O fazendeiro idealista Peter ama Amy, cuja paixão é o urbano Harry. Peter descobre que Harry é um contrabandista e o entrega aos agentes da proibição, incluindo Jane (Joan Crawford). Amy, fi... Ler tudoO fazendeiro idealista Peter ama Amy, cuja paixão é o urbano Harry. Peter descobre que Harry é um contrabandista e o entrega aos agentes da proibição, incluindo Jane (Joan Crawford). Amy, finalmente, fica impressionada com Peter.O fazendeiro idealista Peter ama Amy, cuja paixão é o urbano Harry. Peter descobre que Harry é um contrabandista e o entrega aos agentes da proibição, incluindo Jane (Joan Crawford). Amy, finalmente, fica impressionada com Peter.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Amy
- (as Gertrude Olmsted)
- Harry Benson
- (as Antonio D'Algy)
- The Old Lady
- (não creditado)
- Fat Girl
- (não creditado)
- Assistant revenue agent at booklovers club
- (não creditado)
- Girl at Booklovers Club
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
The Boob is one of these tales and it suggests that by 1926, the subgenre was familiar enough that it could be kidded and caricatured along the way; the movie is full of broad, humor as well as a special effects dream sequence that seems to have walked straight in out of Winsor McCay's Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend. George K. Arthur is The Boob, Peter Good, whose girl May has fallen for the big city swell who runs the speakeasy (which, speaking of lavish, was apparently a redressed Ben-Hur set!).
After an old-timer teaches him the rudiments of being a rootin-tootin' gunslinger, he sets out after the speakeasy and its owner like Bill Hart in Hell's Hinges, and in a farcical manner reminiscent of The Strong Man, he does bring it down, if not exactly as he planned. If you doubt that The Strong Man was the model, note that Joan Crawford turns up in the decidedly thankless, if at least impressively feminist, role of a big city law enforcement agent whose bestowal of approval on Arthur helps him eventually win May over.
** (out of 4)
William A. Wellman directed this comedy about a farm boy (George K. Arthur) who has his dreams dumped on when the girl he loves (Gertrude Olmstread) falls for a bootlegger. This film is heavily influenced by Keaton, Lloyd and Chaplin but it never reaches those heights because it's just not that funny. The funny joke is that the film takes place in the 1920s and an old cowboy makes the farm boy dress up as if it were the 1820s. There are a few funny moments but for the most part all the jokes fall flat on their face. Arthur makes for a rather poor leading man but Joan Crawford is good in her small role. Olmstread is decent in her role but it's another role where our hero falls for a woman who is a bitch throughout the movie. The one thing that sets this film apart is that Arthur's best friend in the movie is a small black boy and the film never plays down to racial jokes or racial stereotypes, which is certainly rare for this era.
I'm not here to sing high praises for this movie. My best complement goes to the dog. It's not great cinema, but the story is functional. There are fine elements. Peter and Cactus Jim are fine. I wouldn't give two seconds to Amy. She's meaningless. I don't really understand the premise of the old lady. It should be more compelling for the three characters and the dog to go off on an adventure together. Whatever. I like the dog.
This was my first exposure to the comic talents of George K. Arthur whose career sputtered to a halt with the coming of sound. The role he plays here would be the kind that Joe E. Brown would do in the Thirties, Red Skelton might try in the Forties and after his split from Dino, Jerry Lewis might have a go in the Fifties at.
There's rumor of bootlegging being done in the area and guess what, D'Algy's at the bottom of it. I think just about anyone else can figure out where the rest of this film is going.
Former Mack Sennett employees Hank Mann as the soda jerk and Charles Murray as the grizzled old time western sidekick to Arthur are featured. Murray has a very nice turn as a man who just because Prohibition is in the land is not going to let that stand in the way of that old western tradition of the saloon. In fact I've often wondered what happened to the saloon in Prohibition times and The Boob does provide something of an answer.
The film might have been forgotten today, but for the presence of Joan Crawford in a secondary role as a Treasury agent. In fact that's a feminist concept many years ahead of its time. What must Eliot Ness have thought of this film? Crawford could have been given a lot more to do in this film. In her next film she would also be in support of a silent screen comic, Harry Langdon in Tramp Tramp Tramp.
The Boob was pleasantly amusing enough and it was interesting to see Joan Crawford in her silent days, something I hadn't done until now.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesWilliam A. Wellman was fired by MGM after making this film.
- Erros de gravação(at around 50 mins) After Cactus Jim and Ham pull Peter out of the stream, Peter has a few spots of mud on his face. Even after the dog licks his face, there is still a spot of mud on his nose under his right eye. When Peter stands up to go after Benson and Amy, the mud is gone.
- Citações
Peter Good: What's the use of livin'?
Cactus Jim: No use a-tall. Life is jest one durned break after another!
- Versões alternativasIn 2003, Turner Classic Movies presented on television a 61-minute version with a piano score written by Arthur Barrow.
- ConexõesFeatured in The Big Parade of Comedy (1964)
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 4 min(64 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.33 : 1