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No, No, Nanette

  • 1940
  • 1h 36min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,2/10
249
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Anna Neagle in No, No, Nanette (1940)
CommediaDrammaMusicaleRomanticismo

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaPerky young Nanette attempts to save the marriage of her uncle and aunt by untangling Uncle Jimmy from several innocent but ensnaring flirtations. Attempting one such unentanglement, Nanette... Leggi tuttoPerky young Nanette attempts to save the marriage of her uncle and aunt by untangling Uncle Jimmy from several innocent but ensnaring flirtations. Attempting one such unentanglement, Nanette enlists the help of theatrical producer Bill Trainor, who promptly falls in love with her... Leggi tuttoPerky young Nanette attempts to save the marriage of her uncle and aunt by untangling Uncle Jimmy from several innocent but ensnaring flirtations. Attempting one such unentanglement, Nanette enlists the help of theatrical producer Bill Trainor, who promptly falls in love with her. The same thing happens when artist Tom Gillespie is called on for help. But soon Uncle J... Leggi tutto

  • Regia
    • Herbert Wilcox
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Frank Mandel
    • Otto A. Harbach
    • Vincent Youmans
  • Star
    • Anna Neagle
    • Richard Carlson
    • Victor Mature
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,2/10
    249
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Herbert Wilcox
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Frank Mandel
      • Otto A. Harbach
      • Vincent Youmans
    • Star
      • Anna Neagle
      • Richard Carlson
      • Victor Mature
    • 19Recensioni degli utenti
    • 1Recensione della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto13

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    Interpreti principali48

    Modifica
    Anna Neagle
    Anna Neagle
    • Nanette
    Richard Carlson
    Richard Carlson
    • Tom Gillespie
    Victor Mature
    Victor Mature
    • William Trainor
    Roland Young
    Roland Young
    • Mr. 'Happy' Jimmy Smith
    Helen Broderick
    Helen Broderick
    • Mrs. Susan Smith
    Zasu Pitts
    Zasu Pitts
    • Pauline Hastings
    Eve Arden
    Eve Arden
    • Kitty
    Billy Gilbert
    Billy Gilbert
    • Styles
    Tamara
    Tamara
    • Sonya
    Stuart Robertson
    • Stillwater Jr.…
    Dorothea Kent
    Dorothea Kent
    • Betty
    Aubrey Mather
    Aubrey Mather
    • Remington, the butler
    Mary Gordon
    Mary Gordon
    • Gertrude, the Cook
    Russell Hicks
    Russell Hicks
    • 'Hutch' Hutchinson
    Margaret Armstrong
    Margaret Armstrong
    • Dowager
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Muriel Barr
    • Show Girl
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Brooks Benedict
    Brooks Benedict
    • Birthday Party Guest
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Joan Blair
    • Woman at Smith Home
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Herbert Wilcox
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Frank Mandel
      • Otto A. Harbach
      • Vincent Youmans
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti19

    5,2249
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7yonhope

    DeSoto taxis and Wildroot Creme Oil

    Okay, so there is a front view of a Checker taxi, probably late 1930s model. It has the great triangular shaped headlights. There also is a DeSoto cab in this black and white, character driven, almost a musical love gone wrong story.

    The real pleasure here is the look at 1940s room interiors and fashions and hotel elevators. The hair styles, male and female are gorgeous. If Dolly Parton had Victor Mature's hair she could have made it big. There is an artist loft that would be the envy of every Andy Warhol wannabe.

    If you watch this expecting a great Casablanca storyline or Sound of Music oom-pah-pah, you will be disappointed. There is a nice little story beneath the runway model approach in this film.

    My copy on DVD with another movie for $1 was very viewable. The title sequence was cute but not up there with Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World or The Pink Panther. This was an RKO movie but it did not have the nice airplane logo that RKO used to use.

    I liked Victor Mature in One Million, B.C., and Sampson and Delilah and especially in Violent Saturday. See if you can find that one. He was wonderful in the comedy with Peter Sellers called Caccia Alla Volpe or After The Fox.

