The famous Baron Munchausen dumps two dimwits in the African jungle. A rescue team mistakes one of them for the missing Baron, and returns them to the US, where they're greeted as heroes. Wh... Read allThe famous Baron Munchausen dumps two dimwits in the African jungle. A rescue team mistakes one of them for the missing Baron, and returns them to the US, where they're greeted as heroes. While giving a speech at a college, the "Baron" falls for a pretty girl, gets tangled up wit... Read allThe famous Baron Munchausen dumps two dimwits in the African jungle. A rescue team mistakes one of them for the missing Baron, and returns them to the US, where they're greeted as heroes. While giving a speech at a college, the "Baron" falls for a pretty girl, gets tangled up with a trio of nutty janitors and faces being exposed as a phony.
- A Stooge
- (as Jerry Howard)
- College Girl
- (uncredited)
- Explorer with Newspaper
- (uncredited)
- Train Passenger
- (uncredited)
- Small Role
- (uncredited)
- Small Role
- (uncredited)
- Mayor's 'Yes' Man
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Now the radio show with time out for commercials and a guest star consisted of Pearl telling these outrageous tales in this overblown German accent to straight man Ben Bard who is in the film as well. He was the Charlie to whom Pearl answered whenever 'Charlie' would question the Pearl's veracity, "Vas You Dere Charlie?" That line became the catchphrase associated with the show, as well known in its time as Jack Benny's 'well'.
In fact Pearl and Bard do one of their typical dialogs which comes about 20 minutes into the film and goes about 20 minutes. But Louis B. Mayer was smart enough to know that would not fill out a whole feature film, so MGM loaded the film with such people as Jimmy Durante, Ted Healy and The Three Stooges, and Edna May Oliver. They all get to do the shtick they were all known for.
The starts out bearing some resemblance to the Marx Brothers Animal Crackers and then segues into one of those college pictures so popular in the Thirties. It's a girl's college where Edna May Oliver is the dean. She plays a Margaret Dumont type character, but a lot shrewder and Oliver looks like she's enjoying herself.
Jack Pearl's type of humor is most out of date, but I kind of like it and with so much else to enjoy in Meet The Baron you don't have to be a fan of his to like the film.
Maybe Halliwell was confused about the script because so much of the action is at a girl's college. Anyway, he's certainly right about the comics. I've been disappointed by Durante films since childhood, but this comes the closest I've seen to a "real" Jimmy Durante movie. (If only he had a song!)
Healy and the Stooges have large sequences throughout, and succeed as the only comedy team to manage a sufficiently interesting 4th member. Although I'm not a fan of Pearl or Pitts, here they seem fittingly cast, with Pitts at her most natural and likable. But the real treat is Edna May Oliver, not a bad looking woman and perfectly cast as the prissy (but not entirely prudish) dean. She is a marvelous comedienne, her timing and gestures and faces are exquisite, and she doesn't shy from an insult, a shove, or a slap in the rear. She takes it in and dishes it out, and her ensemble work with the roughest comedians of the day is stunning.
Jack Pearl's puns seemed much funnier to me watching alone than they did years ago in a revival theatre with an audience. I guess it helps the enjoyment of dopey humour when you don't have people around you groaning.
The film of the Warnervideo release has some nicks at the beginning, but that clears up after a few minutes, and it becomes a clean, sharp, vintage-looking print the rest of the way through.
Eight stars not to signify proximity to a "great" movie, but because that's how much I enjoyed it, and an excellent print to boot.
In the early 1930's, Jack Pearl was a huge success on radio as Baron ('Vas you dere, Charley?') Munchausen, the champion fibber. MGM decided to groom him for film stardom, playing his famous character. Here, in the first of two films -HOLLYWOOD PARTY (1934) was the second - he is surrounded by first rate talent: the great Jimmy Durante as his sidekick; fluttery Zasu Pitts; the inimitable Edna May Oliver as the college dean; and Ted Healy & the Three Stooges.
The movie, while no classic, is enjoyable. Pearl, Durante and Misses Oliver & Pitts all have good moments. Fans of the Stooges will appreciate their contributions to the lunacy of the plot. Film mavens will want to look fast for Robert Greig & Lionel Belmore as explorers and Mary Gordon as the college washerwoman.
'Clean As A Whistle' has to be the strangest song ever included in an MGM movie - it takes place entirely in the college shower room...
Did you know
- TriviaThe opening credits list one of The Three Stooges as Jerry Howard, this was "Curly", more familiarly known as Curly Howard.
- GoofsWhen the Baron is flirting with the maid, he starts to place his right hand on her back. But on the next immediate cut; his right hand is now hanging down low by his side.
- Quotes
Joe McGoo - the Favorite 'Schnozzle' of the Screen: Humiliatin', that's what it is. Under a bed and no husband in sight!
- Crazy creditsWith The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Girls (on movie's poster).
- ConnectionsFeatured in Thou Shalt Not: Sex, Sin and Censorship in Pre-Code Hollywood (2008)
- SoundtracksHail to the Baron Munchausen
(1933) (uncredited)
Music by Jimmy McHugh
Lyrics by Dorothy Fields
Sung by off-screen voices
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Meet the Baron
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 8 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1