Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaProfessor Hardwick teaches at Winfield College and detests the new swing music that is the craze. He has written a rhapsody which he takes to New York to be published. Staying with his Aunt ... Ler tudoProfessor Hardwick teaches at Winfield College and detests the new swing music that is the craze. He has written a rhapsody which he takes to New York to be published. Staying with his Aunt Martha, he is surrounded by swing and after a few drinks, he is photographed hanging on th... Ler tudoProfessor Hardwick teaches at Winfield College and detests the new swing music that is the craze. He has written a rhapsody which he takes to New York to be published. Staying with his Aunt Martha, he is surrounded by swing and after a few drinks, he is photographed hanging on the chandelier. He finds that he can only sell his rhapsody to Eddie, and Linda McKay puts l... Ler tudo
- Killer
- (as Maxie Rosenblum)
- Sam' Hudson
- (as Bill Davidson)
- Courtroom Spectator
- (não creditado)
- Professor
- (não creditado)
- Nightclub Patron
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
The story promises great things and delivers on none of them:
Powell writes hit songs with a beautiful lyricist, but we never see them working together. Powell never even sings in this picture, despite 5 new songs by the same team (Johnny Mercer & Harry Warren) who gave us "You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby" which Powell crooned to Olivia de Havilland in the previous year's "Hard to Get".
They don't even let Dick Powell BE Dick Powell: he plays a nerdy guy lacking in social grace and appeal--and two women vie for his attention. Granted, Powell plays a convincing, somewhat lovable "four-eyed" geek, but the plot keeps hinting that, with a few potent "lemonades", he's a dancing dynamo and the life of the party! But everytime he heads out to the dance floor to strut his stuff there's a fade out and we only find out what a blast he had the night before from an item in the newspaper.
What great fun it might have been if the college prof learned to sing, swing and love. But he stays a nerd, writes hit tunes reluctantly and ends up with the girl formulaically without a spark between them. [Sigh...]
This is a very slight movie that never takes itself seriously and has a nice sense of humor. My only complaint is that Ann Sheridan is featured first in the credits but it's more a Dick Powell film. In fact, Gale Page is more prominent in the film but comes third-- and this must be some sort of testament to the sudden star power of Sheridan. If you do watch, you'll also see Ronald Reagan in one of his earliest roles in support.
While visiting, Hardwick visits a music publisher and plays one of the songs he has written, which the publisher buys. Bu Hardwick is horrified when he hears his song as it has been reworked by the publisher into "Hooray for Spinach!" as a popular rather than classical song. This gets Hardwicke caught up in the music publishing industry with people who are shrewder than he and ultimately ends up in court with Hardwick falsely accused of plagiarizing the music of an early 20th century composer.
This was passable entertainment, and not as inane as most production code B comedy films from Warner Brothers in the 1930s. On the plus side, you have veteran comedienne Zasu Pitts as one of Dick Powell's aunts and Ann Sheridan as a conniving chanteuse early in her career. Because it IS early in her career, Gale Page is the love interest for Powell's character in this one, and unfortunately she just doesn't leave much of an impression. Allen Jenkins, usually a sign that a low-brow extravaganza is going to ensue, doesn't do that much damage here but instead does something that makes his character out to be not only an ignoramus, but a real heel to boot. And what's worse the plot has him paying no price for his behavior. I'm being intentionally vague here.
Dick Powell started his film career in 1932 with the WB hit "Blessed Event" where he played radio star Bunny Harmon as a practically mute character other than for his singing. All through his seven years at Warner Brothers, the studio leaned in on Powell's singing ability and put him in light musical properties. This, his last film at Warner Brothers, was no exception and caused him to leave the studio in search of more serious roles that he probably correctly assumed that he would never get at WB.
As for the plot, Professor Donald Hardwick (Dick Powell) of Winfield College, comes to New York City on a mission of getting his symphonic composition published. While there, he stays with his maiden Aunt Martha (Helen Broderick) who manages a speakeasy. Donald then meets Linda McKay (Gale Page) and Ed Clarke (Ronald Reagan), who mistake Donald for a waiter. After becoming acquainted, Linda, a songwriter, takes Donald's classical compositions and changes it into swing music without his knowledge. Upon his return to Winfield, Donald learns of the radio air-date as to when his composition is to be played so he and his college dean (Halliwell Hobbes), along with Professor Trill (Edward McWade) can join in and listen. Donald gets the shock of his life when he finds his composition changed to a jive number retitled "Hooray for Spinach" as sung by vocalist Zelda Manion (Ann Sheridan). The disgrace finds Donald returning to New York to straighten out matters, only to be further tricked into having his compositions changed into top pop tunes that make it to Number One on the Hit Parade, which eventually leads to a courtroom case.
