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IMDbPro

Le joyeux bandit

Original title: The Gay Desperado
  • 1936
  • Approved
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
324
YOUR RATING
Leo Carrillo, Ida Lupino, and Nino Martini in Le joyeux bandit (1936)
Comedy

Chivo, a singer who works in a movie theater providing live entertainment, is invited by music-loving Mexican bandit Braganza to join his band. Braganza also kidnaps people to become more li... Read allChivo, a singer who works in a movie theater providing live entertainment, is invited by music-loving Mexican bandit Braganza to join his band. Braganza also kidnaps people to become more like the American movie gangsters he admires.Chivo, a singer who works in a movie theater providing live entertainment, is invited by music-loving Mexican bandit Braganza to join his band. Braganza also kidnaps people to become more like the American movie gangsters he admires.

  • Director
    • Rouben Mamoulian
  • Writers
    • Wallace Smith
    • Leo Birinsky
  • Stars
    • Nino Martini
    • Ida Lupino
    • Leo Carrillo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    324
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rouben Mamoulian
    • Writers
      • Wallace Smith
      • Leo Birinsky
    • Stars
      • Nino Martini
      • Ida Lupino
      • Leo Carrillo
    • 15User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins total

    Photos9

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    Top cast40

    Edit
    Nino Martini
    Nino Martini
    • Chivo
    Ida Lupino
    Ida Lupino
    • Jane
    Leo Carrillo
    Leo Carrillo
    • Pablo Braganza
    Harold Huber
    Harold Huber
    • Juan Campo
    James Blakeley
    James Blakeley
    • Bill Shay
    Stanley Fields
    Stanley Fields
    • Butch
    Mischa Auer
    Mischa Auer
    • Diego
    Adrian Rosley
    • Radio Station Manager
    Paul Hurst
    Paul Hurst
    • American Detective
    Al Ernest Garcia
    Al Ernest Garcia
    • Police Captain
    Frank Puglia
    Frank Puglia
    • López
    Michael Visaroff
    • Theatre Manager
    Chris-Pin Martin
    Chris-Pin Martin
    • Pancho
    • (as Chris King Martin)
    Harry Semels
    Harry Semels
    • Manuel
    George Du Count
    • Salvador
    Alfonso Pedroza
    • Coloso
    • (as Alphonso Pedroza)
    Len Brixton
    • Nick
    The Trovadores Chinacos
    • Guitar Trio
    • Director
      • Rouben Mamoulian
    • Writers
      • Wallace Smith
      • Leo Birinsky
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.1324
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    Featured reviews

    8bkoganbing

    The Bandito And The Heiress

    The Gay Desperado came out during that short period when every studio had an opera star under contract giving the American movie going public a little culture more or less. The roles these people had were somewhat limited and the vogue passed painlessly enough with people like the star of this film Nino Martini going back to their first loves of the grand opera and the concert stage.

    Jesse Lasky discovered Martini and used him on and off in films of varying quality, sometimes only as a guest artist. The Gay Desperado was his attempt to launch Martini as a full fledged star with a role as a singing radio entertainer captured by Mexican bandits. This also enabled Martini to use his accent without it being too noticeable.

    Like Harry Cohn at Columbia with Grace Moore, Lasky and his producing partner Mary Pickford gave him full support and his biggest support was hiring Rouben Mamoulian as director. Mamoulian who was successful on the stage as well as film was able to tone down the overacting necessary for an opera singer and make it acceptable for film.

    The Gay Desperado also has one gay and witty script involving some Mexican bandits who fall somewhere between the evil Goldhat of The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre and the noble Cisco Kid. Leo Carrillo after listening to American radio reporting and films glamorizing American gangsters thinks its time his group got up to date in their methods.

    One night because Carrillo is a music lover he raids the local radio station and captures Martini who is giving a radio concert. Later on to get up to date Carrillo and his gang go in for kidnapping which was big in the Thirties starting tragically with the Lindbergh baby. Heiress Ida Lupino and the boy she was running away with to Mexico, James Blakely. A few cadenzas out of Martini and Ida forgets all about this rather arrogant young fathead she was running away with.

    An American gangster and his mob, Stanley Fields horn in on the kidnapping and soon after American detective Paul Hurst is hot on everybody's trail. Pretty soon Leo is thinking that the American gangster style isn't all it's cracked up to be.

    Nino Martini's career in film lasted pretty much as long as his fellow opera singers though this film garnered deservedly good critical reviews and public reception. He introduced the song The World Is Mine Tonight which later was revived by Mario Lanza. Probably without that accent he might have tried some of the familiar operettas that were being done at the time and be better known by audiences today.

