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IMDbPro

Cavadoras de Ouro

Título original: Gold Diggers of 1933
  • 1933
  • Passed
  • 1 h 37 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,7/10
9,6 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Virginia Dabney in Cavadoras de Ouro (1933)
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Reproduzir trailer2:42
1 vídeo
99+ fotos
Drama do mundo do espetáculoMusical clássicoComédiaDramaMusical

Um compositor rico resgata artistas desempregados da Broadway para uma nova obra.Um compositor rico resgata artistas desempregados da Broadway para uma nova obra.Um compositor rico resgata artistas desempregados da Broadway para uma nova obra.

  • Direção
    • Mervyn LeRoy
  • Roteiristas
    • Erwin Gelsey
    • James Seymour
    • David Boehm
  • Artistas
    • Warren William
    • Joan Blondell
    • Aline MacMahon
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,7/10
    9,6 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Mervyn LeRoy
    • Roteiristas
      • Erwin Gelsey
      • James Seymour
      • David Boehm
    • Artistas
      • Warren William
      • Joan Blondell
      • Aline MacMahon
    • 99Avaliações de usuários
    • 46Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado a 1 Oscar
      • 4 vitórias e 1 indicação no total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:42
    Trailer

    Fotos136

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    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Warren William
    Warren William
    • J. Lawrence Bradford
    Joan Blondell
    Joan Blondell
    • Carol King
    Aline MacMahon
    Aline MacMahon
    • Trixie Lorraine
    Ruby Keeler
    Ruby Keeler
    • Polly Parker
    Dick Powell
    Dick Powell
    • Brad Roberts
    Guy Kibbee
    Guy Kibbee
    • Faneul H. Peabody
    Ned Sparks
    Ned Sparks
    • Barney Hopkins
    Ginger Rogers
    Ginger Rogers
    • Fay Fortune
    Robert Agnew
    Robert Agnew
    • Dance Director
    • (não creditado)
    Loretta Andrews
    Loretta Andrews
    • Gold Digger
    • (não creditado)
    Monica Bannister
    Monica Bannister
    • Gold Digger
    • (não creditado)
    Bonnie Bannon
    Bonnie Bannon
    • Gold Digger
    • (não creditado)
    Joan Barclay
    Joan Barclay
    • Gold Digger
    • (não creditado)
    Anita Barnes
    • Gold Digger
    • (não creditado)
    Billy Barty
    Billy Barty
    • Baby in 'Pettin' in the Park' Number
    • (não creditado)
    Busby Berkeley
    Busby Berkeley
    • Call Boy
    • (não creditado)
    Bonnie Blackwood
    Bonnie Blackwood
    • Chorus girl
    • (não creditado)
    Eric Blore
    Eric Blore
    • Clubman
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Mervyn LeRoy
    • Roteiristas
      • Erwin Gelsey
      • James Seymour
      • David Boehm
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários99

    7,79.6K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    stryker-5

    "A Woman's Got To Have A Man"

    Made in the year when the global economic crash hit rock bottom, and the first signs of recovery began to appear, 'Gold Diggers' is very much a product of the Depression. Bread lines and penury are all around, but there is a jaunty air of optimism, too: "the long-lost dollar has come back to the fold".

    Polly, Trixie and Carol are three vivacious and attractive showgirls who room together and scrape a precarious living by getting hired for each new Broadway musical as it crops up, and riding their luck until it closes - which is often before it even opens. On the fringe of their group hovers Fay, the smart blonde with the waspish tongue (Ginger Rogers).

    The girls are 'gold diggers' in that they waste no opportunity to batten onto rich men. It is hinted during the course of the film that showgirls inhabit a shadowy region on the borders of prostitution, and the harsh economic realities of 1933 force the girls to regard their good looks as a marketable commodity.

    A kind of innocent carnality runs through the film. Our three heroines actually sleep together. Fay thinks nothing of changing clothes with Carol, and she gets her backside slapped several times - by both men AND women. Trixie bathes with the door wide open, while Carol preens herself in the scantiest of negligees. The girls contrive to embarrass a rich snob by having him wake up undressed in Carol's bed. The script is loaded with playful smuttiness - taking 'Back Bay codfish' for a ride, making bedroom eyes and so forth.

    It is in the show numbers, however, that the real naughtiness is on display. Busby Berkeley had had a phenomenal impact earlier in the year with his staged routines for "42nd Street", and a similar (but more risque) format is used here. Girls strip naked in silhouette, Ginger sings and dances all but nude for "We're In The Money", and metal chastity bodices are breached using can openers.

