Un ottuso signore dei quartieri poveri cerca di riformare una banda di ragazzi urbani e impressionare una giovane donna attraente, trasformando il loro rude quartiere in un posto più decente... Leggi tuttoUn ottuso signore dei quartieri poveri cerca di riformare una banda di ragazzi urbani e impressionare una giovane donna attraente, trasformando il loro rude quartiere in un posto più decente.Un ottuso signore dei quartieri poveri cerca di riformare una banda di ragazzi urbani e impressionare una giovane donna attraente, trasformando il loro rude quartiere in un posto più decente.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Tenament Mother
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- Attorney
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- James - Harmon's Chauffeur
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- Dresser
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- Cop
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- Little Boy Sitting on Curb
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- Tenement Woman in Window
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- One of Butch's Henchmen
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- Little Boy
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Recensioni in evidenza
** (out of 4)
Buster Keaton plays a soft slum owner who falls for a woman (Anita Page) living in his building and plans on impressing her by fixing up the neighborhood and trying to make her bad brother a good kid. Keaton hated this film so much because MGM wouldn't let him have any artistic control and to his shock it became his most popular film, which was a bad thing since that told the studio they could do whatever they wanted with him. This was certainly a turning point in Keaton's career and while it's not as bad as its reputation it's certainly not the classics we're use to seeing the legend appear in. The biggest problem with the film is that it tries to be too many things at once and it doesn't do any of them very well. One moment it wants to be a comedy then it wants to be a drama and then we get more touches of a romantic comedy. The screenplay is all over the map and I found it to be too light for a drama and too mean to work as a comedy. There's a pretty ugly scene towards the end of the film when a wise guy tries to force the kid brother to kill Keaton and this stuff just doesn't work. The abuse shown at the kid who is forced to do some pretty bad things really comes off like abuse and it's hard to watch at times. Even though Keaton's hated doing this film he still manages to turn in a decent performance. Sure, this isn't the golden era of his career but he does have a few good lines and gets to show off some of his physical abilities but not enough. Page also comes off very good even though her role isn't written too well. The two actually have some nice chemistry together and make the film a lot better than it has the right to be.
Anita Page plays Margie Kelly the woman whom Homer adores but doesn't think he has a prayer of a chance in gaining her interest. His buddy Poggle (Cliff Edwards...voice of Jiminy Cricket fame) encourages him to try to get to know her & ask her to marry him.
Norman Phillips as Clipper Kelly (Margie's brother) is one of a few of the troubled youth Homer wants to help.
And we have Frank Rowan who plays the nasty Butch the Bad Guy. Butch will do all he can to stop Homer from helping the kids because that group is where he collects his new gang members.
What's going to happen? Will Butch's plan to kill Homer come to fruition? Or will the kids decide Homer is A-OK & come to his rescue? I hope you get to watch this comedy.
Keaton wasn't fond of this movie but I found it to be fun!
With all the money and facilities available, this movie is not one-one-hundredth the quality of, for example, "The General." Buster Keaton, though, still showed some of the athleticism that make his good movies so good, and co-star Anita Page showed that she is watchable even in horrible movies.
For Keaton, it's a different kind of script, too, in that Buster is a rich guy and has money to try to do good.
Actually, most of the players do pretty well with what they have to work with, and it's a lot better than, for example, "Free and Easy," but "Sidewalks" is probably a title nobody will want to see more than once ... or maybe, since it is Keaton, more than once a year.
This is added after a viewing on TCM, 7 January 2015: Despite my dismal outlook in the previous review, this time around I liked it a lot more.
Partly I liked it more because I paid more attention to Anita Page, who had, I think, a role quite different for her. And she scored.
In previous roles -- that I have seen -- she was just a very pretty girl with no particular strength. Here she was strong as an over-protective sister "and mother and father."
Cliff Edwards was a particular joy. Usually just a with or at best second fiddle, here he showed he too could be a strong character, and his pairing with the acrobatic Keaton was perfect.
Yes, the big studio did not understand what was funny and did not know how to present Keaton.
But my second viewing, contrary to my earlier comment, made me like this a lot more and I raised my rating to seven. And I think everyone ought to see it. At least twice.
Silent super star Buster Keaton had mixed results during the sound era. This film is one of his successes. It does allow Buster to do his physical comedy. It's relatively funny although the seriousness of Clipper's dilemma is not that fun. Buster is still physically impressive. I do miss a large constructed stunt. While this is not at the level of his silent classics, this does allow Buster to play his character and be the butt of the joke. The romance is nice. It's not high class but Buster does his work well.
Keaton, Cliff Edwards, and Anita Page are all wasted on insipid material. I feel especially bad for Page, who's stuck screaming half the time. Buster has little to do other than look foolish in the most unfunny ways possible, though at least his character isn't nearly as idiotic as he was in Free and Easy. The only decent bit he got was a scene where he tries and fails to carve a roasted duck. Oh well, at least Durante isn't running about the set screeching, else this would be downright painful.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizSome of the courtroom dialogue was reused in The Three Stooges short Disorder in the Court (1936).
- BlooperLefty's pistol, a six shot, is fired twice before Harmon tosses the remaining cartridges into the fireplace. Five bullets subsequently explode in the fire.
- Citazioni
Bailiff: [very quickly] DoYouSwearToTellTheTruth,AndNothingButTheTruth,SoHelpYouGod?
Harmon: ...Huh?
Bailiff: DoYouSwearToTellTheTruth,AndNothingButTheTruth,SoHelpYouGod?
Judge: Answer him?
Bailiff: DoYouSwearToTellTheTruth,AndNothingButTheTruth,SoHelpYouGod?
Harmon: No.
Judge: What?
Harmon: I can't understand a thing he's saying!
Judge: He's asking if you swear...
Harmon: No, but I know all the words.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Tulips (1981)
- Colonne sonoreThe Sidewalks of New York
(1894) (uncredited)
Music by Charles Lawlor
Played during the opening credits
I più visti
Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 276.000 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 14min(74 min)
- Colore