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IMDbPro

Meglio un mercoledì da leone

Titolo originale: The Sin of Harold Diddlebock
  • 1947
  • Approved
  • 1h 29min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,3/10
1812
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Arline Judge, Harold Lloyd, Franklin Pangborn, Frances Ramsden, Rudy Vallee, and Jackie the Lion in Meglio un mercoledì da leone (1947)
CommediaScrewball Comedy

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaHarold is a mild-mannered clerk who dreams about marrying the girl at the desk down the aisle. But then he loses his job, and when he is offered a potent drink at a bar, he goes on a very st... Leggi tuttoHarold is a mild-mannered clerk who dreams about marrying the girl at the desk down the aisle. But then he loses his job, and when he is offered a potent drink at a bar, he goes on a very strange and funny rampage (with a lion in tow).Harold is a mild-mannered clerk who dreams about marrying the girl at the desk down the aisle. But then he loses his job, and when he is offered a potent drink at a bar, he goes on a very strange and funny rampage (with a lion in tow).

  • Regia
    • Preston Sturges
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Preston Sturges
  • Star
    • Harold Lloyd
    • Frances Ramsden
    • Jimmy Conlin
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,3/10
    1812
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Preston Sturges
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Preston Sturges
    • Star
      • Harold Lloyd
      • Frances Ramsden
      • Jimmy Conlin
    • 39Recensioni degli utenti
    • 14Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 2 candidature totali

    Foto45

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    Interpreti principali41

    Modifica
    Harold Lloyd
    Harold Lloyd
    • Harold Diddlebock
    Frances Ramsden
    Frances Ramsden
    • Frances Otis
    Jimmy Conlin
    Jimmy Conlin
    • Wormy
    Raymond Walburn
    Raymond Walburn
    • E.J. Waggleberry
    Rudy Vallee
    Rudy Vallee
    • Lynn Sargent
    Edgar Kennedy
    Edgar Kennedy
    • Jake the Bartender
    Arline Judge
    Arline Judge
    • Manicurist
    Franklin Pangborn
    Franklin Pangborn
    • Formfit Franklin
    Lionel Stander
    Lionel Stander
    • Max
    Margaret Hamilton
    Margaret Hamilton
    • Flora
    Jack Norton
    Jack Norton
    • James R. Smoke
    Robert Dudley
    Robert Dudley
    • Robert McDuffy
    Arthur Hoyt
    Arthur Hoyt
    • J.P. Blackstone
    Julius Tannen
    Julius Tannen
    • Nearsighted Banker
    Al Bridge
    Al Bridge
    • Wild Bill Hickock
    Robert Greig
    Robert Greig
    • Algernon McNiff
    Georgia Caine
    Georgia Caine
    • Bearded Lady
    Torben Meyer
    Torben Meyer
    • Barber with Mustache
    • Regia
      • Preston Sturges
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Preston Sturges
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti39

    6,31.8K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8Sylviastel

    The Final Hurrah for a Hollywood Legend!

    Harold Lloyd was one of Hollywood's greatest physical comedians and actors of Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin generation. This film marks his final performance but he could have done so much more in film. Regardless, his contributions should not be overlooked. Harold Lloyd plays Harold Dibbledock, a former football players, who ends up at a dead-end job as a clerk for 22 years. His ungrateful boss sends him packing after he fires him for years of service which was more like a prison sentence than a job. He never relived his glory days on the field. When he encounters an old man who seeks a few dollars to play the horses, he begins a new life after he takes a drink. Until then, Harold has never drank alcohol. He awakens up to learn that he's changed and doesn't have a clue about it. Margaret Hamilton plays Flora in a small performance. Anyway, he learns that he's bought a cab with a driver and a horse and a circus. Anyway, the film's best scenes are stolen by Jackie, the lion. It's a good film!
    8maeander

    Two very different edits of the same movie and they are both very funny.

    "The Sin of Harold Diddlebock" and "Mad Wednesday" are like two twins who hate each other, so they try to change the way they look. Preston Sturges talked Harold Lloyd into coming back to movies after he had retired. Not only that but Lloyd allowed Sturges to use part of his film "The Freshman" for the opening of the film and to be an investor. Their agreement was that each had the final cut of the film. Lloyds' cut is called "The Sin of Harold Diddlebock". Sturges' is called "Mad Wednesday".

    Some material is lost on both cuts and some is added. Both are utterly funny with "Mad Wednesday" being a little crazier. Rudy Vallee is almost lost in "Diddlebock" but a major character in "Wednesday". And though both end with Lloyd and Frances Ramsden (The next Mrs. Sturges) in a horse drawn carriage, the last shot of "Wednesday" has the horse singing to the lovers.

    If you are interested in how two comic geniuses could shape the same material into two different pictures, then you must see them both. Silly. Funny. Absolutely must sees.
    6geoffparfitt

    Sturges On The Decline

    Between 1940 and 1944, Preston Sturges wrote and directed some of the best film comedy ever produced. His eight movies for that short period are all good, and it would not be an exaggeration to say that four of the eight have the touch of brilliance.

    This sequence of movies came to an end when Sturges left Paramount following what he legitimately saw as increasing interference by studio bosses. His high stature at the studio hadn't prevented two of his movies from being taken out of his hands and re-cut against his wishes, one of which - The Great Moment - was never restored to the movie Sturges intended.

