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IMDbPro

Un comodo posto in banca

Titolo originale: The Bank Dick
  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 12min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,1/10
8025
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
W.C. Fields, Una Merkel, and Cora Witherspoon in Un comodo posto in banca (1940)
Comedy

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaHenpecked Egbert Sousé has comic adventures as a substitute film director and unlikely bank guard.Henpecked Egbert Sousé has comic adventures as a substitute film director and unlikely bank guard.Henpecked Egbert Sousé has comic adventures as a substitute film director and unlikely bank guard.

  • Regia
    • Edward F. Cline
  • Sceneggiatura
    • W.C. Fields
    • Richard Carroll
  • Star
    • W.C. Fields
    • Cora Witherspoon
    • Una Merkel
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,1/10
    8025
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Edward F. Cline
    • Sceneggiatura
      • W.C. Fields
      • Richard Carroll
    • Star
      • W.C. Fields
      • Cora Witherspoon
      • Una Merkel
    • 76Recensioni degli utenti
    • 41Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 vittoria in totale

    Foto19

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    Interpreti principali64

    Modifica
    W.C. Fields
    W.C. Fields
    • Egbert Sousé
    Cora Witherspoon
    Cora Witherspoon
    • Agatha Sousé
    Una Merkel
    Una Merkel
    • Myrtle Sousé
    Evelyn Del Rio
    • Elsie Mae Adele Brunch Sousé
    Jessie Ralph
    Jessie Ralph
    • Mrs. Hermisillo Brunch
    Franklin Pangborn
    Franklin Pangborn
    • J. Pinkerton Snoopington
    Shemp Howard
    Shemp Howard
    • Joe Guelpe
    Dick Purcell
    Dick Purcell
    • Mackley Q. Greene
    • (as Richard Purcell)
    Grady Sutton
    Grady Sutton
    • Og Oggilby
    Russell Hicks
    Russell Hicks
    • J. Frothingham Waterbury
    Pierre Watkin
    Pierre Watkin
    • Mr. Skinner
    Al Hill
    Al Hill
    • Filthy McNasty - aka Rupulsive Rogan
    George Moran
    George Moran
    • Cozy Cochran - aka Loudmouth Nasty
    Bill Wolfe
    • Otis
    Jack Norton
    Jack Norton
    • A. Pismo Clam
    Pat West
    • Assistant Director
    Reed Hadley
    Reed Hadley
    • Francois
    Heather Wilde
    • Miss Plupp
    • Regia
      • Edward F. Cline
    • Sceneggiatura
      • W.C. Fields
      • Richard Carroll
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti76

    7,18K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8Freycinet

    Quite amusing movie, Fields seems very modern

    The irreverent Fields gives spark to what would otherwise have been a quite humdrum comedy movie.

    His politically incorrect jokes seem very present-day, and so makes you understand that the people back in the 1940's weren't so far removed from us as we sometimes think.

    Fields is nasty to children, his wife and the bank examiner, whistles at pretty girls and in general just behaves terribly. You wouldn't think they would film stuff like that back in 1940, but Fields did. The movie is populated by crooks and phonies, as for instance the bank president, who says "let me give you a hardy handshake" and then just rests his hand lightly in Fields' for a second. It's a very observant and stinging visual commentary which tells more than many phrases: that's what films are good at, and it is used here to great effect.

    The final car chase is really scary, with extra's ducking under cars with only inches to spare!
    howlermonkey

    joyful comedy, asides, and the pleasures of smoking and drinking....

    a source of strange joy, even in its quiet and failed moments. great moments mostly mumbled and underplayed so that the film seems so humble and so unaggressive, unlike most comedies now which would wring your neck if they could...Fields' before-its-time irony and self-consciousness about moviemaking is revealed in a throwaway line during the car chase at the end...in the midst of all the obviously speeded-up film and projection effects, Egbert Souse deadpans "you're going to make me have an accident....." I'm almost ready to move into Lompoc, with its Spanish-Americo chili parlor, and, I hope, "rivers of beer flowing over your grandmother's paisley shawl...." and, apparently, absinthe is still available....
    8Squonk

    Classic Fields!

    'The Bank Dick' is a wonderful piece of comedy from W.C. Fields. He plays the town loser, who is given a job as a bank security guard when it appears that he helped stop a bank robbery. Fields' scenes with Franklin Pangborn as the bank examiner are the highlight of the film. The climactic chase sequence, with Fields mentioning points of interest as he is chased by the police, is also hilarious. Only a sequence early in the film, in which Fields pretends to be a Hollywood film director, fails to delight. Overall, a comedy classic!
    jeffy-3

    This is Just Too Funny

    This is the second best Fields film (after It's a Gift) and it's similar in that it casts Fields as the lovable drunk with an absolutely hateful family. From the almost surreal episode directing the movie to the eye-poppingly ridiculous chase scene, this one is pure comic entertainment. One side note: it's sad and not a little scary how bloated and tired the Great Man looks in this compared to just six years earlier when It's a Gift was released.
    8lugonian

    The Accidental Hero

    THE BANK DICK (Universal, 1940), directed by Edward Cline, from an original story and screenplay by Mahatma Kane Jeeves, better known as W.C. Fields, stars none other than W.C. Fields in his third of four comedies for Universal, a classic in the sense of it becoming his most famous and admired works next to IT'S A GIFT (Paramount, 1934). Unlike YOU CAN CHEAT AN HONEST MAN (1939) where Fields loses screen time in favor with a ventriloquist act of Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy; MY LITTLE CHICKADEE (1940) in which he divides his time with Mae West; and NEVER GIVE A SUCKER AN EVEN BREAK (1941) where he steps aside in favor for the singing of the teen-age Gloria Jean, THE BANK DICK is pure Fields from start to finish. As the head of a household of a dysfunctional family, with Fields playing the henpecked husband on screen for the last time, the supporting players consists of a fine assortment of character actors who can be just as funny as Fields himself and not draw attention away from him.

