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Quando o Mundo Dança

Título original: Dance, Fools, Dance
  • 1931
  • Approved
  • 1 h 20 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,3/10
1,4 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Joan Crawford in Quando o Mundo Dança (1931)
CrimeDramaRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAfter the death of her father and loss of the family fortune, Bonnie (Joan Crawford) gets a job as a cub reporter while her brother (William Bakewell) becomes involved in bootlegging.After the death of her father and loss of the family fortune, Bonnie (Joan Crawford) gets a job as a cub reporter while her brother (William Bakewell) becomes involved in bootlegging.After the death of her father and loss of the family fortune, Bonnie (Joan Crawford) gets a job as a cub reporter while her brother (William Bakewell) becomes involved in bootlegging.

  • Direção
    • Harry Beaumont
  • Roteiristas
    • Aurania Rouverol
    • Joan Crawford
  • Artistas
    • Joan Crawford
    • Cliff Edwards
    • Lester Vail
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,3/10
    1,4 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Harry Beaumont
    • Roteiristas
      • Aurania Rouverol
      • Joan Crawford
    • Artistas
      • Joan Crawford
      • Cliff Edwards
      • Lester Vail
    • 41Avaliações de usuários
    • 16Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória no total

    Fotos46

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    Elenco principal26

    Editar
    Joan Crawford
    Joan Crawford
    • Bonnie
    Cliff Edwards
    Cliff Edwards
    • Bert Scranton
    Lester Vail
    Lester Vail
    • Bob
    William Bakewell
    William Bakewell
    • Rodney
    William Holden
    • Stanley Jordan
    Clark Gable
    Clark Gable
    • Jake Luva
    Earle Foxe
    Earle Foxe
    • Wally
    • (as Earl Foxe)
    Purnell Pratt
    Purnell Pratt
    • Parker
    • (as Purnell B. Pratt)
    Hale Hamilton
    Hale Hamilton
    • Selby
    Natalie Moorhead
    Natalie Moorhead
    • Della
    Joan Marsh
    Joan Marsh
    • Sylvia
    Russell Hopton
    Russell Hopton
    • Whitey
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • Luva's Henchman
    • (não creditado)
    Sidney Bracey
    Sidney Bracey
    • Albert
    • (não creditado)
    Drew Demorest
    Drew Demorest
    • Yacht Waiter
    • (não creditado)
    James Donlan
    James Donlan
    • Clinton
    • (não creditado)
    Ann Dvorak
    Ann Dvorak
    • Chorus Girl
    • (não creditado)
    Sherry Hall
    • Reporter
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Harry Beaumont
    • Roteiristas
      • Aurania Rouverol
      • Joan Crawford
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários41

    6,31.3K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    6bkoganbing

    Joan Goes To Work

    Joan Crawford got to display some of her dancing talents which brought her to films in the first place in Dance Fools Dance. She also was paired for the first time with Clark Gable. Although Gable was sixth down on the billing the impression he made assured that he and Crawford would work together again.

    In fact when Dance Fools Dance came out Crawford was already shooting another film, Laughing Sinners with Neil Hamilton and Johnny Mack Brown as her leads. The reviews Gable got made Louis B. Mayer scrap all the footage that had been shot with Brown and Gable was immediately recast in that picture.

    Crawford and William Bakewell play a couple of rich kids whose father William Holden loses everything in the Crash of 29 and dies from the shock of it. And I mean he lost everything as the mansion and its furnishings are auctioned off to pay all the debts the estate owes. Both of them have to go to work, Bakewell not all pleased with that prospect.

    Joan goes to work for a newspaper, writing sob sister stuff and she proves she has a knack for it. Bakewell on the other hand gets a job with your friendly bootlegger and his boss who is Clark Gable.

    At this point the film makes use of the real life incidents of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre and the murder of reporter Jake Lingle in Chicago who covered the gangland beat. Cliff Edwards who plays the reporter does an excellent job, possibly the best acted part next to Gable.

    Playing opposite Crawford as her ever faithful boyfriend from the good old rich days is Broadway actor Lester Vail. I looked Vail up on the Broadway Database and he had considerable stage career. He did not do too many films and truth be told he did not register well as a screen presence. No wonder all the talk was about the few scenes Gable and Crawford had together when she went undercover to investigate the murder of her friend and colleague Edwards.