    At this point, Sturges declined to join a rival studio, and instead formed a partnership with Howard Hughes, hoping to protect his future movies from the interference he could see was becoming more common within the studio system. However, for a combination of reasons, this partnership with Hughes was not a success, and the only film Sturges produces in that period - The Sin of Harold Diddlebock - shows a decline in his work.

    The whole look and sound of the movie is inferior. It is impossible to know whether this decline was the result of an inevitable burn-out in his ability after such sustained success, or the absence of support and quality control that Paramount had applied to the benefit of the wonderful movies that had come before.

    So... to "Diddlebock" itself! It is difficult to identify why it isn't as funny as we might expect. The film was created as a star vehicle for Harold Lloyd, and by all accounts his comedy instincts did not match those of Sturges. As much as Stuges tried, clearly such a big talent and personality as Lloyd was never going to completely submit to direction with which he didn't agree, and there must be some evidence of that in what we see on screen.

    There is a complete lack of the 'sparkle' we have come to expect. The familiar faces around Lloyd remind us of the great Sturges movies, but to me this is like an inferior pastiche of a Sturges movie by a lesser hand, without such a reliable instinct for film comedy. But perhaps that describes what Preston Sturges had become in such a short time.
    Mike Sh.

    Zany

    A strange film. Written and directed by the brilliant filmmaker Preston Sturges, and starring silent film comedian Harold Lloyd (about 20 years after his prime), this movie tells the story of a college football hero who settles into a rut as he reaches middle age. Suddenly fired from his dead-end job, the milquetoasty Mr. Diddlebock uses his severance money to break out of his rut, embark on a series of adventures over a wild two or three days alongside a chance acquaintance, the aptly named Wormy (played by Sturges regular Jimmy Conlin), and pursue the woman of his dreams.

    Even though this film lacks some of the subtlety, sophistication and polish of some of Preston Sturges' earlier work, it nevertheless (in true Sturges fashion) hides away some pretty heady ideas about growing old, taking chances, and living life to the fullest. this film, a minor entry in the Sturges catalog, would have been the crowning achievement in the career of anyone else. Watch this one, if only to find out what Harold really did on Wednesday!
    tork0030

    The last laugh

    The last laugh of any great clown is interesting, if only for its memento mori value. Laurel & Hardy's last film, UTOPIA, is sadly botched but moments of their grand comedy still flair up, like Marc Antony's final bravery in Shakespeare's Antony & Cleopatra. The grandiose W.C. Fields still holds his own in SONG OF THE OPEN ROAD, even though he was deathly ill with alcohol poisoning. The Marx Brother's LOVE HAPPY is mainly a vehicle for one last pantomime fling for brother Harpo -- and all the more poignant for it. Chaplin's KING IN NEW YORK is a splendid idea -- we chuckle at its conception -- though Chaplin conducts himself like a department store floorwalker more than a comedian. And Harold Lloyd's last movie seems to me to be a nostalgic conspiracy between him and director Sturges, a Last Hurrah to remind movie audiences one last time of the glorious slapstick & pantomime heritage that America was in the process of losing forever as the old clowns faded from the scene and brash lunatics like Martin & Lewis or Bob Hope took over the reins of comedy. Lloyd's film exists in several differently edited versions, but I won't call any of them "butchered", just misunderstood. By the late Forties there weren't any skilled editors around who could quite understand the cadence, the beat, the nearly-balletic timing that a great clown brought to the camera and needed the editor to highlight -- such things as double-takes, long shots of the chase and just stationary shooting when the clown is unfolding a gag. Lloyd produced a novel, a War & Peace, if you will, of vintage gags -- his editors only understood short stories or magazine articles. They grew nervous when the camera lingered on anybody or anything. But great comedy is just that -- lingering. In his final film Lloyd wants to loiter over gags silly and profound. His dawdling is cut short and the truncated comedy that follows seems at times stiff and childish. But before Harold is relegated to the dusty shadows he still pulls off much nonsense that is both genial and brassy -- not a coming attraction, but a dignified retreat back to the Land of Belly Laughs. Anyone grounded in American cinematic comedy feels abit like one of the children in the story of the Pied Piper; we wish we could go with him back into that wonderful, magical, mountain.

    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      During the scene where Harold Lloyd's character meets Jackie the lion, on the first take when Lloyd pets Jackie, the lion actually bit him on his right hand. However, he was not injured because the lion's teeth scraped against his two prosthetic fingers (Lloyd had lost most of his right hand in an on-set accident in 1919). After that, he refused to pet the lion ever again on- or off-screen, and in the second take, which was used for the film, his terrified squirming over the lion standing next to him is genuine.
    • Blooper
      The story takes place in New York. It is odd to see Los Angeles City Hall in the background of the final shot.
    • Citazioni

      Jake: [when asked to prepare Harold's very first alcoholic beverage] You arouse the artist in me.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      "... and for the first time a young girl called Frances Ramsden playing the youngest Miss Otis"
    • Versioni alternative
      Originally released at 90 minutes; was then re-edited and re-released in a shorter 79-minutes version under the title "Mad Wednesday" in 1950.
    • Connessioni
      Edited from Viva lo sport (1925)
    • Colonne sonore
      America, the Beautiful
      (uncredited)

      Music by Samuel A. Ward

      Played during the presidential calendar montage

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 4 aprile 1947 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Sin of Harold Diddlebock
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Memorial Stadium - Stadium Rim Way, Berkeley, California, Stati Uniti(football scenes edited from The Freshman)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • California Pictures (I)
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 1.712.959 USD (previsto)
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 29 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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