hitting the mark. Well, in this film he is funny! Alongside some humorous dialogue is a very funny bell-boy - check him out!
It's another good film with a misunderstanding about a baby from 1939, the other being "Bachelor Mother" starring Ginger Rogers and David Niven.
It's an easy-to-watch film that passes the time enjoyably with 2 points to note. The first is that the baby isn't annoying. In fact, the baby is a scene stealer as you watch her interactions with the characters - it is quite fascinating as she reaches to grab Blondell's hair or casts loving looks at Bing hoping he will croon and cradle her again. I usually can't stand children in films but this one is ok. The second is that Mischa Auer (Nicky) isn't annoying. He plays Bing's roommate and he is actually quite funny. I didn't expect that as he is usually very odd, playing for comedy and never hitting the mark. Well, in this film he is funny! Alongside some humorous dialogue is a very funny bell-boy - check him out!
It's another good film with a misunderstanding about a baby from 1939, the other being "Bachelor Mother" starring Ginger Rogers and David Niven.
Bing Crosby and Joan Blondell left their 'home' studios and headed to Universal to pair up in this comedy with surprisingly good results. Crosby is a singer (who would've guessed) who sings greetings over the phone, but when he is required to make a home visit to deliver his vocal message, he gets involved with an old friend, Irene Hervey, battling her powerful father-in-law (C. Aubrey Smith) over her baby boy. H
Hervey's weak-kneed and often drunk hubby has vanished, so to prevent Smith's control, she leaves the baby temporarily with Crosby. Crosby has now moved on to 'singing taxi driver' (he has a record player in the car..) and is on track to marry his sweetie, Joan Blondell. There's the usual 'hide the baby' plot line as the boy's disappearance makes headlines. Crosby and Blondell have terrific chemistry, and some very clever back and forth patter, but Mischa Auer (as Crosby's astrologist roommate) is a scene stealer.
Usually Auer is relegated to a few 'crazy Russian' bits, but here he gets a little more screen time and range while still keeping the wackiness. He even gets a cute dance segment with Blondell. The music is secondary, although there are those warm moments when Crosby sings to the baby. Also well cast is Jerome Cowan as the radio gossip reporter who is always after Blondell, and wants to cash in on finding the infant. This really was a fun watch, and it seems like a natural for Turner Classic Movies, but the fact that it is not in the Turner library and it is rather obscure probably means that is not going to happen.
The baby was played by "Baby Sandy" who was supposed to be Universal's answer to Shirley Temple and who even had her own series of films. However, her last film was made at the age of five and she had no desire to be an adult or even a teen actress. She went on to disappear into California's middle class, reportedly quite happy with her life.
Hervey's weak-kneed and often drunk hubby has vanished, so to prevent Smith's control, she leaves the baby temporarily with Crosby. Crosby has now moved on to 'singing taxi driver' (he has a record player in the car..) and is on track to marry his sweetie, Joan Blondell. There's the usual 'hide the baby' plot line as the boy's disappearance makes headlines. Crosby and Blondell have terrific chemistry, and some very clever back and forth patter, but Mischa Auer (as Crosby's astrologist roommate) is a scene stealer.
Usually Auer is relegated to a few 'crazy Russian' bits, but here he gets a little more screen time and range while still keeping the wackiness. He even gets a cute dance segment with Blondell. The music is secondary, although there are those warm moments when Crosby sings to the baby. Also well cast is Jerome Cowan as the radio gossip reporter who is always after Blondell, and wants to cash in on finding the infant. This really was a fun watch, and it seems like a natural for Turner Classic Movies, but the fact that it is not in the Turner library and it is rather obscure probably means that is not going to happen.
The baby was played by "Baby Sandy" who was supposed to be Universal's answer to Shirley Temple and who even had her own series of films. However, her last film was made at the age of five and she had no desire to be an adult or even a teen actress. She went on to disappear into California's middle class, reportedly quite happy with her life.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe producers originally wanted Ann Sothern for the Blondell role, but she was on tour singing with husband Roger Pryor's band.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- East Side of Heaven
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 28min(88 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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