    Though it goes over the top in the melodrama toward the end Dance Fools Dance was a significant milestone in the careers of two screen legends.
    61930s_Time_Machine

    A safe trip in a Time Machine to somewhere particularly unsafe

    OK, this is far-fetched fiction but it's still frightening to think that this reflected the way things actually were. It's a crazily convoluted story but you can't help but thinking that such choices wouldn't be put into fiction if they weren't even slightly possible. When The Crash came destroying lives, what did people with no training and no work experience do? Organised crime was one easy option: it paid the bills, it kept you from starving, it kept you alive....for a while anyway.

    The other option for employment seemingly was to become a journalist - perhaps not such an easy option but unlike her brother's unwise career plan, that's what Joan Crawford's Bonnie does when they become broke. Incidentally, women journalists and women writers, especially in Hollywood, although the exception were not that uncommon. Indeed the writer of this film, Aurania Rouverol, was a noted female playwright.

    As a work of fiction, this is perhaps Miss Rouverl's greatest achievement. The plot is quite nonsensical but in the magical hands of Irving Thalberg's team at MGM, you're swept along with this stupid story, accepting it all as perfectly normal.

    MGM was the last of the studios to make the switch from silents to sound and as such talking pictures were still a novelty to the studio when this was made. This is very much evident with this. The most sophisticated and classiest silent films were often from MGM and they couldn't abandon that style they'd built up over all those years so easily. Like in the 20s, in this film, faces and expressions are used to tell the story and nobody was better at that than Joan Crawford. The story allows her to really develop her character and her experience one of the leading silent stars ensures first rate acting.

    Clark Gable, in one of his very first roles is only swaggering around for about twenty minutes but he makes quite an impact. Although he is a one-dimensional nasty piece of work, he has an electrifying presence. His on-screen (and subsequent off-screen) romance with Miss Crawford also gives this film an authentic undercurrent of sexual tension. This and the overall high standard of acting (much better than in some other offerings from 1931) again helps to keep this crazy plot seem real. Even so, as a motion picture, it doesn't quite hit the mark but is nevertheless still entertaining.
    7AlsExGal

    Primarily for fans of both precode cinema and Joan Crawford

    This is not a great precode, but it's good enough to keep your interest, particularly if you are fans of Joan Crawford, Clark Gable, or even Cliff Edwards. As others have already mentioned, it is historical for being the initial teaming of Joan Crawford and Clark Gable, although Gable is sixth or seventh billed at this point. Don't expect Gable the gallant cad in this one - here he is pure cad.

    The film is largely an unremarkable morality tale about the follies of the very wealthy spoiling their children even into adulthood to the point where they complain about having to "get up in the middle of the night (9 AM) to eat breakfast.", which are the sentiments of the two Jordan children. When Wall Street crashes, dad dies from the shock and Bonnie Jordan (Joan Crawford) and her brother are left penniless. Bonnie chooses to break into newspaper reporting, but her brother chooses a less honest option which brings him into contact with Gable the gangster. After her close friend, reporter Bert Scranton (Cliff Edwards), is shot to death, Bonnie decides to go undercover as a dancer at Gable's nightclub to try to get to the bottom of the murder. She solves the crime, but at great personal cost.

    The best parts of this film are watching Joan Crawford in a dance number and watching the great chemistry Crawford and Gable have together. You get bigger doses of Crawford and Gable together in "Possessed", which was made later this same year - 1931. Joan Crawford was already a big star at this point. As for Clark Gable, he has to wait until he manhandles Norma Shearer in "A Free Soul" before he catapults to true stardom.
    6csteidler

    Crawford holds up melodrama turned gangster picture

    The opening scenes of Dance, Fools, Dance paint a picture of spoiled rich kids Joan Crawford and her brother William Bakewell. Neither has apparently completed school or ever done anything worthwhile. Their father—who worked his own way up to wealth from the bottom—is worried. Joan smokes before breakfast; her brother buys liquor by the suitcase. The height of adventure and success for Joan is a yacht party where she boldly talks everyone into skinny dipping (well, stripping down to their underwear) out on the ocean.

