Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaStory of several passengers, including an escaped killer, on a cross-country bus trip.Story of several passengers, including an escaped killer, on a cross-country bus trip.Story of several passengers, including an escaped killer, on a cross-country bus trip.
Craig Reynolds
- First Bus Driver
- (as Hugh Enfield)
Jimmy Conlin
- Sid
- (as James Conlin)
Harry C. Bradley
- First Dodd's Salesman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Walter Brennan
- Niagara Falls Boatman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Eddy Chandler
- Last Bus Driver
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jane Darwell
- Mrs. O'Hara
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jean Fenwick
- Schoolteacher
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Ara Haswell
- The Old Maid
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Edward Hearn
- Bus Passenger
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
It's one of those films that you're glad only lasts just over an hour. It's one of those films you wonder why you're bothering to watch it. ..... It's one of those films you secretly enjoy.
The story is beyond ridiculous, the characters in SpongeBob SquarePants are more believable than this lot and even for a 1930s Hollywood police investigation, this has to rank as the most bizarre. It essentially consists of: "She did it, Officer." "OK, we'll arrest her." Then later on..... "Officer, I'm a rich bloke, can I take over your investigation?" "OK, go for it!" So when the real murderer inevitably hijacks the bus, nobody questions why this local policeman has conveniently got a plane parked in the bus station which he subsequently used to fly after the bus.
So it's utter nonsense but it does have a fairly decent director and Ed Buzzell somehow manages to make this trash weirdly entertaining and fun. Nobody seems to take this seriously, the likes of Alice White and Eugene Pallette just play caricatures of themselves so we can watch this in the same vain it was made.
If you want a lighthearted picture which captures the feel of the early thirties then this is a pretty good little time capsule. If however you not someone used to watching pictures from this era or just have to watch any old rubbish Alice White was in, you might want to avoid this.
The story is beyond ridiculous, the characters in SpongeBob SquarePants are more believable than this lot and even for a 1930s Hollywood police investigation, this has to rank as the most bizarre. It essentially consists of: "She did it, Officer." "OK, we'll arrest her." Then later on..... "Officer, I'm a rich bloke, can I take over your investigation?" "OK, go for it!" So when the real murderer inevitably hijacks the bus, nobody questions why this local policeman has conveniently got a plane parked in the bus station which he subsequently used to fly after the bus.
So it's utter nonsense but it does have a fairly decent director and Ed Buzzell somehow manages to make this trash weirdly entertaining and fun. Nobody seems to take this seriously, the likes of Alice White and Eugene Pallette just play caricatures of themselves so we can watch this in the same vain it was made.
If you want a lighthearted picture which captures the feel of the early thirties then this is a pretty good little time capsule. If however you not someone used to watching pictures from this era or just have to watch any old rubbish Alice White was in, you might want to avoid this.
"Cross Country Cruise" is a very strange but enjoyable film that is a bit like "Grand Hotel" in that it's made up of lots of little stories all brought together by, of all things, a bus instead of a hotel! I think you could call it a lower-class version!
When the film begins, a woman on a double-decker bus accidentally drops something out of her suitcase on the rich guy (Lew Ayres) in his car below. Instantly smitten(??) this idiot then follows the lady as she then transfers to a cross country bus. This is creepy and far- fetched to say the least. On the bus are a variety of characters and rogues...confidence people, bigamists and more. And, during the course of this long journey, one of them becomes a murderer!!
This film entertains but isn't always logical. Apart from the rich guy who jumps onto the bus on a whim, you also have police that are about to arrest the wrong lady for murder (with no real evidence to support this) as well as allowing the rich guy to conduct the cross- examinations because...well...I have no idea why!! But it is fun and I do recommend you watch it...just be sure not to think too much as you see the stories unfold!
When the film begins, a woman on a double-decker bus accidentally drops something out of her suitcase on the rich guy (Lew Ayres) in his car below. Instantly smitten(??) this idiot then follows the lady as she then transfers to a cross country bus. This is creepy and far- fetched to say the least. On the bus are a variety of characters and rogues...confidence people, bigamists and more. And, during the course of this long journey, one of them becomes a murderer!!
This film entertains but isn't always logical. Apart from the rich guy who jumps onto the bus on a whim, you also have police that are about to arrest the wrong lady for murder (with no real evidence to support this) as well as allowing the rich guy to conduct the cross- examinations because...well...I have no idea why!! But it is fun and I do recommend you watch it...just be sure not to think too much as you see the stories unfold!
"Cross Country Cruise" is a somewhat lighthearted title, for this totally entertaining little film has a strongly and unapologetically lurid undertone, all the while with a view to how people try to manipulate others, conspire to take advantage of others, and actually try to damage and even deal death to others in their efforts to seek life's desires and goals.
