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Mississippi

  • 1935
  • Approved
  • 1h 13m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
617
YOUR RATING
Joan Bennett, Bing Crosby, and W.C. Fields in Mississippi (1935)
ComedyMusical

Crosby plays a Philadelpia Quaker engaged to a Southern belle. He becomes a social outcast when he refuses to fight a duel. Fields then hires him to perform on his riverboat, promoting him a... Read allCrosby plays a Philadelpia Quaker engaged to a Southern belle. He becomes a social outcast when he refuses to fight a duel. Fields then hires him to perform on his riverboat, promoting him as "Colonel Steel...the notorious Colonel Steel...the singing killer." The plot then follow... Read allCrosby plays a Philadelpia Quaker engaged to a Southern belle. He becomes a social outcast when he refuses to fight a duel. Fields then hires him to perform on his riverboat, promoting him as "Colonel Steel...the notorious Colonel Steel...the singing killer." The plot then follows a predictable course, but there are plenty of scenes featuring W.C. Fields.

  • Directors
    • A. Edward Sutherland
    • Wesley Ruggles
  • Writers
    • Francis Martin
    • Jack Cunningham
    • Herbert Fields
  • Stars
    • Bing Crosby
    • W.C. Fields
    • Joan Bennett
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    617
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • A. Edward Sutherland
      • Wesley Ruggles
    • Writers
      • Francis Martin
      • Jack Cunningham
      • Herbert Fields
    • Stars
      • Bing Crosby
      • W.C. Fields
      • Joan Bennett
    • 23User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos25

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    Top cast71

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    Bing Crosby
    Bing Crosby
    • Tom Grayson
    W.C. Fields
    W.C. Fields
    • Commodore Jackson
    Joan Bennett
    Joan Bennett
    • Lucy
    Queenie Smith
    Queenie Smith
    • Alabam
    Gail Patrick
    Gail Patrick
    • Elvira
    Claude Gillingwater
    Claude Gillingwater
    • General Rumford
    John Miljan
    John Miljan
    • Major Patterson
    Jan Duggan
    Jan Duggan
    • Thrilled Passenger in Pilot House
    Fred Kohler
    Fred Kohler
    • Captain Blackie
    • (as Fred Kohler Sr.)
    Edward Pawley
    Edward Pawley
    • Joe Patterson
    Paul Hurst
    Paul Hurst
    • Hefty
    Theresa Maxwell Conover
    Theresa Maxwell Conover
    • Miss Markham
    The Cabin Kids
    John Larkin
    John Larkin
    • Rumbo
    Libby Taylor
    Libby Taylor
    • Lavinia
    Stanley Andrews
    Stanley Andrews
    • Gambler with 4 Aces
    • (uncredited)
    King Baggot
    King Baggot
    • Gambler
    • (uncredited)
    Roy Bailey
    • Pianist
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • A. Edward Sutherland
      • Wesley Ruggles
    • Writers
      • Francis Martin
      • Jack Cunningham
      • Herbert Fields
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.5617
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    Featured reviews

    7planktonrules

    How much you enjoy this will certainly depend on whether you wanted a musical or a comedy.

    I love W.C. Fields films. This was THE reason I watched "Mississippi"...to see and hear Fields. However, I've hesitated for some time because I really LOVE Fields but am not exactly a huge fan of musicals....especially comedy musicals. "Mississippi" certainly is a comedy musical with a romantic subplot as well. As a result, often the comedy certainly is secondary...well, perhaps tertiary, as there's also a plot involving a Quaker and his perceived manliness. Some folks like this sort of thing, but like the Laurel & Hardy films "March of the Wooden Soldiers" and "The Devil's Brother", I am a bit cold about this sort of hodgepodge...so my hopes for "Mississippi" were rather low.

    The story is set mostly on a riverboat filled with entertainers (much like in the movie "Showboat"). Fields plays the captain of the ship (though he calls himself 'The Commodore') and has a few funny interludes here and there. But the main plot involves Tom Grayson (Bing Crosby)...who is engaged with Elvira. However, when Grayson is challenged to a duel over nothing of great importance, he refuses. After all, he's a Quaker AND the matter simply didn't seem worth killing a man over anyway. Well, in antebellum Southern society where Elvira lives, a man isn't a man unless he blows another man's brains out over the least little afront and so she breaks the engagement because Grayson is supposedly a coward. This provides an opportunity for Lucy (Joan Bennett), as she secretly loves Grayson...but she's being sent off to a girls finishing school and he's headed for a job on the riverboat. In the meantime, aboard the boat, the Commodore begins telling everyone that Grayson is the notorious Colonel Steele...a singing killer!!!

    While towards the end of the film Crosby doesn't act very Quaker-like, I was surprised that I enjoyed this film and it's various plots. The singing wasn't great, even if the songs were by Rodgers & Hart, but the two subplots were pretty enjoyable. It's well worth seeing...though I would have preferred all Fields and nothing else! By the way, I am pretty sure today that many would be offended by this film. It depicts a highly idealized view of the South and slavery. It also has Fields using a pejorative slur that IMDB won't even allow me to write in this review! A word that was perfectly acceptable back in 1935...but certainly not in 2020. I say watch it...but just be aware of this.
    10Melmoth-9

    It's a wonderful movie on many counts

    Mississippi is truly a wonderful movie, Fields or otherwise. Foremost is the music itself and the wonderful depiction of the old south. Crosby's singing is delightful, and, in fact, many people felt he'd stolen the movie from Fields upon its release. Field's humor is great with many wonderful bits. Blowing cigar smoke, for example into the barrels of unshot guns to show he was the one who fired is truly wonderful. The tone of this movie is so light and airy, and the love for the subject matter is so apparent that it adds an additional dimension to a movie that can stand strongly on its own. The love story might be viewed as sappy by our current sensibilities, but, given the time, it is lovely to view. The Singing Killer indeed!
    10golsen

    I wish I could buy a copy!

