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IMDbPro

A Princesa Boêmia

Título original: The Bohemian Girl
  • 1936
  • Approved
  • 1 h 11 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
2,4 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
A Princesa Boêmia (1936)
ComédiaMusical

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA band of Gypsies is camped outside the walls of Count Arnheim's palace. Oliver's wife kidnaps the Count's daughter Arline, then leaves the child and runs off with her lover, Devilshoof. Not... Ler tudoA band of Gypsies is camped outside the walls of Count Arnheim's palace. Oliver's wife kidnaps the Count's daughter Arline, then leaves the child and runs off with her lover, Devilshoof. Not knowing her true identity, Oliver, with "Uncle" Stanley's help, raises the girl as his ow... Ler tudoA band of Gypsies is camped outside the walls of Count Arnheim's palace. Oliver's wife kidnaps the Count's daughter Arline, then leaves the child and runs off with her lover, Devilshoof. Not knowing her true identity, Oliver, with "Uncle" Stanley's help, raises the girl as his own. Years later, Arline, still unaware of her noble birth, is caught trespassing on the Cou... Ler tudo

  • Direção
    • James W. Horne
    • Charley Rogers
    • Hal Roach
  • Roteiristas
    • Michael William Balfe
    • Alfred Bunn
    • Frank Butler
  • Artistas
    • Stan Laurel
    • Oliver Hardy
    • Thelma Todd
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,6/10
    2,4 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • James W. Horne
      • Charley Rogers
      • Hal Roach
    • Roteiristas
      • Michael William Balfe
      • Alfred Bunn
      • Frank Butler
    • Artistas
      • Stan Laurel
      • Oliver Hardy
      • Thelma Todd
    • 33Avaliações de usuários
    • 13Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos23

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    Elenco principal57

    Editar
    Stan Laurel
    Stan Laurel
    • Stan
    Oliver Hardy
    Oliver Hardy
    • Ollie
    Thelma Todd
    Thelma Todd
    • Gypsy Queen's Daughter
    Antonio Moreno
    Antonio Moreno
    • Devilshoof
    Darla Hood
    Darla Hood
    • Arline as a Child
    Julie Bishop
    Julie Bishop
    • Arline as an Adult
    • (as Jacqueline Wells)
    Mae Busch
    Mae Busch
    • Ollie's Wife
    William P. Carleton
    William P. Carleton
    • Count Arnheim
    James Finlayson
    James Finlayson
    • Captain Finn
    Zeffie Tilbury
    Zeffie Tilbury
    • Gypsy Queen
    Mitchell Lewis
    Mitchell Lewis
    • Salinas
    Felix Knight
    Felix Knight
    • Gypsy Singer
    Yogi
    • 'Yogi' - the Mynah Talking Bird
    • (as 'Yogi' The Myna talking bird)
    Sam Appel
    Sam Appel
    • Gypsy
    • (não creditado)
    Harry Bernard
    Harry Bernard
    • Town Crier
    • (não creditado)
    Eddie Borden
    Eddie Borden
    • Nobleman
    • (não creditado)
    Harry Bowen
    Harry Bowen
    • Drunk
    • (não creditado)
    Jerry Breslin
    • Gypsy Vagabond
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • James W. Horne
      • Charley Rogers
      • Hal Roach
    • Roteiristas
      • Michael William Balfe
      • Alfred Bunn
      • Frank Butler
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários33

    6,62.3K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    10Ron Oliver

    A Gypsy Adventure With Mr. Laurel & Mr. Hardy

    Two gentle eccentrics raise THE BOHEMIAN GIRL kidnapped by gypsies, unaware of her noble birth.

    In evaluating this film it is important to understand that it is very different from the result first planned by Hal Roach. The mysterious and scandalous death (murder? suicide? accident?) of the leading lady late in 1935 caused extensive reshooting & reediting by the nervous Studio. Although Thelma Todd is still given third place billing, her participation has been slashed down to virtual insignificance. What a waste. This was the lovely & talented Miss Todd's final film, she was a credit to her

    profession and she deserved better treatment. This probably also accounts for the abrupt cuts & scene transitions which plague the production.

    As a result, Felix Knight's obvious role as romantic lead was also truncated and he is left with but one short appearance, singing a melodic ballad. This is also a shame, as he was a fine young actor and he never received another good chance to become a successful movie star.