With music and lyrics by Harry Warren and Jerry Mercer, with acknowledgments to classical composers Richard Wagner, Johannes Sebastian Bach, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Franz Lizst, the songs featured include: "Remember Dad" (sung by Jerry Colonna and Allen Jenkins); "Hooray for Spinach" (sung by Ann Sheridan); "I'm Happy About the Whole Thing" (sung by Dick Powell and Gale Page); "In a Moment of Weakness" (sung by Gale Page); "Corn Pickin'" (sung by Ann Sheridan/ jitterbug dancing by patrons); and "I Don't Believe in Signs" (sung by Ann Sheridan). Only "Hooray for Spinach" would be a tune more to the liking of the famous cartoon character of Popeye.
Other than the use of six forgettable songs based on classical compositions, NAUGHTY BUT NICE finds Powell in numerous comedic situations, such as being served an alcoholic beverage instead of his usual lemonade which gets him so drunk that he shouts out, "YA-HOO," only to get photographed by news-hounds and picture being placed on the front page of every newspaper showing Donald swinging from a chandelier; Powell getting a "hot foot" (lighted matches stuck on his shoes) by Joe Dirke (Allen Jenkins), which causes the naive professor to take hold of his foot and jump up and down as he moans, causing the night club patrons to do the same, thus, the creation of a new type of dancing, a jitterbug number called "Corn Pickin'"; Donald getting vamped by Zelda; among others. But what is supposed to be hilarious comes off somewhat forced. This type of comedy is not Powell's style, but sure is the way of studio contract termination, this making NAUGHTY BUT NICE Powell's "swan song."
Then there is the droll Helen Broderick as Powell's more down-to-earth Aunt Martha, along with his other maiden aunts, Penelope Louisa Hardwick (Zasu Pitts), an accurate-on-information know-it-all; Annabella (Vera Lewis) and Henrietta (Elizabeth Dunne), as lovers of classical music. Maxie Rosenbloom, a former boxer, is also featured as Broderick's man-servant who answers doors, cooks cakes and cleans house; Grady Sutton as a college student; and William B. Davidson, billed as Bill Davidson in the closing credits, a familiar face in numerous Warner Brothers features, playing as a crooked song publisher.
NAUGHTY BUT NICE is a good idea gone sour, and at 90 minutes, looks more like an overlong "B" movie. The age of the thirties musicals is over, changing to the swing of things of the more prosperous forties. Warners would produce other musicals, but didn't hit its stride again until YANKEE DOODLE DANDY (1942) starring none-other than James Cagney. By then Powell had moved on to other studios such as Paramount, Universal and MGM before he successfully transformed into a serious actor in "film-noir" dramas beginning with MURDER, MY SWEET (RKO, 1944), and later director.
NAUGHTY BUT NICE can be seen during the late night hours on Turner Classic Movies. (**)
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesO Queridinho das Titias (1939) is a treat for fans of the studio's contract players, featuring memorable bits by Allen Jenkins, Maxie Rosenbloom and the young Ronald Reagan. Mystery fans will get a special charge out of the casting of Helen Broderick and Zasu Pitts as Dick Powell's supportive aunts. Each had previously played Stuart Palmer's crime-solving school teacher Hildegarde Withers. Broderick was the first to succeed Miss Wither's original interpreter, Dame Edna May Oliver, when she starred in O Mistério da Ferradura (1936), while Pitts finished out the series in À Cena o Autor (1937).
- Erros de gravaçãoDuring the ending courtroom scene Pysinski moves his arm in a way that mimics what a conductor would do while Hardwick's aunts are playing. His movement tracks a time signature of ¾, which is not correct for that song.
- Citações
Aunt Henrietta Hardwick: We flew.
Aunt Annabella Hardwick: By airplane.
Aunt Martha Hogan: You three would look more at home on broomsticks.
- ConexõesReferenced in O Homem do Terno Cinzento (1956)
- Trilhas sonorasLiebestraum No. 3 (A Dream of Love)
(uncredited)
Music by Franz Liszt
Played by an unidentified pianist in Aunt Martha's house
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- Naughty But Nice
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- Tempo de duração1 hora 29 minutos
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- 1.37 : 1