अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंMartha arrives in Hollywood determined to become a star but finds work only in a drugstore. There she meets New York playwright Larry again who has been hired for a script about Hollywood - ... सभी पढ़ेंMartha arrives in Hollywood determined to become a star but finds work only in a drugstore. There she meets New York playwright Larry again who has been hired for a script about Hollywood - which he knows nothing about.Martha arrives in Hollywood determined to become a star but finds work only in a drugstore. There she meets New York playwright Larry again who has been hired for a script about Hollywood - which he knows nothing about.
James Ellison
- Larry Winters
- (as Jimmy Ellison)
Karin Vengay
- Ann Mason
- (as Karin Lang)
Michael Romanoff
- Prince Romanoff
- (as Prince Michael Romanoff)
Richard Bartell
- Office Worker
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
William 'Billy' Benedict
- Joe - Newsboy
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Lillian Bronson
- Abigail Wrighthouse
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Bill Chaney
- Guy walking Lassie
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
I always like films wih Frank Pangborn.. here, he's Reggie, pharmacy owner, next to the studio. Wanda McKay is Martha, who is headed for hollywood. (Although McKay's real claim to fame is that she was married to musician Hoagy Carmichael.) Ralph Morgan (the wizard's brother) is Mr. Lavish, head of the studio. We watch as Martha tries to get a start in hollywood, but it just isn't happening. Larry (James Ellison ) follows her around, and keeps trying to return her dog, which isn't really hers. The whole story is pretty corny, and it barely holds together, but it's fun if you go along for the ride... kind of an insider's look at hollywood. Cameo by Dewey Robinson, the banana surprise guy. It's all silly, but fun. A shortie from PRC, at 58 minutes. Directed by Alex ThurnTaxis... one of the five films he directed; didn't seem to spend much time in hollywood, unlike everyone else in this film! apparently ThurnTaxis was related to the royal family of Austria, and was on the committee that investigated the murders of the russian Tsar's family. Now THAT's a movie !
First of all, critic db Burroughs, who didn't seem to know what he was watching, didn't know who he was watching. The actor he called Frank Morgan was Ralph Morgan, Frank's brother. Read the credits.
Producers Releasing Corporation usually made Monogram look like MGM, but every now and then they came out with a gem.
I'm fairly familiar with the studio. My father had a one man printing press on the lower east side - Active Printing, yet. Most of his work were one sheeters for clothing manufacturers, but he also printed sheet music for some of the biggies around 52nd St. - that's how I met W. C. Handy - and he did the NYC work for PRC.
This Producers Releasing Corp. item was certainly pretentious-less and, certainly a helluva lot of fun, at times, completely nutty
There was enough corn to fill a couple of Del Monte crates, and most of it produced a lot of laughs.
More laughs from a cast of some of the funniest character actors of the time, essentially playing themselves. The topper, of course, was Franklin Pangborn, always put upon, and, thankfully, given more time in this flick.
Making the most of a little time on screen was Dewey Robinson who always played a not-too-bright tough. His love of a banana surprise was a hoot.
The leads were just fine. James Ellison who played leads in a few major musicals but had no staying power, was coupled with Wandy McKay, a cutie beauty who kept very busy but did not top major marquees. The pair had good on-screen chemistry.
The star, of course, was good old Daisy, on loan from the Bumstead family. Button cute, it did every doggie trick in the books. This movie was made before movie animals talked. Kids today must think animals have mastered the English language.
Bottom line - this, obviously, was a low-budgeter, but who cares? It did what it set out to do - created a lot of laughter.
Producers Releasing Corporation usually made Monogram look like MGM, but every now and then they came out with a gem.
I'm fairly familiar with the studio. My father had a one man printing press on the lower east side - Active Printing, yet. Most of his work were one sheeters for clothing manufacturers, but he also printed sheet music for some of the biggies around 52nd St. - that's how I met W. C. Handy - and he did the NYC work for PRC.
This Producers Releasing Corp. item was certainly pretentious-less and, certainly a helluva lot of fun, at times, completely nutty
There was enough corn to fill a couple of Del Monte crates, and most of it produced a lot of laughs.
More laughs from a cast of some of the funniest character actors of the time, essentially playing themselves. The topper, of course, was Franklin Pangborn, always put upon, and, thankfully, given more time in this flick.
Making the most of a little time on screen was Dewey Robinson who always played a not-too-bright tough. His love of a banana surprise was a hoot.