The story of how strangers on a cross-country bus schedule back in 1934 interact is the premise, and the delivery of the several primary relationships to the viewer is marvelous and wholly admirable. The characters are diverse and fascinating and the performances by the cast are, in general, done fully effectively. Lew Ayers is somewhat milky (as he often is) in this one, but Alan Dinehart, June Knight, and Alice White are all fully magnificent. Cameos and other support staff are all richly presented, too. I expect the cast knew that the story was quite far-fetched and incredulously appointed, but the crew probably really enjoyed making this flick. It really is a fantasy.
One aspect that really took hold for me was the glimpse of America in general-- and bus travel therein, in particular-- in 1934. Intercity bus travel was burgeoning in the early 1930s, as folks took to travel in ever-growing numbers, despite the Depression holding sway over the country. Bus transportation allowed people to move around more than ever as the country's road system began to take shape. By 1934 intercity bus travel, especially that provided by the rapidly-expanding network offered by Greyhound Lines, became reliable, relatively safe, and economical.
The other 1934 film in which bus travel was integral was "It Happened One Night," but "Cruise" took the bus component to an even more central level, being that the bus endured as the movie set for the entire program.
It was interesting that the film employed an actual Greyhound bus for the trip, as did "It Happened One Night," instead of using an unmarked coach, as so many other films where bus travel is featured have done (with all the shady doings going on in the movie, it is interesting to conjecture if Greyhound would today allow its name to be used in this one).
It was neat to see that a lavatory was on-board the coach, as was a drinking water dispenser with cups, along with sleeping pills, of all things. And did the schedules actually stop at front-line city-center hotels for 3- and 4-hour rest stops and shopping forays, and at county fairs for home-cooked meals and dancing, as depicted? Maybe they did then, as 1934 was just before the time when the golden era of bus station construction was beginning (and which examples were still bountiful and used as bus stations into the early 21st century).
All in all, watching "Cross Country Cruise" with this assemblage of diverse characters is a fun experience despite (or maybe even partially because of?) the fantastic story elements. An unusual movie worth watching for fans of 30s movies!
The story of how strangers on a cross-country bus schedule back in 1934 interact is the premise, and the delivery of the several primary relationships to the viewer is marvelous and wholly admirable. The characters are diverse and fascinating and the performances by the cast are, in general, done fully effectively. Lew Ayers is somewhat milky (as he often is) in this one, but Alan Dinehart, June Knight, and Alice White are all fully magnificent. Cameos and other support staff are all richly presented, too. I expect the cast knew that the story was quite far-fetched and incredulously appointed, but the crew probably really enjoyed making this flick. It really is a fantasy.
One aspect that really took hold for me was the glimpse of America in general-- and bus travel therein, in particular-- in 1934. Intercity bus travel was burgeoning in the early 1930s, as folks took to travel in ever-growing numbers, despite the Depression holding sway over the country. Bus transportation allowed people to move around more than ever as the country's road system began to take shape. By 1934 intercity bus travel, especially that provided by the rapidly-expanding network offered by Greyhound Lines, became reliable, relatively safe, and economical.
The other 1934 film in which bus travel was integral was "It Happened One Night," but "Cruise" took the bus component to an even more central level, being that the bus endured as the movie set for the entire program.
It was interesting that the film employed an actual Greyhound bus for the trip, as did "It Happened One Night," instead of using an unmarked coach, as so many other films where bus travel is featured have done (with all the shady doings going on in the movie, it is interesting to conjecture if Greyhound would today allow its name to be used in this one).
It was neat to see that a lavatory was on-board the coach, as was a drinking water dispenser with cups, along with sleeping pills, of all things. And did the schedules actually stop at front-line city-center hotels for 3- and 4-hour rest stops and shopping forays, and at county fairs for home-cooked meals and dancing, as depicted? Maybe they did then, as 1934 was just before the time when the golden era of bus station construction was beginning (and which examples were still bountiful and used as bus stations into the early 21st century).
All in all, watching "Cross Country Cruise" with this assemblage of diverse characters is a fun experience despite (or maybe even partially because of?) the fantastic story elements. An unusual movie worth watching for fans of 30s movies!
Lo sapevi?
- QuizReleased barely a month before Frank Capra's It Happened One Night (1934), which also chronicled a romantic cross-country bus journey. Ironically, the Capra comedy swept the Academy Awards while Cross Country Cruise (1934) quickly drifted into obscurity.
- ConnessioniReferenced in Thou Shalt Not: Sex, Sin and Censorship in Pre-Code Hollywood (2008)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- New York - San Francisco
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 12 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Cross Country Cruise (1934) officially released in India in English?
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