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Shivering Shakespeare

  • 1929
  • 20min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,8/10
179
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Shivering Shakespeare (1929)
ComedyFamilyShort

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe gang is participating in a program sponsored by the Golden Age Dramatic League. They present their own fractured version of Quo Vadis? (1924). Things go from bad to worse when the neighb... Leggi tuttoThe gang is participating in a program sponsored by the Golden Age Dramatic League. They present their own fractured version of Quo Vadis? (1924). Things go from bad to worse when the neighborhood tough kids disrupt the show. The pie fight is given a new twist by use of some slow... Leggi tuttoThe gang is participating in a program sponsored by the Golden Age Dramatic League. They present their own fractured version of Quo Vadis? (1924). Things go from bad to worse when the neighborhood tough kids disrupt the show. The pie fight is given a new twist by use of some slow motion sequences.

  • Regia
    • Robert A. McGowan
  • Sceneggiatura
    • H.M. Walker
    • Robert F. McGowan
  • Star
    • Norman 'Chubby' Chaney
    • Allen 'Farina' Hoskins
    • Jackie Cooper
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,8/10
    179
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Robert A. McGowan
    • Sceneggiatura
      • H.M. Walker
      • Robert F. McGowan
    • Star
      • Norman 'Chubby' Chaney
      • Allen 'Farina' Hoskins
      • Jackie Cooper
    • 12Recensioni degli utenti
    • 1Recensione della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto

    Interpreti principali50

    Modifica
    Norman 'Chubby' Chaney
    Norman 'Chubby' Chaney
    • Chubby
    • (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    • …
    Allen 'Farina' Hoskins
    Allen 'Farina' Hoskins
    • Farina
    • (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    • …
    Jackie Cooper
    Jackie Cooper
    • Jackie
    • (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Mary Ann Jackson
    Mary Ann Jackson
    • Mary Ann
    • (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    • …
    Bobby 'Wheezer' Hutchins
    Bobby 'Wheezer' Hutchins
    • Wheezer
    • (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Donald Haines
    • Donny
    • (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Edith Fellows
    Edith Fellows
    • Girls Scared of Elephant
    • (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Gordon Thorpe
    • Effeminate boy
    • (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    Douglas Greer
    • Turkey Egg, curtain pulller
    • (as Hal Roach's Rascals)
    June Branon
    • Blonde Girl
    Pete the Dog
    Pete the Dog
    • Pete
    Fred Rollins
    • Boy in Audience
    Herman Tutt
    • Spy who arrests Jackie
    George Verricco
    • Boy in Audience
    Johnny Aber
    • Tough Kid
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Georgie Billings
    • Shepard
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Allan Cavan
    Allan Cavan
    • Man who 'resents it'
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Dorothy Coburn
    Dorothy Coburn
    • Pie Seller
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Robert A. McGowan
    • Sceneggiatura
      • H.M. Walker
      • Robert F. McGowan
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti12

    6,8179
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    Agnelin

    Kids acting as kids

    I'm an Our Gang/Little Rascals fan, and I enjoy this episode immensely, I never tire of it. "Shivering Shakespeare" is about the kids acting in an adaptation of "Quo Vadis" made by Mrs Kennedy, who is conveniently hiding behind the curtains to help out the kids with the classic and a bit too complicated dialogue. The best thing about this episode is watching the kids act as kids; they have a natural grace that is fortunately not ruined by the fact that they are kid actors; you would say that they are just being themselves and practically unaware of the cameras.

    Some of the best gags have Chubby as a protagonist -not having learned his dialogue well, he has taken notes on his robe, only to find out he's put on the robe inside out. There's also the gang of the kids who aren't in a play and have decided to turn it into a pie-throwing fest. 'Farina' is also at his best, scolding the teacher for "talking too much" when she's helping the kids with the forgotten dialogue. Very enjoyable is also Mary Ann Jackson, the leading lady, cheeky and adorable!
    7nnwahler

    One of the best of Our Gang's first "sound" season

    The early sound shorts in the Our Gang series were scattershot, quality-wise, depending on which director was handling the episode at hand. Full-time director Bob McGowan saw the new era through to its maturity. Other early sound-era episodes, like "When the Wind Blows" (L&H director James W. Hornes' one-shot Rascals short), and series co-director Anthony Mack's efforts (Mack was really Robert Anthony McGowan, nephew of Bob), were a few times good, but mostly misfires.

    Mack was a semi-skilled director at best: the man just didn't latch onto how to pace and shape a film. But the present episode presents an ingenious compromise: being merely a semi-skilled director, Anthony Mack proves just about the ideal choice to direct an episode with this plot: the gradeschooler kids are supposed to be players in the cast of a small-town production of "Quo Vadis" which quickly becomes one big joke by means of forgotten lines, a harried and loud and pretentious schoolmarm, and an extended pie-throwing melee to cap things off. Norman "Chubby" Chaney shines in his attempt to be Nero, The result is an episode that cuts the mustard, at least in this reviewer's opinion. Some of the punchlines fail to come off, but a hearty good time generally.

    A large, hilarious supporting cast help put this one over the edge.
    7xoxmagoosxox

    Obviously inspired several Three Stooges films

    I first saw this as a kid (THE LITTLE RASCALS first went on TV the year I was born) and fairly recently bought this on DVD. In between, I watched it on the occasions it was on and took careful notes at 1) the pie fight itself and 2) how racist some of these parts were: Farina as a Nubian slave, doing voodoo, for example. I think Roach and McGowan would have been beaten to death if they'd tried to do that now.

