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Louisiana Purchase

  • 1941
  • Approved
  • 1h 38min
NOTE IMDb
6,1/10
576
MA NOTE
Bob Hope, Irène Bordoni, Victor Moore, and Vera Zorina in Louisiana Purchase (1941)
ComédieMusical

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA bumbling senator investigating graft in Louisiana is the target of a scheme involving a Viennese beauty.A bumbling senator investigating graft in Louisiana is the target of a scheme involving a Viennese beauty.A bumbling senator investigating graft in Louisiana is the target of a scheme involving a Viennese beauty.

  • Réalisation
    • Irving Cummings
  • Scénario
    • Buddy G. DeSylva
    • Morrie Ryskind
    • Jerome Chodorov
  • Casting principal
    • Bob Hope
    • Vera Zorina
    • Victor Moore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,1/10
    576
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Irving Cummings
    • Scénario
      • Buddy G. DeSylva
      • Morrie Ryskind
      • Jerome Chodorov
    • Casting principal
      • Bob Hope
      • Vera Zorina
      • Victor Moore
    • 16avis d'utilisateurs
    • 4avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 2 Oscars
      • 1 victoire et 2 nominations au total

    Photos12

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    Rôles principaux67

    Modifier
    Bob Hope
    Bob Hope
    • Jim Taylor
    Vera Zorina
    Vera Zorina
    • Marina Von Minden
    Victor Moore
    Victor Moore
    • Sen. Oliver P. Loganberry
    Irène Bordoni
    Irène Bordoni
    • Madame Yvonne Bordelaise
    Dona Drake
    Dona Drake
    • Beatrice
    Raymond Walburn
    Raymond Walburn
    • Col. Davis Sr. aka Polar Bear
    Maxie Rosenbloom
    Maxie Rosenbloom
    • The Shadow aka Wilson
    Phyllis Ruth
    Phyllis Ruth
    • Emmy Lou
    Frank Albertson
    Frank Albertson
    • Robert Davis, Jr.
    Donald MacBride
    Donald MacBride
    • Capt. Pierre Whitfield
    Andrew Tombes
    Andrew Tombes
    • Dean Albert Manning
    Robert Warwick
    Robert Warwick
    • Speaker of the House
    Charles La Torre
    • Gaston, Waiter
    Charles Laskey
    • Danseur
    Emory Parnell
    Emory Parnell
    • Sam Horowitz, Lawyer
    Iris Meredith
    Iris Meredith
    • Lawyer's secretary
    Catherine Craig
    Catherine Craig
    • Saleslady
    Jack Norton
    Jack Norton
    • Jester
    • Réalisation
      • Irving Cummings
    • Scénario
      • Buddy G. DeSylva
      • Morrie Ryskind
      • Jerome Chodorov
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs16

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    Avis à la une

    7tavm

    Bob Hope and some of the musical's original cast make Irving Berlin's Louisiana Purchase quite a funny and entertaining movie

    I've read that this Irving Berlin musical was based on the dealings of Huey Long and his cronies. Long was the governor of my state, Louisiana, and later the state senator and he did much that was good for it but also had some crooked deals with like-minded people who got exposed after Long's assassination in the mid-'30s. So it was that this film began with a lawyer singing of dictating a letter to the studio that the only way this story depicted here can be presented is to treat it as fiction. I'll stop there and just say that I found this Bob Hope vehicle funny and entertaining with good support from Vera Zorina, Irene Bordoni, and especially Victor Moore, all reprising their roles from the Broadway version. The Irving Berlin songs retained for this production are fine as well. Oh, and I loved the sight of the state capital from my state's capital city of Baton Rouge inserted here! Nothing more to say except I highly recommend Louisiana Purchase.
    6CinemaSerf

    Louisiana Purchase

    This starts off with quite a fun little ditty that serves as their libel/defamation disclaimer - proclaiming that none of this is based on any real people! Who might have taken offence in the US of A in 1941 to the idea of a senate investigation into the dodgy goings on in any state at all, let alone Louisiana? Well it appears that the imminent arrival of the tee-total "Sen. Loganberry" (Victor Moore) has set the cat amongst the pigeons, and talking of pigeons it looks like "Taylor" (Bob Hope) is going to become exactly that. The great and the good of his state have been merrily creaming off the top for years, but any evidence of their miscreant behaviour will stop firmly with this poor patsy. Facing a million years in jail, the bosses encourage him to find a way to leverage their inscrutable visitor and so he'd better get his thinking cap on. What now ensues sees Hope (well two of him quite often) and his friend "Marina" (Vera Zorina) try to embroil the man in all sorts of compromising scenarios. Of course, as things mosey on along there are a few romantic opportunities with Irène Bordoni making up this quartet of mischief and mayhem. It's based on the stage play with a few Irving Berlin numbers - notably "You're Lonely and I'm Lonely? - amongst it, and though it does drag a little as the joke borders the slapstick too closely for my liking, it does show Hope in a slightly less hapless light, Moore delivers engagingly and there's been a little thought gone into the plot to keep it from farce. It's a colourful and lively production and might well do wonders for the sale of oysters in Nebraska.
    3planktonrules

    Amazingly unfunny...