    Richard Carlson went on to do I Led Three Lives on TV in the early 1950s.

    Vic Mature was offered the part of Sampson's father in the remake of Sampson and Delilah. He supposedly was asked if he would have any problems playing the part of the father since he was so well known as Sampson. Victor replied, "If the money is right, I'll play Sampson's mother."

    Tom Willett
    6pmullinsj-1

    Pretty Curio But Is Not Really a Musical

    This is one of the strangest 'musicals' I've ever seen. I saw that one commenter had played Jimmy Smith in a production in 1974. I myself was one of the twin pianists in the Broadway show for the last 6 months of the run, in which I worked with Ruby Keeler, Helen Gallagher, Bobby Van, and Patsy Kelly, and after Keeler left, for Martha Raye, who was taking Patsy Kelly's maid role over but was given Ruby's big 'I want to Be Happy' number. It didn't work, but this had been a great experience for me.

    I had watched 'Tea for Two' a few years ago, thought it was just fair, nothing special, I was watching just a bunch of old Doris Day things from that period. This was not one of the best, unlike 'Love me or Love Me' or 'Calamity Jane'. I don't remember how much of the score it kept, not nearly all, but here you don't even get a single whole song, except maybe one full verse of 'Tea for Two', sung by Tom and Nanette in different places. That's fairly nice, but 'I want to Be Happy' is never but a snippet, there's a little of the title song that Neagle sings at the very beginning, still only a line or two; and I think later in the movie there is a snippet of 'Take a Little One Step', which was Ruby's other big number in the B'way show, but it is not even sung as a fragment. I really don't understand this, because the sets and costumes didn't look shoddy or cheap at all. Ms. Neagle is extremely pretty and quite charming, I thought. Victor Mature is stunningly handsome at that age, he really is very much the hunk already, and very sexy. Richard Carlson is also very handsome in a different, lighter kind of way. Beautiful young people and wonderful costumes and luxury are what are on display to enjoy. I looked at the cast of the 1930 version and that at least had Bill and Lucille Early from the original production, but this plot had almost no resemblance to the show I did. Nanette did not ballet (Ms. Neagle's dancing is not terribly distinguished) and both Tom and Nanette are much more naive and 'pure ingenue'. I was surprised I enjoyed as much as I did. I just gave up on it early on as having anything much at all to do with the show I enjoyed doing live. I think it had less music than any musical I ever saw: at least 'Louisiana Purchase', although it leaves out a lot of Berlin's songs, has a couple of big numbers, even if most of the songs are left out (and that's quite a good film.)
    6haustin-1

    Nostalgia,perhaps and fair acting

    Perhaps some nostalgia shielded me from the grainy picture and outrageous sound in this picture which came out a year into the European World War II, probably intended as escapist fare for the Allied side of the combattants. It is a funny story, but probably the plot is as old as history. Anna Neagle, a very versatile (still) young actress,who could do Queen Victoria, Nell Gwynn and many other roles,shows herself mistress of fluid dialogue and continuity,vivacious,charming and witty, and knocks our more modern imports like the "propah, Oh so British Sounding" Julie Andrews and Elizabeth Taylor (the poor man's Vivian Leigh) into a cocked hat. There is a nice dance sequence while she dreams while being painted,and her voice is quite pleasant. There are sufficient conflicts and the film is not devoid of a moral issue: to paint for art's sake,or put out meretricious subjects in order to advertise smoking. Helen Broderick,Zasu Pitts,Eve Arden, who rather hams her part,are in nice supporting roles,with Richard Carlson (who has a passable voice) and Victor Mature as the male juvenile leads.
    4jmiertschin

    Nanette? Noooooooo! What happened to the songs?