    Ruby Murray and Dick Powell once again team up as the ingenue lovers, this time playing Brad and Polly - "a knockout for the mush interest". Murray is all coy charm and Powell's tenor voice is magnificent. Ginger is, as always, a beautiful and intelligent performer. Watch her pull off the gibberish verses in 'Money', and breezing through the comic dialogue in the apartment scene. Joan Blondell as Carol is simply adorable. Her sad face during the trick played on Lawrence is enough to tell us that she is falling in love. Her performance as The Spirit Of The Depression in "My Forgotten Man" is one of the great images in cinema history.

    Warren and Dubin wrote the songs - and what songs! There are amusing, playful numbers like "Pettin' In The Park", with Berkeley choreography to match, and "We're In The Money" is deservedly famous. "In The Shadows" is a lovely ballad, with a set of geodesic walkways and electrically-illuminated violins. The spine-tingling climax is the anthemic "My Forgotten Man".

    "Pettin' In The Park" was originally intended to be the closing number (hence Polly in her park outfit during the final reel), but the running-order was changed. A reprise of "Pettin'" as aural wallpaper in the restaurant scene is an understated gem, with a lovely arrangement featuring muted cornets. In a nice little in-joke, the producer likes Brad's songs so much, he decides to fire Warren and Dubin. By the way - who is the girl who sits silently in the armchair throughout that long scene?

    The conception for "My Forgotten Man" was "men marching, marching, marching!" A sweeping epic is told in song and action as we see breadlines, tenements, Great War doughboys and much, much more - all in one song! Joan Blondell deters the heartless cop by pulling back the bum's lapel in a vignette of great emotional power. The musical styles range through torch song, jazz, blues and more. Listen out for the trumpet's counter melody as Joan speaks the verses, the negress on the window sill with the divine alto voice, the clarinet and sax obbligato after each sung line, and the gospel-style descant. "Gee, don't it get ya?"
    8heatmise

    Forgotten Musical Gem

    Mervyn LeRoy directs this irresistible and touching depression-era musical. Busby Berkeley's choreography is as breath-taking as ever, as are the bevy of beautiful women in the elaborate productions. Many great musical numbers highlight this film including "We're in the Money" in which a then unknown, Ginger Rogers sings in Pig Latin. A host of other oddities can be found as always when Mr. Berkeley is involved. Ruby Keeler and Dick Powell are sensational as dancing and singing lovebirds and all works out well in the end. The show does close on a noticeably strange note with the very powerful protest number regarding the depression called "Forgotten Man" masterfully delivered by bombshell, Joan Blondell. A truly original and memorable musical.
    9deuchler

    Great Pre-Code Stuff

    This is the most perfect example of "history on the silver screen" that I can think of. When Ginger Rogers says, "It's the Depression, dearie" at the beginning to explain the chorus girls' bad luck, it's the key to the whole film. While the "Shadow Waltz" number was being filmed during an actual 1933 earthquake in L.A. a number of the girls toppled off the Art Deco "overpass" where they were swaying with their filmy hoop skirts and their neon violins short-circuited. The electrical hook-ups were also rather dangerous, especially if the neon bows came in contact with the girls' metallic wigs in that number. The culminating production number, "Remember My Forgotten Man," is the most significant historically and illustrates Warner Bros.' "New Deal" sensibilities. Warner Bros. was the only studio that "bought" the whole Roosevelt approach to economic recovery. The year before, under Hoover, WWI vets were not only neglected in terms of benefits but were run out of their shanty town near the Capitol building. Starving guys were camping on the edges of most communities who'd served in the Great War fifteen years before. Of course, why or how this number fits into such a '30s girlie-type musical revue is anyone's guess. Berkeley never looked for reality, just eye-popping surrealistic effects.

    About ten years ago I found myself sitting next to Etta Moten Barnett at a Chicago NAACP banquet. I was flabbergasted. She was in her 90s yet still looked lovely. She's the singer who sang "Forgotten Man" in the window. She also sang "The Carioca" in Astaire and Rogers' first pairing, "Flying Down to Rio." She was quite gracious, though she did not have wonderful things to say about Hollywood of that era. The African Americans in both pictures were fed in a tent away from the general commissary area.

    Ruby Keeler has a certain odd-ball appeal, like a homely puppy. She can't sing, she watches her leaden feet while she dances, and almost all her lines are read badly. Yes, she was married to Al Jolson, but that may have HURT her career more than anything. He was not exactly always likable. He was much older than Ruby and so full of himself.

    This film is also a classic example of the PRE-CODE stuff that was slipping by---the leering "midget baby" (Billy Barty), the naked girls in silhouette changing into their "armor," the non-stop flashing of underwear or lack of underwear, Ginger Rogers having her large coin torn off by the sheriff's office mug so she's essentially standing there in panties, and so forth.

    A good comparison of before and after the code would be to examine this picture and "Gold Diggers of 1935." The latter is so much more chaste, discreet, and less fascinating except for the numbers. There's not the lurid, horny aura of the Pre-Code pictures. And it's not quite as much naughty fun, either.
    10jotix100

    Marvyn Leroy and Busby Berkeley, what a combination!