    The father dies and it turns out he's broke; the picture turns to chapter two, or, How will the spoiled kids survive? –Well, the brother finds work with a bootlegging mob, and Joan gets a job as a cub reporter. (Influential friend of the family helps her out, apparently...no, she's not remotely qualified, but shows a knack for the work right away!) Rather quickly, the brother finds himself over his head in the sordid business of bootlegging...and Joan, eager for a real story instead of the tea parties she's initially assigned to, takes on....you guessed it, the mob.

    There's more to it than that, including Joan's sometime boyfriend (Lester Vail), who half-heartedly offers to marry her when her fortune goes kaput and hangs around when she sets off to make her own success; and Cliff Edwards as the veteran reporter who mentors Joan at the paper but hears too much for his own good at a speakeasy.

    Clark Gable is riveting as boss gangster Jake Luva; pre-mustache, the swagger is already there. His first scene features a cigarette-lighting routine with girlfriend Natalie Moorhead (excellent in a tiny role as the soon-to-be discarded moll): he blows smoke in her face, she blows out his lighter, and they hold a stare for a lingering shot that speaks more about their characters' relationship than any of their dialog even attempts.

    Midway through the story you have a pretty clear idea of where the plot is going to go….but the second half of the picture is still livelier than the first: at least the characters have some purpose in the second half. Crawford is especially good: she is always at the center as the picture revolves through her relationships with the various men in her life—lover, brother, mentor, gangster.

    Joan also gets in one good dance—undercover as a chorus girl, she sees her former rich kid friends in the audience and really puts on a number.

    No classic as far as plot goes, or dialog…but worth seeing for Crawford's performance.

    Research question: How would a 1931 movie audience have been impressed by spoiled rich girl Crawford flashing an electric hair dryer?
    SkippyDevereaux

    Slap him again, Clark!!

    A very good film by MGM back in 1930--this one is non-stop viewing. It was nice to see Clark Gable in a non-hero role and once again, great acting by Gable and Joan Crawford. One scene that stands out for me, is where Clark Gable slaps William Bakewell in the face. Now, I don't know if Bakewell actually got hit in the kisser, but his facial expression sure looked like he did!! This film is not dated at all--it is that good of a film. Very good movie all around.

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    Enredo

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    • Curiosidades
      "Dance, Fools, Dance" is clearly based on two infamous incidents in Chicago crime history: the 1929 St. Valentine's Day Massacre in a garage and the June 9, 1930 murder of Chicago Tribune reporter Jake Lingle, who was shot while heading to a train station. However, unlike the movie's Bert Scranton, Lingle was a shady character who played both sides of the law and had parlayed a $65 a week salary into a $60,000 income. In journalistic terms, Lingle was known as a legman who would telephone in the salient details of the story which would be actually written by a rewrite man. This is what happens when Joan Crawford's Bonnie phones in her story after the shootout.
    • Erros de gravação
      When in the newsroom Scranton tells Bonnie that if they had a chance they would cut the Lord's Prayer to a one-line squib and he quotes, "Now I lay me down to sleep". But the line is not from the Lord's Prayer, it is actually the first line and title of the bedtime prayer, "Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep".
    • Citações

      Bob: You know I'm very much in love with you, don't you?

      Bonnie: Are you?

      Bob: I'm crazy about you, and you know it.

      Bonnie: I didn't know.

      Bob: Well, you know it now. What about it?

      Bonnie: That's it... what?

      Bob: Going to make me stand on ceremony?

      Bonnie: You think I'm so old-fashioned?

      Bob: I hope not.

      Bonnie: You're right. I'm not. I believe in... in trying love out.

      Bob: On approval?

      Bonnie: Yes, on approval.

      [they kiss as the scene fades out]

    • Conexões
      Edited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Piano Sonata No. 14 in C sharp minor, Op. 27 No. 2 'Moonlight'
      (1800-01) (uncredited)

      Written by Ludwig van Beethoven

      Played on piano by Natalie Moorhead

      Reprised on piano by Joan Crawford in a swing version

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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 7 de fevereiro de 1931 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Dance, Fools, Dance
    • Locações de filme
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, Califórnia, EUA
    • Empresa de produção
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 234.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 20 min(80 min)
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.20 : 1

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