Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe government has set up a special agency to stamp out what it considers the number one public menace: the jitterbug. They aren't after the many followers, but the primary perpetrator of th... Ler tudoThe government has set up a special agency to stamp out what it considers the number one public menace: the jitterbug. They aren't after the many followers, but the primary perpetrator of the jitterbug, who they've coined "Public Jitterbug No. 1". Hal Sturges is one of several ag... Ler tudoThe government has set up a special agency to stamp out what it considers the number one public menace: the jitterbug. They aren't after the many followers, but the primary perpetrator of the jitterbug, who they've coined "Public Jitterbug No. 1". Hal Sturges is one of several agents working on the case who goes undercover as a dancer in Broadway haunts to find and ca... Ler tudo
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With the same zeal the FBI went after the Red Menace J. Edgar Hoover and his forces have determined the Jitterbug must be eradicated so our American way of life be preserved. Toward that end they've assigned special agent Hal LeRoy whose talents include dancing to locate and apprehend the woman known as Public Jitterbug Number 1.
Who of course is Betty Hutton. Aside from some musical numbers, yes this is as dopey as it sounds.
** 1/2 (out of 4)
This Warner two-reeler has the government going after the title character so a bunch of G-Men head to a nightclub where they witness a few acts while they try to determine who their bad guy is. The first act is Hal LeRoy who does some tap dancing. Up next is the strange Chaz Chase who eats anything he can get his hands on. There's also Betty Hutton who does a couple dance numbers and sings. Of course, today's viewers are going to mainly interested in this for their chance to see Hutton in her film debut. I can't say that had I seen this short in 1939 that I would have picked her out for stardom but there's no question she has a certain style that the camera captures and her dancing here is quite good. With that said, the main reason to watch this short is for the Chase act because he really does eat everything. He starts off eating his cigarette, all the matches in the book and then he gets to his clothes, flowers and even his napkin. This act is more weird than funny but it's certainly the highlight of the picture. For the most part all of the acts are entertaining enough and they make the film worth sitting through even with the rather silly story.
You probably will never see it, so let me describe it. It starts with a shot of the US capitol and switches to a group of men that are some mix of senators and G-men. They are upset that there is nothing on the radio but swing. A national disaster is declared.
The men decide that rather than capture all the offenders, they need to get the top guy. So everyone is sent out to catch "public jitterbug number 1." The scene shifts. Somehow they have decided that a certain club is the location of interest. Our G-men are now disguised as a country-western band! All except one who poses as a tap dancer.
What follows are three episodes. The first is our tapdancer, Hal Le Roy, who really does a phenomenal dance. Very good, with what must be silk pants ruffling. Then there's an episode that has nothing at all to do with the already incredible story: a guest Chaz Chase eats everything. And I mean everything: a cigarette lit on both ends, a dozen lit matches, flowers, all the food on the table, his own shirt, a harmonica and a police badge. When the badge comes back up, the G-men are revealed.
The third and last scene is Betty Hutton who admits to being public jitterbug number one. She sings, well enough. And she dances after a fashion. But she is wearing a full, floorlength dress (a sort of folk German affair) so if she is doing something special under there, you can't see it.
Finally, the tap dancer (who has fallen in love with Betty) turns against the group and runs away with her, bullets flying.
Its not enjoyable on its face. The print I saw was very bad. Betty has no charm at all. But it is one of the most mind bending story ideas I have even encountered. "Phantom Empire" from a few years earlier is another. I think there must have been drugs involved.
Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
Betty was a superstar for 15 years from circa 1942 to circa 1957(although she continued to entertain for 30 more years). It is great to see her here as Public Jitterbug #1. You can see how talented she is, even at age 18. She steals the picture.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesVitaphone Production Reels #B240-241.
- Citações
[first lines]
Government Agent Chief: Swing, nothing but swing! Gentlemen, it's sweeping over the country. Jitterbug! They're a menace to the public. They must be stamped out.
Hal Sturges: What we've got to do, Chief, is get to the higher ups!
Government Agent Chief: Now you're talking, Sturges. We don't want the small fry. We want Public Jitterbug No. 1!
- Trilhas sonorasPublic Jitterbug No. 1
(uncredited)
Music by Saul Chaplin
Lyrics by Sammy Cahn
Played during the opening credits
Also performed by Betty Hutton toward the end
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Broadway Brevities (1939-1940 season) #8: Public Jitterbug Number One
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 21 min
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1