    "Golddiggers of 1933" is a fun movie to watch because all the right elements that went into the making of this motion picture. Mervyn Leroy was truly inspired, and his direction clearly shows he was in total command. The contribution made by the incomparable Busby Berkeley is one of the best things in the film. His choreography for the big production numbers is one of the most impressive thing he did for the movies.

    The film is a sweet story about young hopefuls in New York trying to make it in the musical theater. Thus, we find the impoverished room mates, Carol, Trixie and Polly, who are so poor they have to steal their neighbor's milk! These young women are at the end of their rope when Barney, the Broadway impresario comes by to tell them about the new show he is working on. The only trouble, he has no money for it.

    How naive and wonderful those movies that came during the great depression were! Everything was possible, in spite of what was happening in the country at the time. In fact, this film, as well as others of that era, served as an excuse for people that were facing a hard time making ends meet for escaping it all when watching a movie like this one.

    The cast is excellent. Warren William, Joan Blondell, Aline McMahon, Dick Powell, Ruby Keeler, Ned Sparks, Ginger Rogers, and Guy Kibbee giving performances that endeared them to the American public of the time.

    The production number of "Shadow Waltz" has to be one of the best ones in this musical genre ever produced. The number is an amazing one and a tribute to the man who staged it, Busby Berkley. It also help the chorus girls were dressed by Orry-Kelly and the music was by Harry Warren and Al Dubin.

    "Golddiggers of 1933" is one of the best movies to come out of the Hollywood of those years.
    7blanche-2

    Interesting Depression musical starring some of the usual suspects

    With the success of "42nd Street," Warner Brothers wasted no time adding Busby Berkeley musical numbers to "Gold Diggers of 1933."

    Starring Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler, this musical also has some of the same Depression darkness that permeated "42nd Street." "It's the Depression, dearie," Ginger Rogers says as the show she and her fellow chorines are laboring in closes in rehearsal due to lack of funding.

    However, Brad (Powell), a composer in a nearby apartment who's sweet on Polly (Keeler), offers to give Ned Sparks the money he needs to produce his new show. His only condition is that Polly be featured.

    Everyone wonders where he got the money, and a news item plus the fact that he refuses to appear in the show make the girls suspicious that he's a bank robber. In fact, he's the scion of a wealthy man (Warren William), who soon appears on the scene with his attorney (Guy Kibbee) when Brad steps in for the lumbago-ridden juvenile lead.

    Polly's roommates Trixie and Carol (Joan Blondell and Aline MacMahon) go to work on the two immediately.

    Though the film has some fantastic numbers - "We're in the Money," "The Shadow Waltz," "Pettin' in the Park," and great Busby Berkeley choreography, the middle section has no music and drags on as the gals meet the men, get them to pay for expensive hats, etc. This is probably because the film was completed when the musical numbers were added.

    But the final number is worth the whole film. "Remember Your Forgotten Man" is a tribute to the World War I soldiers now out of work in the Depression, and not only are the production effects and choreography fantastic, but the singing as well, particularly the solo work by Etta Morton. Blondell, who from the sound of it in Dames was completely tone deaf, is beautifully dubbed here.

    Ginger Rogers shines in a supporting role especially with her pig Latin lyrics to "We're in the Money" which were added after she was heard fooling around in a rehearsal. Powell is in gorgeous voice in all the numbers, but "I've Got to Sing a Torch Song" is a high point.

    It's easy to watch the dancing, the beautiful women in their costumes, and listen to the singing and forget what in fact was going on in the '30s - after all, that's why these films were made.

    But the "Forgotten Man" number serves as a reminder then and today that for the people sitting in the theaters, their troubles were right outside the door.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      During rehearsals of "We're in the Money", Ginger Rogers began goofing off and singing in pig Latin. Studio executive Darryl F. Zanuck overheard her, and suggested she do it for real in the movie.
    • Erros de gravação
      When Brad plays piano for Mr. Hopkins, his fingers don't match the sound of the piano.
    • Citações

      Trixie Lorraine: "Fanny" is Faneul H. Peabody, just the kind of man I've been looking for, lots of money and no resistance.

    • Conexões
      Edited into Busby Berkeley and the Gold Diggers (1969)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      The Gold Diggers' Song (We're in the Money)
      (uncredited)

      Music by Harry Warren

      Lyrics by Al Dubin

      Played during the opening credits and often in the score

      Performed by Ginger Rogers (in English and Pig-Latin) and chorus

      Played also as dance music by a band

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    Perguntas frequentes17

    • How long is Gold Diggers of 1933?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 27 de maio de 1933 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Cavadoras de Ouro de 1933
    • Locações de filme
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, Califórnia, EUA(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Warner Bros.
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 433.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 105
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 37 min(97 min)
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.33 : 1

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