The wealthy Mrs. Virginia Delaware is at the Bergen Orphanage to choose a child to adopt. Dr. Bergen wants Mrs. Delaware to choose the troublesome Charlie McCarthy if only to get rid of him.... Read allThe wealthy Mrs. Virginia Delaware is at the Bergen Orphanage to choose a child to adopt. Dr. Bergen wants Mrs. Delaware to choose the troublesome Charlie McCarthy if only to get rid of him. Charlie on the other hand, doesn't want Mrs. Delaware to adopt him. The more Charlie trie... Read allThe wealthy Mrs. Virginia Delaware is at the Bergen Orphanage to choose a child to adopt. Dr. Bergen wants Mrs. Delaware to choose the troublesome Charlie McCarthy if only to get rid of him. Charlie on the other hand, doesn't want Mrs. Delaware to adopt him. The more Charlie tries to make a bad impression, the more the hard of hearing Mrs. Delaware, who mishears every... Read all
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** (out of 4)
Fair short has Edgar Bergen running an orphanage for small children. When the wealthy Virginia Delaware (Florence Auer) comes to adopt a kid, Bergen tries to pawn off Charlie McCarthy but the wooden guy has different plans. I'll be honest and admit that I've enjoyed very few of the Bergen-McCarthy shorts. I'm just not a ventriloquist type of guy as I've never found them to be funny and in all honesty I see them more creepy than anything and I think that's why films like MAGIC work the subject better. This entry here isn't the worst but there just aren't enough laughs to make it worth viewing. The one funny sequence has Charlie in the tub being abused by the guy giving him a bath after he has fallen into the trash. We get a few nice one-liners here and another one later when Charlie refers to the rich woman as Frankenstein's bride but outside of these scenes there's not too much comedy. The film remains watchable simply out of the strangeness of the two characters.
In this film, Bergen is head of an orphanage and Charlie is one of his charges. A dotty old matron wants to adopt McCarthy but the dummy prefers a lovely young southern belle. In order to discourage the older woman from adopting him, Charlie claims he is horribly sick. His scheme succeeds, but not in the way he desires.
In order to project the illusion of Charlie McCarthy as a real person, DOUBLE TALK not only gives him a voice, but often visually depicts him away from Bergen's lap: wading in a bathtub and sitting on a sofa. But since McCarthy is an inanimate figure, the film has very little slapstick. Most of the time, McCarthy engages in verbal humor with Bergen and other foils. The paucity of action and movement renders the film stagebound.
The short's cinematic shortcomings are compensated, however, by Bergen's effervescent performance as Charlie McCarthy. He presents McCarthy as an utter scamp, constantly insulting Bergen and others and shamelessly flirting with the southern belle. Yet one never resents him because there's a boyish good humor in his misbehaving. Indeed, his irreverence is so endearing, one actually dreads the thought of Charlie behaving himself. If he did, he would be dull. Bergen also acquits himself admirably as McCarthy's straight man, a stern but benevolent father figure. One can overlook Bergen's amateurish ventriloquism because he sincerely believes his dummy is alive, making the audience believe that Charlie McCarthy is alive. No wonder the public accepted McCarthy as a bona fide star.
It seems odd to a modern audience how this act could work. On the radio, how could the audience see the interaction between Bergen and his dummy? In these short subjects, in the tight two-shots, how could the audience miss Bergen's mouth moving while Charlie talked? The answer is that the audience didn't care. For a one-man two-act, Bergen had fine timing.
Among Edgar Bergen's films, this certainly it not one of the funnier ones. But, it is slight and enjoyable--with Charlie behaving in his usual cheeky manner. It's all quite interesting but certainly not a must-see.
Did you know
- TriviaVitaphone production reel #1991.
- Quotes
Charlie McCarthy: My pappy is an old southern planter.
Georgia Maryland: Cotton?
Charlie McCarthy: No, undertaker.
- ConnectionsReferences La Fiancée de Frankenstein (1935)
Details
- Runtime
- 10m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1