An American girl is in a small South American village which is celebrating San Marcos Day. The rebels, led by old El Toro and his young Lieutenant, occupy the village. El Toro has an eye for... Read allAn American girl is in a small South American village which is celebrating San Marcos Day. The rebels, led by old El Toro and his young Lieutenant, occupy the village. El Toro has an eye for the ladies. The Lieutenant and the girl sing love songs to each other and as the governme... Read allAn American girl is in a small South American village which is celebrating San Marcos Day. The rebels, led by old El Toro and his young Lieutenant, occupy the village. El Toro has an eye for the ladies. The Lieutenant and the girl sing love songs to each other and as the government troops approach, they part.
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** 1/2 (out of 4)
An American woman (Jane Froman) visits a small South American town where she quickly falls for a charming lieutenant (Georges Metaxa) but their romance is threatened by an evil dictator who wants the girl for himself and will kill the other if he has to. This operetta clocks in at 22-minutes and is fairly entertaining. I guess it should go without saying but a longer running time probably would have helped things because there's so much packed into the running time that you can't help but somewhat feel like nothing get expanded to a point that's needed to really make the love story work. I thought both Froman and Metaxa handled the songs extremely well and it's easy to see why they were both quite successful in their time. Froman has pretty much been forgotten except for those who remember Susan Hayward playing her in WITH A SONG IN MY HEART. This two-reeler features some fairly funny stuff involving the dictator but there's no question the real highlight here are the songs that are performed. None of them are overly memorable but each is good enough to help carry the film.
First, does butterflies mean queer back in the day? Or are they gold-digging society women flying around rich men? This short depends a lot on the audience's musical taste. Maybe your taste is high and mighty and you look down on this performance. Maybe this is not your type of music at all. I can't differentiate and this seems fine to me.
"Kissing Time" is set in some fictional South or Central American country. And, in this place, on San Marcos Day, everyone sings and dances like they are on Broadway. There's also a plot involving revolutionaries and federal troops...but who really cares?
This film is very stagy and dull....there, I cut right to the chase. If you like stagy and dull, then by all means give it a view. Otherwise, you could do much better.
A handsome South American lieutenant has his KISSING TIME with a beautiful American traveler rudely interrupted by his uncouth general, who wants the lady for himself...
Although this short film can boast little beyond its ludicrous lovemaking, the songs are sung nicely, and the characters of the obese general and fey Englishman are slightly humorous. The unusually dense plot, with its ghostly, bell ringing hermit & unhappy ending, makes this musical somewhat atypical for its time.
Operettas were idea subject matter for early talky two-reelers. They were swiftly paced, colorful (even in black & white) and rather cheap to produce, utilizing as they did the sets & costumes of the feature films. Their brief length negated any need for character exposition and the stories were easy to follow, even when sung by heavily accented voices. Best of all, they were full of Sound, and that was still enough of a novelty to keep most audiences from becoming overly critical or expectant of anything smacking of real art.
The girl, the lieutenant, and the would be dictator are played by Jane Froman, Georges Metaxa, and Don Pelayo. Both Froman and Metaxa were better known as nightclub, radio, and Broadway performers, hence the generic title for these short subjects, Broadway Brevities.
Of course Froman was immortalized by her struggle for a show business comeback and for a while, life itself, so eloquently dramatized in With A Song In My Heart. Susan Hayward with Jane Froman's voice has given Froman her image for now and all time in that film. Froman was quite a beautiful woman herself and sang divinely.
Metaxa had some success on Broadway and did some films, but was never any kind of big star on the cinema. He's best known on Broadway for playing the lead in The Cat And The Fiddle, the Jerome Kern-Otto Harbach musical where Ramon Novarro did Metaxa's part opposite Jeanette MacDonald over at MGM.
Both Froman and Metaxa are shown to good advantage and Don Pelayo is funny as the amorous would be dictator. A couple of fine performers preserved in this short subject, Kissing Time.
Did you know
- TriviaVitaphone production reels #1593-1594.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Kiss Me Again (2006)
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- Broadway Brevities (1933-1934 season) #12: Kissing Time
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 23m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1