    The main attractions, Stan Laurel & Oliver Hardy, never falter. They are hilarious even when sitting and doing nothing. Playing puckish pickpockets, they get to involve themselves in a fair amount of physical activity, which gives the viewer another opportunity to marvel at Stan's inventiveness and Ollie's remarkable grace & dexterity. Stan's latest finger trick and his attempt to siphon a barrel of wine into bottles, along with Ollie divesting a foppish nobleman of every last valuable accouterment, stand out, but only as gems among treasures.

    Two of the great character actors from the Boys' films of the past appear with them again. Formidable Mae Busch, making her final appearance with Stan & Ollie, plays Hardy's spectacularly unfaithful wife and suspicious little James Finalyson comes in at the end as an officious captain of the guard.

    OUR GANG cutie Darla Hood is darling indeed as the purloined infant. She grows up to become pretty Jacqueline Wells (an obvious replacement for Miss Todd). Former matinée idol Antonio Moreno plays Miss Busch's paramour, while elderly English actress Zeffie Tilbury brings life to the small part of the Gypsy Queen.

    Irish prodigy Michael William Balfe (1808-1870) composed the 1843 operetta upon which the film is based. Many of the words of the songs, especially when performed by the Gypsy Chorus, are unintelligible. However, it is good to hear the wonderful old solo ballads "When Other Lips" & "I Dreamt That I Dwelt In Marble Halls" beautifully sung.
    4Libretio

    Third and last of Laurel and Hardy's comic operas

    THE BOHEMIAN GIRL (1936)

    Aspect ratio: 1.37:1

    Sound format: Mono

    (Black and white)

    Two bumbling gypsies (Stan 'n' Ollie) are left holding the baby when Ollie's wife (Mae Busch) steals the infant daughter of a contemptuous nobleman (William P. Carleton).

    The last of three L&H vehicles based on popular comic operas (following FRA DIAVOLO and BABES IN TOYLAND). Derived from a work by Michael William Balfe, THE BOHEMIAN GIRL is theatrical in every sense of the word, with its exaggerated performances (by everyone except Stan and Ollie), cramped sets and predictable plot. Some of the songs are lovely (particularly the ode to Ollie's fatherly love, sung at breakfast by Julie Bishop, here billed as 'Jacqueline Wells'), but most are rendered quaint by antiquity. Ollie is just as punctilious and accident-prone as ever, but Stan steals the picture with effortless grace, getting drunk on home-made wine and saving Bishop from Carleton's misguided nobleman. Favorite gag: After being told that Ollie has become a father, Stan shakes his hand and declares, "I hope you grow up to be as good a mother as your father was!". Mae Busch plays Ollie's duplicitous wife, and L&H regular James Finlayson turns up in a bit part as one of Carleton's guards. Though previewed in 1935, the movie underwent extensive re-editing following the death of co-star Thelma Todd, who appears only briefly in the finished version as the gypsy queen's daughter. Directed by James W. Horne and Charles Rogers.
    7tavm

    The Bohemian Girl is another enjoyable Laurel & Hardy movie if one can tolerate the more dramatic moments and occasional songs put in

    When I watched this again on a Video Treasures VHS tape, I also rewatched the home movies provided and narrated by Stan Laurel's daughter, Lois, as she told of her father and Uncle Babe Hardy's trip to Europe during the early '30s to crowds nearly everywhere as we see some amusing antics they supposedly ad-libbed in front of their fans. We then see color footage of Stan at his home during the '60s admiring his honorary Oscar-which his daughter says he wished he had received with Babe when he was still alive and which he referred to as "Mr. Clean"-and making fun of it by putting glasses in front of it. As for the movie proper, Stan & Ollie are very funny-as always-and Stan especially is hilarious when he accidentally gets drunk trying to bottle some beer! The straight plot involving them as gypsies and their cohorts almost threatens to take over at some points especially when those cohorts start singing but most of it is tolerable, at best. So on that note, The Bohemian Girl is worth a look for L & H fans. P.S. This was Our Gang member Darla Hood's only time she performed with the boys on film. She's mostly held by Oliver Hardy though when she recounted her time with the boys, she had this to say to Leonard Maltin & Richard W. Bann in their book, "The Little Rascals: The Life and Times of Our Gang": "They were so marvelous, Hardy was a bit more serious, and reserved, but Laurel apparently just loved children, and he'd always pick me up, and hold me, play games. I remember one time I wanted to sit and make mud pies, and he sat right down on the ground with me and helped me mold my mud pies!" Thelma Todd had a large role originally but after she tragically died on December 16, 1935-five days after the preview-she was only at the beginning with her dubbed song. As a result, Zeffie Tilbury-who would subsequently appear as an elderly friend of Our Gang in Second Childhood-was added as a gypsy queen, Antonio Moreno would now be paired with Mae Busch-making her characterization a little uneven having to be both romantic to him and still mean to hubby Ollie & his friend Stan, and Felix Knight-Tom-Tom in L & H's Babes in Toyland-sang a song originally meant for Moreno. By that way, that freak ending was funny but it was also a bit abrupt!
    7richardchatten