    The Gay Desperado with its good spirit of satirical fun still holds up well for today's audiences. Pity it's not shown more often.
    8tkrehbiel

    Local color and a correction...

    This is, as others have pointed out, a lovely film in many ways.

    I particularly enjoyed seeing the Tucson, AZ landscape as it was some 80 years ago. This appears to have been filmed in the area in which Columbia Pictures built a whole 1860s town for the movie "Arizona." On a personal note, I can look eastward from my back yard and recognize the mountains and the terrain that has been preserved as a county park.

    The correction I need to make is the use in various reviews of the Spanglish non-word "bandito" (created to rhyme with the product name Frito) in every place where the correct word, readily found in any Spanish dictionary, would be "bandido."
    7Igenlode Wordsmith

    The Girl & the Golden Voice

    If "Love Me Tonight" is "the musical for people who don't like musicals", it has to be said that "The Gay Desperado" is definitely not a musical for people who don't like opera. In fact -- despite apparently being based on a comic operetta -- it is not really a musical at all but a spoof bandit story with interpolated unrelated arias to show off the voice of one character; and what a voice it is.

    Nino Martini, as the young singer Chivo who joins the bandit troop to get a spot on the radio (no, the plot doesn't make a lot more sense later on either...), has a glorious golden tenor whose style hasn't dated a day since the era when it was recorded. The trillings and warblings of some of his musical contemporaries belong to a bygone fashion, but it's very easy to picture Chivo belting out "Nessun Dorma" to a World Cup crowd and topping the charts in the process. Unfortunately, while he has an engaging grin and a decent dramatic range, he is completely incapable of acting and singing at the same time. The result is that the otherwise rapid-paced film grinds to a shuddering halt every time Chivo lays his hand on his breast and starts to declaim, and the viewer's tolerance of the result is likely to depend on his appreciation of operatic performance.

    Aside from this drawback, the film is an enjoyable broad-brush satire on Hollywood conventions and the Mexican bandit stereotype in particular, which achieves the vital goal of all such spoofs in making its characters engaging enough in their own right to hold the viewer's interest when the joke would otherwise have grown stale. The bandit chief and his sidekick have the traditional double-act relationship, there is an enigmatic peon with a carved-teak face, and a spirited heroine (a young Ida Lupino) who performs the generic "you say you hate me but you love me really" routine with a refreshing twist.

    Overall the film is entertaining and pretty funny, and I feel I did get my money's-worth -- but it can't be denied that the musical interludes, while admirable in their own way, introduce severe pacing problems.
    humanoid

    Check Out The Cuffs

    While watching this delightful farce, I was surprised to notice that Leo ("Braganza") Carillo's leather cuffs are each decoratively studded with a large swastika. This is, of course, a ubiquitous ancient sacred symbol which had only positive connotations before the Nazis appropriated it, but by the time this movie was made, it certainly had political implications. Was costume designer Omar Kiam merely employing a local graphic motif, or was he slipping in a pro-fascist symbol in the same way that SubGenius sympathizers placed the face of J.R. "Bob" Dobbs almost unnoticeably in the background of David Letterman's and Pee Wee Herman's original stage sets?
    9pat3

    a hidden gem of the Hollywood Studio system

    This film is one of the hidden gems of the 1930's Hollywood studio system. It is a wonderful operetta buffo, a delightful parody of all those Mexican bandito westerns and American gangster films of the early decade. The Mexican stereotypes are a bit painful but they are deliberately exaggerated for this comedy about a Mexican bandit who wants to learn real outlaw lessons from the American gangsters seen on the movie screen. The in-joke is that when we finally do meet those gangster, led by perennial heavy Stanley Fields, he is surrounded by other racketeers that look and act exactly like Edward G. Robinson and George Raft. And that is only one of the numerous little in-jokes in this film. Director Mamoulian's visual style and camera, his use of set-ups and shadows, of bandits riding against the evening sky, is so remarkable that the New York Film Critics gave him the Best Director Award for 1937. The script is witty and as fast paced as any Howard Hawks, especially the inter-play between Carrillo and Harold Huber in what must be his best Hollywood role. He and Mischa Auer as a mute Spanish Indian are delightfully. A real gem produced by Mary Pickford's United Artist company.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although he's playing a Mexican, Nino Martini was actually born in Italy.
    • Connections
      Featured in Mary Pickford: A Life on Film (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      The World Is Mine Tonight
      Lyrics by Eric Maschwitz (as Holt Marvell)

      Music by George Posford

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 27, 1936 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The Gay Desperado
    • Filming locations
      • Saguaro National Park, Arizona, USA(East, Rincon Mountain District)
    • Production company
      • Pickford-Lasky
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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