Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA female secret agent has gotten ahold of a new type of explosive gas. She has to avoid the efforts of two men who are trying to steal it. They succeed in doing so, but the gas turns out to ... Leggi tuttoA female secret agent has gotten ahold of a new type of explosive gas. She has to avoid the efforts of two men who are trying to steal it. They succeed in doing so, but the gas turns out to be not quite what they expected.A female secret agent has gotten ahold of a new type of explosive gas. She has to avoid the efforts of two men who are trying to steal it. They succeed in doing so, but the gas turns out to be not quite what they expected.
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This comedy begins with a starving artist and his friend, a starving author (Tyler Brooke and James Finlayson) looking out their window to see a car chasing another. The chasing car flips and the pair leave to offer assistance....and discover that the two men in the car that flipped were detectives. Why were they chasing this woman? Well, you soon find out that Madame Mysterieux (Bara) is an American spy and she has stolen an explosive that can level cities...and that's why the men were chasing her! Soon Madame boards a boat for America--and the unemployed artist and author follow her because they want the reward for her capture. What's next? See the film in order to find out...as well as to see Oliver Hardy as the ship's captain.
Most of "Madame Mystery" isn't all that funny...which is strange considering it was from Hal Roach Studios. However, it did end on a funny note and is worth seeing just to get a chance to see the vamp of the 1910s in her last movie.
The tone of Madame Mystery is goofy and cartoon-y, rather like something cooked up by the Mack Sennett crew, but in fact it was a product of the Hal Roach Studio. It's a representative example of Roach's "All-Star" series of the period, which, title notwithstanding, usually featured aging favorites who were no longer major box office draws. At the time, the studio's biggest stars were Charley Chase and the Our Gang kids; Laurel & Hardy had not yet become a team. Interestingly, both Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were involved in Madame Mystery: Laurel behind the scenes, as co-director and gag man, Hardy in a supporting role as Captain Schmaltz of the HMS Royal, the ship that serves as the primary setting for the film's second half.
Our comic leads are Tyler Brooke and Jimmy Finlayson. They're essentially a team, but oddly their characters have no names. For those of you who haven't seen him, Brooke was a smallish, mustachioed man who looked like a cross between Max Linder and Adolphe Menjou; Finlayson, of course, is more familiar. Brooke is an artist, and they share lodgings in his garret studio. They're so broke Brooke can't even afford to hire a model, so Fin poses for him in drag, in a Little Bo Peep outfit. (Warning: once you've seen Fin in drag, you cannot "unsee" him.) Their luck changes when an auto accident occurs outside their studio. Two secret agents have crashed their car in pursuit of Madame Mysterieux (Theda Bara), who has blithely fled the scene. It seems she's in possession of a valuable, extremely dangerous substance, an explosive that could level an entire city. (Bear in mind, this film was made long before the atom bomb was devised.) Brooke and Fin, unaware of the danger involved, switch identities with the two agents and follow the lady to her ship, the HMS Royal, bound for New York. All they know is that she has something very valuable, and everyone seems to want it.
The funniest gag sequence takes place at the pier, when Finlayson, who doesn't resemble the spy he's impersonating, is turned away by shipping authorities since he doesn't match the man's I.D. photo. So Brooke the artist paints an image of the guy's face on top of Fin's bald pate, and subsequently Fin walks backwards onto the ship, facing people with the top of his head. (Trust me, it's funnier seen than described.) Once on board, the inept duo attempt to shadow Madame Mysterieux and retrieve her valuable item, whatever it may be. The plot climaxes in a surprise twist involving this substance, which Fin accidentally ingests; and it all culminates in a dream-like sight gag involving levitation. The special effects in the finale are fairly impressive, certainly good for a chuckle.
Miss Bara plays it straight throughout, more of a straight woman than a comedian, maintaining her dignity despite all the silliness surrounding her. I had high hopes that Mr. Hardy would provide a boost when he arrives in Reel 2, but unfortunately he wasn't granted a lot of screen time, or given much to do. He does have one good bit when Miss Bara gets her shoe caught on the gang plank. Gallantly he comes to her aid, saying, in Ollie-like fashion, "All things are impossible with me!" Sure enough he manages to fling her shoe overboard, much to her annoyance. The only problem is that someone decided Captain Schmaltz should wear a big, brush-like mustache, so Hardy's facial reactions are somewhat obscured.
All in all this is a moderately amusing short, entertaining what for it is, but a tad disappointing considering the talent involved. Considering how rare it is to see Theda Bara in anything at all, it's too bad that her farewell to the screen wasn't a little more distinguished, even as satirical comedies go. But this is nonetheless a pleasant bit of nonsense, and I'm glad it survives complete. And I do hope Miss Bara had a happy retirement, once she hung up her vamping shoes.
Her last screen performance was April 1926's "Madame Mystery." She appears in the second half of the Hal Roach-produced short comedy, partially directed by Stan Laurel. At 41, Bara acts in a parody of the characters she played in her career. She's an American spy who allegedly has a city-destroying explosive in her possession. She boards an ocean liner bound for America-and that's when the fun begins. Tyler Brooks and James Finlayson, both recognizable comedic character actors in the 1930s, are starving artists who see an opportunity for riches, seizing Bara on board the ship.
Bara was one of those silent movie stars who exited cinema well before the advent of talkies. She married British-born director Charles Brabin in 1921. Brabin, famous for directing the 1932 'The Mask of Fu Manchu,' retired from movies in mid-1930's to be with Bara at their summer vacation home in Harbourville, Nova Scotia, and at their winter home in Cincinnati, Ohio. She never returned to movies after "Madame Mystery." Bara suffered from stomach cancer and died on April 7, 1955, at 69.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThis film has long been available in a poor quality, one-reel edition. But a complete, two-reel version survives in the 16mm format.
- Citazioni
Captain Schmaltz: Permit me, Madame. All things are impossible with me.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Woman with the Hungry Eyes (2006)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione21 minuti
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- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.33 : 1