    Notice how the pie fights in The Three Stooges' HALFWITS' HOLIDAY and IN THE SWEET PIE AND PIE resemble this one...and this film came out a few years before their initial contract with Harry Cohn at Columbia Pictures. There was obviously some inspiration from SS and Laurel & Hardy's THE BATTLE OF THE CENTURY for these films...remember, at that time, they all stole from the best, each other!!!

    One more note: Laurel & Hardy buffs, that bake sale lady was none other than Dorothy Coburn, who also appeared in TBOTC-the 'flapper' getting into her car and getting it in the rear end. It always escapes me why she was never credited?
    8librarymind

    Would have been a 9

    This one had me laughing until the pie fight at the end. I was sorry to see it end that way. I thought the adult participation was very amusing and expressed the way the people would really feel about each other if this had been produced in real life. It was very natural and personal. You don't see natural man to man interactions any more. The scenes with the men dressed as animals were irresistible. The children acted like children would at that time, too - it was all very believable. And the lady in charge of this drama was the perfect spinster librarian type everyone liked to ridicule, only no more nor less than she, too, would have been in real life. The mothers were also very motherly and warm and attached to their children. I could relate to them - far more than I can relate to the mothers I meet today, most of whom seem to feel very little for their children. I feel a very warm affection for the time when family love was still so much a part of people's lives.
    6robert-temple-1

    All the world's a stage in which the Little Rascals play their part

    This is the seventh Little Rascals sound film, 20 minutes long. Shakespeare does not actually feature in the film, which is entirely devoted to a school play of QUO VADIS staged at the school attended by the Little Rascals. (The fact that Wheezer is only four years old and could not yet be at school is conveniently set aside, and there he is declaiming the lines of an ancient Roman.) Pete the Dog is of course in attendance, and howls at an appropriate moment. The chief Rascals in the action of this film are Chubby, who plays the Emperor Nero, Farina who plays a sorcerer 'from darkest Africa', and Mary Ann, who plays a Christian girl who is going to be thrown to the lions. For those who do not know, QUO VADIS was at this time an extremely famous book. It is a novel written by the Polish author Henryk Sienkiewicz (pronounced 'Syen-kyay-vitch'), who won the Nobel Prize for Literature for writing it. It is set in Rome at the time of Nero, and is a very powerful and dramatic work. Sienkiewicz was a brilliant author, and is still a literary hero to Poles today, who all have to read him in school (though not this novel, instead they read his many Polish historical novels). QUO VADIS was what we call 'a runaway international best-seller' which sold millions of copies. One reason for its success was its description of the early Christians, who were being persecuted by Nero, since until the 1970s, Christianity was still very important to everyone in the 'mass market'. If it were published today, few people would buy it, I expect, despite its being very good. No one cares about early Christians anymore, at least not in films. QUO VADIS was made into a famous Hollywood epic film in 1951 with Peter Ustinov playing Nero. I remember asking Peter, whom my wife and I knew very well, what it was like playing Nero. He said he had to remember to keep squinting up his eyes, because Nero was notoriously near-sighted. He felt ambivalent about giving the thumbs-down to the gladiators in the Colisseum, since although it made him feel powerful, it also made him feel guilty at the same time. The costumes worn by the kids in the school play are extremely lavish, well above the budget of any actual school play. Everything imaginable that could go wrong with the production does go wrong. Comic situations abound, and not only the Rascals but all the parents and adults attending the performance throw custard pieces in each other's face, so that a very congenial total chaos results.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      At the beginning of the play being performed by "The Pupils of B. Grade, Liberty School", the announcement poster notes that "The Gladiator's Dilemma" was authored by "Mrs. Funston Evergreen Kennedy" (apparently the wife of Kennedy the Cop who is also involved in the production) "with acknowledgement of excerpts from Shakespeare, Confucius, Aristophanes, Bacon, Cervantes and Irwin S. Cobb". The inclusion of Cobb (1876-1944, whose first name in reality is spelled "Irvin"), the only living writer in the list and the only one not usually associated with "great literature", is obviously meant as a contemporary joke.
    • Citazioni

      Nero's Spy: [the kids are completely unprepared, constantly needing offstage prompting] The oriental girls do their ori-... their wild, pag-... , pagan dance, to make... to make...

      Kennedy the Cop: [for once, Kennedy upstages his wife giving a joke prompt from the wings] To make whoopee!

      Nero's Spy: [with renewed confidence] To make whoopee!

      Jackie: Forsooth!... Nero was in a terrible rage today...

      Mrs. Funston Evergreen Kennedy: [from offstage] And well may...

      Jackie: And well may we all tremble in our pants.

      Mrs. Funston Evergreen Kennedy: [from offstage] *Togas.*

      Jackie: Well, anyway, he has used up all his Christian prisoners, and has no more to feed the lions.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Our Gang: Inside the Clubhouse (1984)
    • Colonne sonore
      The Blue Danube
      (uncredited)

      Music by Johann Strauss

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 25 gennaio 1930 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Страсти вокруг Шекспира
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Hal Roach Studios - 8822 Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, Stati Uniti(Studio)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Hal Roach Studios
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      20 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.20 : 1

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