    I've seen this about twice, but many years ago. Perhaps a corny, old fashioned melodrama, but you get the combination of a very young Bing Crosby singing sweetly, and a very funny W.C. Fields. In one scene, Fields' character is setting in the Cabin bragging (telling lies,of course) about his exploits as an "Indian Fighter". A "Cigar-Store Indian" is being carried along the deck, and as it passes his window, he does a double-take, and proclaims: "Of course now, the Red Man and I have smoked the pipe of peace". I believe that circa 2001 some people find this racist. I felt that scene actually MADE FUN of his blustering attitude, and gave all people of good nature a laugh on the character.
    10buzzthefuzz

    Mississippi...10 stars

    I got lucky and copied Mississippi from I think AMC, about a hundred years ago. My wife and I LOVE IT!...for Joan Bennet...Bing...Gail Patrick...and of course WC.

    The film and its characters has a sense of purity, of well, virginity about it that is hard to define yet easy on the eyes.

    Every now and again, my wife will imitate WC's classic: "...cutting my way through a wall of human fleeeesh..." and we will sit down to watch it yet again. And love it all over again.

    Mississippi may not be one of Field's best movies, but it ranks as one of our favorites.
    7lugonian

    The Fighting Coward's Code of Honor

    "Mississippi" (Paramount, 1935), directed by A. Edward Sutherland, is a memorable event featuring crooner Bing Crosby and comedian WC Fields on screen for the only time. From the story by Booth Tarkington, it was filmed twice before: a 1924 silent with Cullen Landis and Mary Astor; and as a 1929 talkie titled "River of Romance" starring Buddy Rogers and Mary Brian, both for Paramount, but this third adaptation to the silver screen remains the best known.

    Set in the South in the late 1800s, Bing Crosby plays Tom Grayson, a Northern gentleman engaged to marry Elvira Rumford (Gail Patrick), but loses his honor and her respect when he refuses to duel with Major Patterson (John Miljan), the man who actually wanted Elvira's hand in marriage. Tom leaves the plantation a disgrace, but before he goes, he is approached by Elvira's younger sister, Lucy (Joan Bennett) who tells him that she loves him. However, Tom, feeling this to be only a schoolgirl crush on her part, goes and bids the "little shrimp" farewell. Tom then joins a show boat headed by Commodore Orlando Jackson (WC Fields), who tries to teach him the meaning of defending his honor. Later, during a performance, Tom is threatened by a Captain Blackie (Fred Kohler Sr.) to stop singing, but he continues just the same. Because of this a fight ensues between Tom and Blackie, and Blackie is accidentally shot by his own pistol. This gives Tom confidence to go on singing to his audience and become a stronger person. With the help of Jackson, Tom is given the big build-up as the notorious "Singing Killer," and being the man who has killed more than one man, which isn't true. However, the ever more confident Tom (now sporting a mustache and looking more debonair) decides to the Rumford plantation and proves himself a braver man to General Rumford (Claude Gillingwater Sr.), Lucy and Elvira's Southern father. But which one of the sisters does Tom get to take back with him as his bride?

    Aside from Fields' antics and his imaginative story telling leaving his on screen listeners to find very hard to believe, "Mississippi" is a welcome change for Bing Crosby, especially with his fighting scene with Kohler, which looks very realistic enough to appear as a real fight. (Kohler met the same fate playing the same role in the 1929 remake). I personally find the songs written by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart first rate and beautiful to hear, which include "Row, Mississippi" (sung by Queenie Smith and the Five Cabin Kids); "Soon," "Down By the River" and "So Easy to Remember" (all sung by Crosby). Of all the songs, I'll vote "Easy to Remember" to be one of the best songs ever sung on screen by Crosby, who is really "Easy to Remember and Hard to Forget." Crosby sings that song with grace and charm that one can listen to over and over again. Crosby also gets to sing a Stephen Foster song with the Five Cabin Kids earlier in the story titled "Swanee River" in a sentimental and throaty manner.

    Also in the cast are Jan Duggan (a familiar face in several Fields comedies), and Paul Hurst. Look fast for a young Ann Sheridan as one of the students in an all-girls school sequence with Bennett. Sheridan has a line or two in the story and its very recognizable. Miss Bennett's performance should not go unnoticed in which she starts off as the childish younger sister transformed to a mature woman whom Crosby continues to call "a little shrimp." "Mississppi" is enjoyable SHOW BOAT type musical rarely shown at all these days. For the benefit to those who feel it was never presented on cable television, American Movie Classics did premiere it on April 14, 1992 (along with a couple of other Fields comedies he did for Paramount), and was aired several times thereafter before ending its AMC run in early 1993. One can only hope "Mississippi" will get to see the light on the TV screen again someday. (***)

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The lead role was intended for Lanny Ross, but Bing Crosby was cast because he was the more popular star instead. In fact, the songs were also selected especially for Ross, even though Crosby sings them in the final cut.
    • Goofs
      The bullet hole in Commodore Jackson's hat changes position between shots, first near the top, then further down, then off to the side.
    • Quotes

      Commodore Jackson: Even a dead fish can float downstream.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Fashion Side of Hollywood (1935)
    • Soundtracks
      It's Easy to Remember (And So Hard to Forget)
      (1935)

      Music by Richard Rodgers

      Lyrics by Lorenz Hart

      Played often in the score

      Sung by Bing Crosby

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 22, 1935 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Äventyraren från Mississippi
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 13 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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