The leads were just fine. James Ellison who played leads in a few major musicals but had no staying power, was coupled with Wandy McKay, a cutie beauty who kept very busy but did not top major marquees. The pair had good on-screen chemistry.
The star, of course, was good old Daisy, on loan from the Bumstead family. Button cute, it did every doggie trick in the books. This movie was made before movie animals talked. Kids today must think animals have mastered the English language.
Bottom line - this, obviously, was a low-budgeter, but who cares? It did what it set out to do - created a lot of laughter.
This is a real oddity...a film from tiny PRC Studio that I really liked! While most of PRC's pictures were rather awful, this one was terrific all due to Daisy. Who is Daisy? It's an adorable and well-trained dog that gained most of its fame in the Blondie and Dagwood films...and it really rescued this film.
The film is about Larry Winters...a big-time Hollywood writer who becomes infatuated with a lady. They meet each other and at the same time they meet a homeless dog (Daisy). Larry takes the dog with him and searches for the girl. But she thinks he's just some poor schmuck and so he pretends to be so that he can win her heart. In the meantime, the dog goes off to Hollywood and becomes a sensation!
The reason I liked the film is that without Daisy the film was pleasant. But with this great trained dog, it was absolutely charming. Well worth seeing.
The film is about Larry Winters...a big-time Hollywood writer who becomes infatuated with a lady. They meet each other and at the same time they meet a homeless dog (Daisy). Larry takes the dog with him and searches for the girl. But she thinks he's just some poor schmuck and so he pretends to be so that he can win her heart. In the meantime, the dog goes off to Hollywood and becomes a sensation!
The reason I liked the film is that without Daisy the film was pleasant. But with this great trained dog, it was absolutely charming. Well worth seeing.
Daisy must have been the most overworked animal star of the 1940s. She appeared in over 40 films starting with "Blondie" in 1938 and finishing with "Badman's Gold" in 1951. Her bread and butter was, of course, the Blondie series but she still found time to appear in films like "The Perfect Snob" (1941) where she was uncredited as "Beano" and "Hollywood and Vine" (1945), where as Emperor, the story revolved around her.
Daisy is the real star of this movie. She plays a cute pooch, Emperor, who goes to Hollywood with a starstruck young hopeful and is the one who makes it big. The movie isn't much but the story of the dog has some novelty. Emperor becomes a big star - dining at all the fancy restaurants, his picture in the gossip pages, even being investigated for tax evasion. Thrown in is the missing dog angle and a dog hating spinster who tries to claim him and takes the studio to court!!
Wanda McKay and James Ellison (looking a dead ringer for Ralph Bellamy) supply the tepid romance and two stars from the past - June Clyde as Gloria, who came to Hollywood with stars in her eyes only to end up as a stand-in, and Ralph Morgan, who was a great villain in the early thirties, he plays the head of Lavish Studios.
Daisy is the real star of this movie. She plays a cute pooch, Emperor, who goes to Hollywood with a starstruck young hopeful and is the one who makes it big. The movie isn't much but the story of the dog has some novelty. Emperor becomes a big star - dining at all the fancy restaurants, his picture in the gossip pages, even being investigated for tax evasion. Thrown in is the missing dog angle and a dog hating spinster who tries to claim him and takes the studio to court!!
Wanda McKay and James Ellison (looking a dead ringer for Ralph Bellamy) supply the tepid romance and two stars from the past - June Clyde as Gloria, who came to Hollywood with stars in her eyes only to end up as a stand-in, and Ralph Morgan, who was a great villain in the early thirties, he plays the head of Lavish Studios.
Delightful little comedy from an unlikely source, PRC. Except for the charming Wanda McKay and a likable James Ellison, it's a wacky cast, featuring such specialists in exaggeration as Pangborn, Belasco, Lynn, and most of all, little Daisy. Seems Martha (McKay) wants to break into movies, and with her brilliant smile I'd hire her in a minute. Seems too, screenwriter Larry (Ellison) would like to help, but he's too busy being an inept soda jerk. Meanwhile, Daisy shows she can twirl and dance like any two-legged critter, and so gets hired on immediately. Show-biz is nothing if not fickle. So, will our lovey-dovey twosome finally find happiness and success on Hollywood and Vine. Stay tuned. No, this is not Grant or Hepburn or MGM, but it is a minor little gem, just right for an hour's worth of harmless amusement.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाDaisy, the dog that stars as "Emperor" in this movie, is the same dog that appears in several of the "Blondie" movies of the 1940s under the character name of Daisy.
टॉप पसंद
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विवरण
- चलने की अवधि58 मिनट
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.37 : 1
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