AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,5/10
195
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaDown-on-his-luck film director Jimmie Dale takes a job at a fly-by-night acting school.Down-on-his-luck film director Jimmie Dale takes a job at a fly-by-night acting school.Down-on-his-luck film director Jimmie Dale takes a job at a fly-by-night acting school.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Dorothy Bay
- Miss Jessup, Student Actress
- (não creditado)
Brooks Benedict
- Dancing Boy
- (não creditado)
Nina Borget
- French Girl
- (não creditado)
Margaret Brayton
- Young Wife
- (não creditado)
Tex Brodus
- Dancing Boy
- (não creditado)
Tyler Brooke
- Casting Director
- (não creditado)
Donald Brown
- Dancing Boy
- (não creditado)
Betty Bryson
- Showgirl
- (não creditado)
Duke Burgess
- Dancing Boy
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Negligible low budget very early Alice Faye musical which is in terrible shape. The picture is full of scratches, very washed out and over-bright so that it's rather hard on the eyes of the viewer. This is from the period where the studio was still trying to push Alice as a musical Jean Harlow so she looks awful with too much makeup and ridiculously thin and distracting eyebrows. As for the plot, it's the old saw about a girl from the sticks looking for her big break and the down and outer who helps her get it. Still Alice sings well and the view of Hollywood it presents is interesting in a historical aspect. But if you're just looking for an enjoyable Alice Faye musical go for one of her later films where the production values were higher and she was presented in a more flattering way
James Dunn plays a down and out film director. While he's won the Oscar in the past, currently he's unwanted in Hollywood and goes to work for a fly-by-night acting school run by Grant Mitchell. However, when a genuinely talented lady (Alice Faye) enrolls, Dunn is in a bind when his boss wants him to con her out of money. You see, the angle is to pretend to make a movie with her and take her money--but Dunn can't bring himself to do this and plans on REALLY making a movie with Faye. Will his scheme work?
As for the quality of this film, it's pretty obvious that Faye was yet to become an A-list star for Fox Studio. The writing is rather pedestrian, the two idiots provided for comedy relief were (to put it bluntly) just awful and the film very, very uneven. A few of the groan-inducing moments included the Tarzan/Mae West bit as well as anything involving the two idiots. As a result, this film is one mostly of interest to die-hard Alice Faye fans. Not terrible but also not very good.
As for the quality of this film, it's pretty obvious that Faye was yet to become an A-list star for Fox Studio. The writing is rather pedestrian, the two idiots provided for comedy relief were (to put it bluntly) just awful and the film very, very uneven. A few of the groan-inducing moments included the Tarzan/Mae West bit as well as anything involving the two idiots. As a result, this film is one mostly of interest to die-hard Alice Faye fans. Not terrible but also not very good.
An early star-making vehicle for the under-appreciated Alice Faye, this movie spends too much time on the behind-the-scenes rigmarole that goes into the process of turning an aspiring singer into a marketable commodity. Favorite line "Go back to Peoria, learn to cook, and raise a family!" While Faye is given ample opportunity to imitate Jean Harlow, she is given too little to sing; nevertheless, the fabulous production number casting her in a variety of worldwide stereotypes is a hoot. Some of the sexual innuendo is obviously free of the censorship brought on by the Hays Code.
This is one of the earliest Alice Faye musicals I have seen and it's strictly for us, her fans and, perhaps, the connoisseurs of early musicals. While Not among Faye's best musicals, I thought "365 Nights in Hollywood", directed by George Marshall, was above-average musical: likable, pleasing, unpretentious effort that just passes the time. Ms. Faye - very young and looking exactly like Jean Harlow - plays an aspiring, talented movie star that joins a bogus film school, run by Grant Mitchell, and through the help of a has-been director, played by James Dunn, whom she ultimately falls in love, she succeeds and becomes a rising musical star. The songs and production numbers are well mounted and pleasing throughout.
If you like this one, I recommend "George White's 1935 Scandals"(1935), again with Faye and Dunn.
If you like this one, I recommend "George White's 1935 Scandals"(1935), again with Faye and Dunn.
This is pretty much a collection of vaudeville bits stapled together. It's a film within a film, and the teachers at the film academy want to bilk a rich guy (Mr. Young) out of his money. Sound quality is pretty shredded in this oldie black and white from 1934. At the opening, "Alice" (Alice Perkins) walks into the film academy and meets the teachers Jimmy (James Dunn) and Delmar (Grant Mitchell). At one point, Grant Mitchell makes a reference to Shirley Temple.... James Dunn had actually worked with Temple several times. Frank Melton is "Young", and talks about coming from Pineapple Alabama... he actually WAS born there (but sadly croaked at 43 from a heart attack). Keep an eye out for Clarence and Percy at the talent show (Jack Durant and Frank Mitchell ); they had done vaudeville together for years, as well as appearing together in NINE films! Some silliness with them as two goofy ice delivery guys... The plot and the song & dance numbers are pretty hokey, but it's all just an opportunity for us to see the actors and vaudeville guys doing their acts. Directed by George Marshall, who had been around forever, and done about every role there is in the industry. It's all pretty silly, but if you hang in there, you'll get to the end. It's pretty much a "How-Not-To-Make-a-Film" !
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesOnly the title of 'Jimmy Starr''s book of short stories was used.
- ConexõesReferences Aconteceu Naquela Noite (1934)
- Trilhas sonorasGive Him Love
(uncredited)
Music by Richard A. Whiting
Lyrics by Sidney Clare
Sung by Alice Faye (imitating Jean Harlow)
Principais escolhas
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 17 min(77 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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