    Aside from some terrible films Bob Hope made in the 1960s (and there were quite a few), "Louisiana Purchase" may be among his worst for two major reasons. The biggest problem is that the film simply is not funny—a serious problem since it's a comedy! The other problem is that Hope plays a very unsympathetic character—and it's hard to root for him throughout this film that seems, at times, like a misguided rip-off of "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington".

    The film begins with a very unusual and rather cute disclaimer about the film being fictional—you have to see this to understand what I mean, but it's obvious that the film makers chose to lampoon Louisiana since the state has a very, very long history of political corruption.

    Hope plays a state senator with very unsavory friends. While he's serving in the senate, they are involving him in all kinds of illegal deals—completely unbeknownst to him. However, and this is odd, when he discovers what they've done, he does NOT come clean about the illegal activity but spends almost all the film trying to blackmail or corrupt an honest(!) politician who is investigating the activities of Hope's organization. While I liked Victor Moore as the sweet and daffy crusading US senator, everything about Hope seemed self-centered and sleazy. And, inexplicably, a lady who somehow has come to instantly love him has agreed to try to destroy Moore! This made little sense—as did her weird reversal after they were able to set him up. The final portion of the film is right out of "Mr. Smith" and ends with an ending that just seems too pat and hard to believe.

    As I said, nothing about this is funny nor is the leading man (Hope) likable—and without these elements the film cannot help but be a failure. Watchable but only of interest to very rabid Hope fans—ones who are willing to look past the film's many, many deficits.

    By the way, this is on a DVD with another Hope film—"Never Say Die". This second film IS very good and makes the disk worth obtaining.
    5ilprofessore-1

    From stage to screen, disastrously

    Although many of the same people who made this mess of a 1941 film were also involved in the original hit 1940 Broadway production, something definitely went wrong in the transition to film, and that something is Bob Hope who was not in the original show. Instead of letting this mild satire on contemporary politics in the style of "Of Thee I Sing" play as it must have in New York, Hope and his army of gag writers apparently shoved in a ton of meaningless machine gun gags, including a few on such wartime topics as immigration. The Norwegian ballerina Vera Zorina, wife of George Ballanchine at the time, was then a big star on Broadway, but pretty as she was, the camera did not love her. The only saving grace of this embarrassingly misguided musical is the superb clowning of the great Victor Moore as the befuddled senator. He, too, was a great star of the theater, but unlike the others in this film he somehow knew how to underplay his comedy for the camera. A few of the many songs Irving Berlin wrote for Broadway were retained for the film, most delightfully the catchy tune, "You're Lovely and I'm Lonely," which Zorina and Moore do hilariously as they might have done it on Broadway, in this case without the overbearing scene-stealing presence of Hope. Hope was a great screen personality and made many fine films, but this is not one of them.
    5JoeytheBrit

    Slow when Hope-less

    This one's a real oddity: a semi-musical satire of a period of corruption that will mean nothing to anybody who is either not a resident of the United States or under eighty-ish years of age. Bob Hope stars as a naive hero who finds himself set up to take the rap when a corrupt cadre find themselves on the brink of discovery and hatches one of those ridiculous Hollywood musical plots to get himself out of trouble. Somehow, I don't think this is too closely based on factual events.

    The film opens with a quirky number in which a colourful group of girls sing about how the characters are fictitious and not based on any persons living or dead, and include lyrics stating they are singing this to save the producers from being sued. Bizarre. When Hope is on screen the film is a typical Hope vehicle - which isn't necessarily a good thing - and when he's not the pace slows to a crawl. Despite this it is Victor Moore as the ageing virginal investigator on the trail of the corrupt politicos who steals the movie. Vera Zorina as Hope's love interest is an actress of extremely limited talent and best forgotten to save her descendant's embarrassment. The storyline is littered with references to contemporary matters that mean nothing today, meaning most of them flew way over the top of my head, making it somewhat flawed as a political satire - and fairly insipid as a musical

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Irène Bordoni and Vera Zorina both repeated their roles from the original Broadway stage version.
    • Citations

      Sam: [looking at Marina] Boy, if she were black, she'd be beautiful!

    • Connexions
      Version of Musical Comedy Time: Louisiana Purchase (1951)
    • Bandes originales
      LAWYER'S LETTER
      Written by Irving Berlin

      Sung by Emory Parnell

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 31 décembre 1941 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Oh, Louisiana
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 38 minutes
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Bob Hope, Irène Bordoni, Victor Moore, and Vera Zorina in Louisiana Purchase (1941)
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    By what name was Louisiana Purchase (1941) officially released in India in English?
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