Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn inept barber maintains his good-humored optimism in his small town shop despite having a hen-pecking harridan for a wife and a total lack of tonsorial skill.An inept barber maintains his good-humored optimism in his small town shop despite having a hen-pecking harridan for a wife and a total lack of tonsorial skill.An inept barber maintains his good-humored optimism in his small town shop despite having a hen-pecking harridan for a wife and a total lack of tonsorial skill.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
John Sinclair
- Mr. Flugg
- (as John St. Clair)
Frank Alexander
- Steam Room Victim - Before
- (não creditado)
Billy Bletcher
- Steam Room Victim - After
- (não creditado)
Joe Bordeaux
- Passerby
- (não creditado)
Harry Bowen
- Cop
- (não creditado)
Joe Calder
- Passerby
- (não creditado)
Julia Griffith
- Mrs. Scroggins - Passerby
- (não creditado)
Fay Holderness
- Little Girl's Mother
- (não creditado)
George Humbert
- Jose
- (não creditado)
William McCall
- Man with Horse
- (não creditado)
Gloria Velarde
- Gloria - Little Girl in Barber's Chair
- (não creditado)
Frank Yaconelli
- Italian Man Selling Bass Fiddle
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
The Barbershop was the fourth and last Mack Sennett short subject that W.C. Fields did for Paramount. In this last one and in The Pharmacist he honed his henpecked character to perfection.
As you gather by the title Fields is a barber and he lives above the shop with his wife Elsie Cavanna and son Harry Watson who is busy annoying dad with a lot of stupid riddles. It may have been in this film and in The Pharmacist that Fields developed his well known appetite for children. Remember he said he liked them if they were properly cooked.
His moment of sunshine every day is shapely manicurist Dagmar Oakland who brightens his working day. But Fields is so under the thumb of his wife he dare not make a move. Still he can and does dream.
My favorite gag is the very obese gentleman who went into the steam room Fields installed and came out like a third world starvation victim. If losing weight were only that simple.
I do also like that two bull fiddles mate and have a nice litter of violins as a result. That's another great sight gag.
In the end Fields does not get credit for an albeit accidental act of heroism. But it's all in a day for Fields whose characters just can't catch a break ever.
As you gather by the title Fields is a barber and he lives above the shop with his wife Elsie Cavanna and son Harry Watson who is busy annoying dad with a lot of stupid riddles. It may have been in this film and in The Pharmacist that Fields developed his well known appetite for children. Remember he said he liked them if they were properly cooked.
His moment of sunshine every day is shapely manicurist Dagmar Oakland who brightens his working day. But Fields is so under the thumb of his wife he dare not make a move. Still he can and does dream.
My favorite gag is the very obese gentleman who went into the steam room Fields installed and came out like a third world starvation victim. If losing weight were only that simple.
I do also like that two bull fiddles mate and have a nice litter of violins as a result. That's another great sight gag.
In the end Fields does not get credit for an albeit accidental act of heroism. But it's all in a day for Fields whose characters just can't catch a break ever.
Personally, I like Fields' features much more than the few short films he made. The Bank Dick, You Can't Cheat an Honest Man, You're Telling Me, The Old-Fashioned Way, It's a Gift, Never Give a Sucker an Even Break, and The Man on the Flying Trapeze are some of the funniest films you're ever likely to see. But most of his shorts are somewhat lame. My favorite is The Golf Specialist, which is nothing more - nor should it be - than Fields' infamous vaudeville routine. The Dentist is famous for its sexual innuendo of the woman wrapping her legs around Fields while he pulls a tooth, but it's not very funny after that. The Barber Shop is the second funniest of these shorts. Fields is very funny in it, and so are the supporting cast members. Here Fields is in henpecked husband mode, taking it from his evil vegetarian wife. His little son likes to tell him the lamest riddles in history. The slight plot is a prelude to The Bank Dick, with a criminal on the run and Fields bragging that he'd throttle him good if he got a hold of him. A lot of good jokes here. See it on the Criterion disc of his short films. 8/10.
Another dose of madness from W. C. Fields, this short sees him playing the part of Cornelius O'Hare, small-town barber with a cutting observation for all who pass his path. Fields comes up with a number of gags that possibly only he would dream up, whether its testing the sharpness of a razor on his tongue, playing a bass fiddle in his own inimitable way, or shaving a hapless customer with all the delicacy of a blind man painting a barn door. This forms a loose trio with The Dentist and The Pharmacist, which Fields also made for Mack Sennett, and all of which present the comedian at the height of his talent although this one is perhaps the weaker of the three.
W.C. plays the title role of the Barber. He gets to flirt with the manicurist in his shop all day, and go upstairs to his unadoring wife at night. His shaving technique is truly frightening, and his steamroom is truly amazing. He even manages to babysit for a neighbor and to capture a criminal in his shop, through no fault of his own, during his very full day. And you haven't lived till you've heard Fields play the bass fiddle!
Fields is good as usual in this film; it's not as hilarious as others of his but is fairly even.
Fields is good as usual in this film; it's not as hilarious as others of his but is fairly even.
W. C. Fields had done a few silent shorts in the "teens" but it really did take sound to capture him at his best. He is not only a physical comedian, capable of broad slapstick, he is one of the best verbal comedians around, especially when allowed to ad-lib, as he does here. The story follows the adventures of barber Cornelius O'Hare through his extremely busy day. It has the look of a vaudeville routine, which no doubt it was based on. Fields' almost constant patter makes all his movies worth rewatching, just to catch his subtle remarks, often made under his breath and very quickly. I have read that, at the beginning of the short, as Fields is sitting out front of his shop, making rude comnents about people as they go by, that this is a tribute to his mother, who acted just like this as Fields was a boy, commenting cuttingly on the neighbors. If you like sardonic humor, Fields is the man for you. Recommended highly along with any of his other shorts as in these shorter films, much more is packed in and nothing is allowed to lag.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThis film is included on "W.C. Fields - Six Short Films", which is part of the Criterion Collection, spine #79.
- Citações
Cornelius O'Hare: I'm the worst barber in town, my wife can tell you that.
- ConexõesEdited into W.C. Fields: 6 Short Films (2000)
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração21 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was O Barbeiro (1933) officially released in Canada in English?
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