    Partners in Crime

    In one of Laurel & Hardy's least-seen films Stan not the first time plays the brains of the outfit as he and Hardy cross to the wrong side of the law as a pair of gypsy pickpockets wearing funny hats Bob Hope would have envied in the only film they made with lovely but ill-fated Thelma Todd.
    6The_Movie_Cat

    "Do you believe me, or believe what I see?"

    What a good thing it is that Laurel and Hardy movies are not open to great critical debate. That way, you don't have to worry that The Bohemian Girl isn't one of their better efforts. We don't have to argue that, as with the fitfully amusing Swiss Miss, the operatic elements fail to gel and should have been removed. Yes, as a music-free short this would have been vastly superior, but so what? Laurel and Hardy aren't satirists; they don't indulge in Freudian critiques or social commentary, and all the better for it.

    Their brand of simple, slapstick fun is submerged, but if you can wade through the irrelevant gypsy sequences then it's there, just as funny as ever. Just the simple things, like Ollie smacking himself in the face with a potato, or Stan asking a town crier ("Nine o'clock and all's well") "Say, could you tell us the time?" – then following it up by nicking his bell.

    An unusually portly Stan here gets to do something I've never seen him do before – break the fourth wall with an Ollie-style double take to camera. Look at the scene where Stan steals a wallet, backflips it to Ollie with not a single look back, and Hardy catches it in his hat and curves it back onto his head – all in one fluid motion. This is the first Laurel & Hardy film I'd seen since the apocryphal Bronson Pinchot/Gailard Sartain version, For Love Or Mummy. This only serves to heighten appreciation of how good the real duo's timing was.

    It is weird seeing the two as conmen, but they're still as likeable as ever. Stan even gets to do the "floating finger" routine. Other elements quite racy for 1936 include adultery and child abduction. Yet great visual gags abound – "Give me part of the banana" orders a bossy Hardy before Stan hands him the skin. There's even some surreal stuff, like Stan's female/deep singing voices and his stretchy ear. Okay, both of those are throwbacks to Way Out West, but if they work, why not use ‘em? A classic four-minute scene has Laurel getting inadvertently drunk while trying to fill bottles of wine.

    The somewhat overbearing opera fixations are even punctured by a Stan who eats Ollie's breakfast because he doesn't know how long a song will take to finish. There's even room for James Finlayson to get in on the act.

    Yes, The Bohemian Girl isn't Laurel and Hardy at their best. Yet when even their average films are this funny, then who cares?

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

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    • Curiosidades
      This was Thelma Todd's last screen appearance before her controversial, suspicious death at age 29. She died on December 15, 1935, nearly two months before A Princesa Boêmia (1936) was released. In an attempt to avoid associating the film with the notoriety surrounding the event, the plot was altered and many of her already-filmed scene clips were re-filmed and re-designed, differently. Her only featured scene that remains in the film is her musical number, "Heart of the Gypsy", near the film's beginning; even in this scene her singing voice is dubbed.
    • Erros de gravação
      Stan and Ollie are covered in snow and sleeping in a cart. When Arline calls them into the caravan for breakfast, they go in with no snow on them.
    • Citações

      Stanley: Well, blow me down with an anchovy.

    • Versões alternativas
      When originally released theatrically in the UK, the BBFC made cuts to secure a 'A' rating. All cuts were waived in 1988 when the film was granted a 'U' certificate for home video.
    • Conexões
      Featured in The Crazy World of Laurel and Hardy (1966)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Heart of a Gypsy
      (1936)

      by Nathaniel Shilkret and Robert Shayon

      Sung by The Gypsies (uncredited)

      Also Sung by Thelma Todd (uncredited)

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    Perguntas frequentes13

    • How long is The Bohemian Girl?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 14 de fevereiro de 1936 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Official Site
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • A Comedy Version of The Bohemian Girl
    • Locações de filme
      • Hal Roach Studios - 8822 Washington Blvd., Culver City, Califórnia, EUA(Studio, uncredited)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Hal Roach Studios
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 11 min(71 min)
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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