Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaWith the help of his mechanic buddy, an engineer, and the company's attractive new publicist, an automotive test driver struggles to develop a new carburetor by entering cars in the Indy 500... Leggi tuttoWith the help of his mechanic buddy, an engineer, and the company's attractive new publicist, an automotive test driver struggles to develop a new carburetor by entering cars in the Indy 500 and speed trials at California's Muroc Dry Lake.With the help of his mechanic buddy, an engineer, and the company's attractive new publicist, an automotive test driver struggles to develop a new carburetor by entering cars in the Indy 500 and speed trials at California's Muroc Dry Lake.
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- Sceneggiatura
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- Waiter Telling of Barn Dance
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- Nurse
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- Track Official Telling Terry He Qualified
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- 'Shorty', Bystander at Barn Dance
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- Woman at Barn Dance
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Recensioni in evidenza
MARTIN is working on a new SUPER CARBERATOR with his side-kick 'Gadget' Haggerty (Ted Healy). He duels for creative control with Frank Lawson (Weldon Heyburn) educated engineer and top intellect of the company and also for the romantic interest of Jane Mitchell/Emery (Wendy Barrie). 'Jo' Henderson (Una Merkel) wants Lawson, but just does not know how to go about it. Fear not, true love will conquer in the end and automotive innovation, money and success will follow, with a happy ending.
The idea of a engineering miracle invention like the SUPER CARBERATOR was a typical one in the 1930s. Whether for Automobiles or Aero-Planes it promised a revolution in performance. Either by stretching a gallon of gas to a 100 miles or promising speeds (in the air) in excess of 500mph. The movies though were on the wrong track. In Germany and Sweden, fuel injection was shown as the way to go, not carburetors. Don't think so, just look under the hood of your Car!
This movie has a small bit of historic interest for reasons that don't make it a very good movie. First of all this is James Stewart's first official leading role. As he commented once, he got lots of small parts in big movies, and in this on he got a big part in a small movie. The movie is small because it's low budget and rather poorly written (both in its plot and its dialog).
Secondly, there are scenes of early (1935) Indy 500 racing. The most surprising part of this is having two people in each car, a driver and a mechanic who kept the systems going at their peak (or just keep them going at all in some cases). This allows for some pretty corny scenes where one of the people in one car will make faces or gestures to someone in another car (as they are cruising at 140 mph).
If you like Stewart you'll like him here despite the various limitations. He plays Terry Martin, whose love of racing at a track leads eventually to his going after a land speed record in a bizarre car with a giant fin for stabilization. (This was a special vehicle supplied by Chrysler for the shoot, not quite the real deal.) Of course this leads to a crisis and then the woman of the story, played with lackluster but reasonable ease by Una Merkel, gets her chance to win the hero's heart. This gives nothing away, believe me. It's all in lights from the get go.
A better movie, if still not even slightly brilliant, is certainly the 1950 Clark Cable movie with Barbara Stanwyck in the leading female role (and with a far more empowering part for a woman) , "To Please a Lady." And if you really want to round this out, the Paul Newman movie from 1969 called "Winning" is another faltering attempt at making this scene work on screen. Maybe if all three were played simultaneously on three screens you could get the roar and some interesting plots mixing together well. Individually they make for some fun moments and lots of stalling and pits stops. The actors, at least, are stars that hold their own in each case.
"Speed" is never slow, but that's not the same thing as getting any kind of checkered flag. Watch as filler.
This starts with a nice car stunt and then it turns into a ten minute industrial educational film. They need to show off the machinery. I like my heavy metal and this is fascinating for me. For other people, it's probably rather boring. There is a nice little love triangle and then a quadrangle. For sure, Jimmy Stewart is the cat's meow and the audience knows it. It's an early lead role for him. He is certain to get a girl. The car action has some good stock-footage crashes. This seems to be a movie written by the auto industry. I like Jimmy and I like cars. The movie is ok.
While he spends his working days racing, flipping and crashing test cars, he is also working on a new carburetor design that he is sure will make his mark. Unfortunately, he's having trouble perfecting the carburetor will the company bigwigs force him to take on help from the snooty engineering department?
Stewart's ambitions and frustrations make up one part of the plot; the other half of the story is a romantic drama involving publicity agent Wendy Barrie, newly promoted auto executive Una Merkel, and bland auto engineer Weldon Heyburn, whom Stewart considers a rival both professionally and romantically but who is really not a bad guy after all.
The first fifteen minutes of the picture offer a great tour of the automobile factory where these characters all work. It's basically a commercial for the auto industry, and a pretty neat look at the inside of a production plant, circa 1936.
With this cast, you would expect some good laughs or at least plenty of snappy dialog delivery; unfortunately, the tone is fairly grim and the screenplay pretty dry. We do get a bit of comic relief from Ted Healy as Stewart's friend and sidekick; but it sure seems a shame to have both Barrie and Merkel—two really excellent comic talents—go practically a whole movie with no wisecracks!
The production is slick and includes some impressive footage from testing grounds and racetracks. And Stewart definitely shows some charisma, even though his character is so stubborn and self-pitying that it's hard to root for him completely.
Overall, it's easy to watch but probably should have been better.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizSpeed (1936) was James Stewart's first starring role. Ted Healy, who played my best friend, told me, 'Think of the audience as partners ... as collaborators ... not just watchers. You have to involve them.'"
- BlooperDespite test driving an automobile and deliberately crashing it on a test track, James Stewart's character wasn't wearing a crash helmet. (Nash was the first automobile manufacturer to offer them [1949]).
- Citazioni
Jane Mitchell: Well, as much as I hate to leave such distinguished company, I have to be on my way.
Terry Martin: Where are we going?
Jane Mitchell: Different directions.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Jack Armstrong (1947)
- Colonne sonorePop! Goes the Weasel
Traditional 17th century English song
Played and sung by the band at the barn dance for dance music
I più visti
- How long is Speed?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- La prueba suprema
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Indianapolis Motor Speedway - 4790 W. 16th Street, Speedway, Indiana, Stati Uniti(stock footage of Indy 500)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 10min(70 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1