    As for the story, set in the town of Lompoc, the focus obviously is on Egbert Souse, accent over the final "E" (W.C. Fields), an unemployed husband who spends much of his leisure time smoking cigarettes and hanging around the local bar, The Black Pussy Cat Cafe, as well as coping with Agatha, his wife, (Cora Witherspoon), Mrs. Hermisillo Brunch, his mother-in-law (Jessie Ralph), Myrtle, his adult daughter, (Una Merkel) and Elsie Mae Adele Brunch, the obnoxious youngster, (Evelyn Del Rio). Of the members in his family, only Myrtle, his eldest, understands him. Aside from being a character herself, she's in love with the hayseed Og Oggilby (Grady Sutton), a bank teller who later encounters a couple of robbers at his window and forced to hand over a large sum of money at a point of a gun. When their getaway car is taken away, the crooks make a run for it. Chased by the police, one gets away while the other is found by Souse seated on a bench nearby, making him a hero for "capturing the crook." In gratitude Souse is awarded a job as a special officer by Mr. Skinner (Pierre Watkin), the bank president. In order for Oggilby to earn enough money to marry Myrtle, Souse arranges for him to invest the bank's money on Beefstake Mines Stock, which finds Souse spending much time preventing the visiting bank examiner (Franklin Pangborn) from looking over the books to find a shortage. More complications occur when the bank gets robbed again with Souse being forced to take the driver's seat in another exciting car chase from the police.

    Supporting players enacting under oddball names include Shemp Howard (Joe Guelpe, the bartender whose whistle to "Listen to the Mockingbird" entices Souse to follow him to the bar); Richard Purcell (Mackley Q. Greene); Russell Hicks (J. Frothingham Waterbury); Jack Norton (A. Pismo Clam); Bill Wolfe (Otis), with Jan Duggan, another favorite of the Fields stock players, once again doing a funny bit in a wonderful cameo set in the bank. While Al Hill is credited as Filthy McNasty in the credits, he is called Repulsive Rogan in the final story. As for the support provided by the diversified Una Merkel, her performance is unlike the assortment of starlets, ranging from Mary Brian, Judith Allen or Constance Moore as Fields' daughters playing their roles in a more serious-minded and caring fashion. Merkel provides her role with comic flare and free-spirit. She and and Grady Sutton (in his final Fields comedy) certainly make a perfect odd couple.

    THE BANK DICK may have some flaws, such as having the audience accept the middle-aged Fields and Cora Witherspoon as parents to a minor child while physically they pass more as grandparents. However, overlooking such minor details, highlights include Souse filling in for a drunken director (Norton) of Tel-Avis Picture Productions, a movie company filming on location; Sousé getting the bank examiner (Pangborn) ill on a "Michael Finn" drinks in order to keep him from examining the books; the climatic car chase; and bank president Mr. Skinner on two separate occasions giving Sousé the "hearty hand clasp" in which Skinner's fingers barely touches Souse's outstretched palm heightened by going to a split-second freeze-frame. While the attention is focused more on Souses' outside activities than on his domestic affairs, one cannot ignore the underscoring to "There's No Place Like Home" used during each opening scene at the Souse household.

    THE BANK DICK, along with MY LITTLE CHICKADEE, became the first of Fields' comedies to be distributed on cassette during the early days of home video in the 1980s. Other than frequent revivals on commercial television prior to 1990, THE BANK DICK assured popularity to a new generation when shifted over to cable stations as American Movie Classics (1995-1999), and later Turner Classic Movies since 2001.

    Fields' fourth and final starring role for Universal being NEVER GIVE A SUCKER AN EVEN BREAK (1941) not only reunites him with Franklin Pangborn, but opens and closes with the same underscoring from THE BANK DICK. It even has an in-joke of Fields, playing himself, standing in front of a billboard advertisement which reads "W.C. Fields in THE BANK DICK." Because of these similarities, these both Fields comedies make logical choices as double features whether on television or a DVD package. As THE BANK DICK is a fun movie, it's kind of sad in a way watching W.C. Fields, older and heavier, in what's to become the final phase to his long career. All good things come to an end but the legend of Fields and his movies lives on. (***)

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      "Mahatma Kane Jeeves" (the pseudonym used by W.C. Fields as screenwriter) is a play on words from stage plays of the era. "My hat, my cane, Jeeves!" And in fact, at the end of the film his butler does hand him his hat and his cane.
    • Blooper
      When W.C. Fields enters the hotel room of J. Pinkerton Snoopington, a hand can be seen on the doorknob on the other side pulling the door shut.
    • Citazioni

      Egbert Sousé: [at the bar of the Black Pussy Cat cafe] Was I in here last night and did I spend a twenty dollar bill?

      Joe Guelpe: Yeah.

      Egbert Sousé: Oh boy, what a load that is off my mind! I thought I'd lost it.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Frances Farmer Presents: Bank Dick (1958)
    • Colonne sonore
      Home Sweet Home
      (1823) (uncredited)

      Music by H.R. Bishop

      Background music near the beginning of the movie and at the end

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    Domande frequenti17

    • How long is The Bank Dick?Powered by Alexa
    • Why do Fields and Howard refer to his drink as a poultice ? A poultice is usually a medicinal herbal wrap.

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 29 novembre 1940 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Bank Dick
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Lompoc, California, Stati Uniti
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Universal Pictures
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 12 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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