Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAn incompetent bellhop is recruited to fill in for a deceased comedian.An incompetent bellhop is recruited to fill in for a deceased comedian.An incompetent bellhop is recruited to fill in for a deceased comedian.
- Shoeshine Boy
- (as Scat Man Crothers)
Recensioni in evidenza
Jerry plays the bellhop Stanley, who serves at a hotel. Now in that hotel a group of employees of a newly dead comedian are talking about their future. One of them Morgan Heywood (played by Peter Lorre) gets the idea to find a man that they first of all can control, and secondly teach the trade of entertainment. After Stanley have tried to serve the team champagne (with ice, wet ice!) They find that he well be the perfect new man. Now this starts the most fun part of the film, he tries his luck at singing recording and what else he needs to know. Along the way the secretary of the team Ellen (Ina Balin) and Stanley falls in love. All that takes about an hour, sadly the last 40 minutes doesn't live up to the good start. The solution to, if Stanley will be successful and if he and Ellen will be a pair. Guess yourselves our even better see the film.
The film begins with the unexpected death of a much-loved comedian in a plane crash. The comedian's management team (producer, writer, press agent, etc.) panics, fearing unemployment now that they've lost their "golden goose." To overcome this situation, they decide to find someone completely talentless but naive and easily manipulated to replace the deceased comedian and turn him into a new star. This person is Stanley Belt (Jerry Lewis), the clumsy bellboy at the hotel where they work. As the team tries to reinvent Stanley and open the doors of fame for him, comedic events ensue. However, Stanley's natural lack of talent complicates matters. During this process, Ellen (Ina Balin) from the team develops sympathy for Stanley and genuinely tries to help him.
The film satirically addresses and criticizes the artificial nature of fame in Hollywood, how a star is "manufactured," and the behind-the-scenes workings of show business. Additionally, there are plenty of scenes where Lewis makes nods to Chaplin-esque physical comedy.
Overall, it's a typical/standard Jerry Lewis film and a good entry point into Lewis's cinema for first-time viewers. This is because it contains many of his thematic and stylistic traits and is a production where Lewis boldly puts his persona front and center.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThis is the only Jerry Lewis solo film that mentions Dean Martin by name. Ed Sullivan includes Martin & Lewis in a list of famous acts that made their debuts on his show.
- Citazioni
[Ina Balin, as Ellen, is bawling after seeing Jerry's character Stanley fall over the balcony of his apartment. Jerry Lewis appears from the right, behind her]
Stanley Belt: Aren't you overacting a little bit, Miss Bawling... Balin... Balin? It's a movie, you see? I'm fine. Uh, the people in the theater know I ain't gonna die. Here, it's a movie stage. Here, look at this, see? There's wires and lights and I'm gonna make more movies, so I couldn't die. It's like a "make-believe." It's a dumb city.
Ellen Betz: Mr. Lewis, you are a complete nut.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Genitori cercasi (1994)
- Colonne sonoreI Lost My Heart in a Drive-In Movie
Lyrics by Jack Brooks
Music by David Raksin
Performed by Jerry Lewis
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- The Patsy
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 41 minuti
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1