    My roommate got the No, No, Nanette soundtrack as a dub on a tape and she proceeded to listen to it non-stop. After it finally totally brainwashed me into submission, I found the songs to be irresistible, especially the famous, I want to be happy, but I can't be happy... But of coarse from the soundtrack I had no idea what the film was about. So the other day I saw a copy of it at the video store and I rented what was supposed to be a long lost version of the film. I was thinking that it was going to be amazing, because the soundtrack is so cute. Unfortunately most of the songs that I loved were nowhere to be found in the video I saw. Now I've never seen the 1930 version of the musical but this version was sadly disappointing because there was very little singing and practically no dancing and beside that the sound was really bad through out and you couldn't really understand what people were saying a lot of the time. Really the only highlights of this film were the outrageous 1940's fashion. Nanette wears this crazy hat with two feathers that stick out like rabbit ears and Kansas Kitty has this bizarre feather muff that she keeps on her fore arm and then has herself wrapped in this net scarf. The one dance sequence is a little weird too with Nanette doing this weird ballet stuff with pin-up girl imagery superimposed on top of her. Actually one more bright spot of the film was the artist Guillespe who dreams of being a fine artist but it currently condemned to drawing pin-up girls for money. I like how Guillespe keeps it old school, and disses Nanette when his masterpiece, the piece that was to make his career, is sold by Nanette for a paltry $5250. Doesn't she realize that that piece was his immortality? Silly rabbit/girl with your feather rabbit ears on your hat. When will you learn? Why doesn't he just pencil in a cigarette before the ad men take the Work away?
    dougdoepke

    Too Frantic

    Looks like RKO was showcasing lead actress Neagle. She's in almost every frame, trying hard, all bounce and giggles as aging ingenue Nanette. Trouble is she may be trying too hard without let-up. Then too, the airy farce is itself trying too hard, almost frantic in its machine gun editing and pacing. Too much spark speeds by without time to digest or to maybe even enjoy. The rapid-fire also undercuts a good chance to dig into a stellar cast of supporing players, like Pitts, Arden, and Gilbert. Nonetheless, there are compensations, such as occasional snappy dialogue, women's hat stabbers, and a sexy character named Sonyabich (How'd they get that one by the censors). Anyway, had the pacing slowed without trying to crowd in so much, along with more and better musical numbers, the musical farce might have scored, instead of speeding its way into movieland obscurity.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      This film is a revised version of a 1930 film of the same title which is now lost. It was based on a 1924 stage musical that itself was completely revised from the first version that flopped on the road in 1923. Producer Harry Frazee gutted the original, put in mostly new songs and had a hit in Chicago. The two songs that became hit tunes were brand new - "I Want to Be Happy" and "Tea for Two." The original source of all of this was a farcical Broadway play of 1919, called "My Lady Friends," by Frank Mandel.
    • Blooper
      When Jimmy Smith boards the plane to Reno, he tells the stewardess his destination is the Virgin Islands. She tells him he will need to change planes in Los Angeles. Apparently the writer thought the Virgin Islands are in the Pacific.
    • Citazioni

      [first lines]

      [Happy Jimmy Smith opens a silver dish to reveal a single slice of bacon]

      Mr. 'Happy' Jimmy Smith: Pauline, what's this?

      Pauline: Bacon.

      Mr. 'Happy' Jimmy Smith: Well, I know that but...

      Pauline: We've already had our allowance for the month.

      Mr. 'Happy' Jimmy Smith: You mean...?

      Pauline: Not another slice until Wednesday.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      The credits appear printed on stage curtains. As the title appears, Anna Neagle comes out from behind the curtain, sits to the left of the stage and sings the title song, while different curtains are rolled out, each containing new credits.
    • Connessioni
      Referenced in Arena: The Orson Welles Story: Part 1 (1982)
    • Colonne sonore
      No No Nanette
      Written by Vincent Youmans and Irving Caesar

      Sung during opening titles by Anna Neagle

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 20 dicembre 1940 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Streaming on "ampopfilms" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Animat Oldies" YouTube Channel
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Não, Não, Nanette
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(Studio)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Suffolk Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 36 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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