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Bluff

Original title: Thunder in the City
  • 1937
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
480
YOUR RATING
Edward G. Robinson and Luli Deste in Bluff (1937)
ComedyCrimeDramaRomance

A visiting American engages in a bold business promotion, the likes of which the British have not seen.A visiting American engages in a bold business promotion, the likes of which the British have not seen.A visiting American engages in a bold business promotion, the likes of which the British have not seen.

  • Director
    • Marion Gering
  • Writers
    • Robert E. Sherwood
    • Aben Kandel
    • Ákos Tolnay
  • Stars
    • Edward G. Robinson
    • Nigel Bruce
    • Constance Collier
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    480
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Marion Gering
    • Writers
      • Robert E. Sherwood
      • Aben Kandel
      • Ákos Tolnay
    • Stars
      • Edward G. Robinson
      • Nigel Bruce
      • Constance Collier
    • 19User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos12

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Edward G. Robinson
    Edward G. Robinson
    • Dan Armstrong
    Nigel Bruce
    Nigel Bruce
    • The Duke
    Constance Collier
    Constance Collier
    • The Duchess
    Luli Deste
    Luli Deste
    • Lady Patricia
    Ralph Richardson
    Ralph Richardson
    • Manningdale
    Arthur Wontner
    Arthur Wontner
    • Sir Peter
    Annie Esmond
    Annie Esmond
    • Lady Challoner
    Cyril Raymond
    Cyril Raymond
    • James
    Elizabeth Inglis
    • Dolly
    James Carew
    James Carew
    • Snyderling
    Everley Gregg
    Everley Gregg
    • Millie
    Donald Calthrop
    Donald Calthrop
    • Dr. Plumet
    Nancy Burne
    • Edna
    Billy Bray
    • Bill
    • (as Charles 'Billy' Bray)
    George Carney
    George Carney
    • Harry Hopper
    • (uncredited)
    Terence de Marney
    Terence de Marney
    • Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Roland Drew
    Roland Drew
    • Frank
    • (uncredited)
    Victor Harrington
    Victor Harrington
    • Man Singing at Concert
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Marion Gering
    • Writers
      • Robert E. Sherwood
      • Aben Kandel
      • Ákos Tolnay
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.1480
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    Featured reviews

    6utgard14

    "There's no romance in Daniel Armstrong, except the romance of big business."

    Advertising man Dan Armstrong (Edward G. Robinson) is fired because his ideas are seen as out-of-date and undignified by his bosses, who cite the English as having a respectable approach to business. He decides to go to England to visit relatives. While there he falls for pretty Lady Patricia (Luli Deste), who is considering marrying stuffy jerk Manningdale (Ralph Richardson) just for his money. Dan cooks up a scheme to help his financially struggling family as well as make himself enough money he could provide Patricia with more security than Manningdale.

    Pretty much any film with Eddie G. is worth watching and this is no exception. It's a fish-out-of-water story with the colorful American teaching and learning from the staid Brits. The funniest scene to me was when Robinson gets lost in the family manor. It's all genial enough and the cast is certainly a quality one. Robinson is great. Richardson is always good. Nigel Bruce and Constance Collier are fun. Interesting look at British/American relations and attitudes at the time.
    6loloandpete

    Inoffensive light comedy

    An inoffensive light comedy but it makes the mistake of trying to sell us Edward G Robinson as a comedic, romantic lead. Attention does stray at times. Fortunately, outside of his Holmes' film appearances, Nigel Bruce has one of his larger filml roles. He is billed second and is great fun as the befuddled and loveable Duke. The best sequence in the film features Bruce and Robinson at a fairground.
    3F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    Where have you gone, Mister Robinson?

    Edward G Robinson is remembered for playing snarling gangsters and other tough guys, but in real life he was a very cultured man, a collector of art and antiques. (Robinson acquired a Van Gogh before that artist was well-known.) 'Thunder in the City' is a low-budget film that Robinson made in England, playing a fairly normal person for once. I wanted to like this movie, as it brought back memories for me of the one occasion when I met Robinson (in London, when he was buying antiques in the Portobello Road). Sadly, despite the presence of an excellent cast and a good performance by Robinson, this film is not very entertaining.

    Despite its low budget, 'Thunder in the City' opens with an extremely impressive montage by Ned Mann, and offers several other impressive montages throughout the movie. Those montages are the best things in this film. The single biggest problem is that 'Thunder in the City' (with its overly dramatic title) can't seem to figure out what sort of movie it wants to be. This material has the general pacing and feel of a comedy, but it isn't funny, and it's not quite engaging enough to be a drama. A previous IMDB poster has compared this movie to 'Beat the Devil'. Sorry, but 'Thunder in the City' hasn't got one percent of the wit of that film.

    Robinson takes centre stage as Dan Armstrong, a high-pressure publicity agent in charge of the New York campaign for a motorcar called the Straight 8. (He doesn't seem to be bothered that the car has an illegible logo.) When the ad campaign fizzles, Armstrong's bosses pressure him into resigning because they haven't the bottle to sack him outright. One of Armstrong's bosses tells him that he could learn from the example of the English, who were so efficient in acquiring Suez. (No comment.) This prompts Armstrong to recall his prankster grandfather, an Englishman who fled to America in disgrace after he stole a mummy out of the British Museum and smuggled it into the front bench in the House of Lords. Now, Armstrong conveniently recalls that he still has relatives in England, and even though he's never met them he assumes they'll be delighted if he pops round for a visit. (Frankly, Edward G Robinson doesn't look as if his ancestors came from the sceptred isle.)

    Armstrong's relations are the Duke and Duchess of Glenarvon, lounging about in Challoner Hall, which has been the family home for 20 generations. They've got titles and bloodlines but no money. (This is the most plausible part of the movie.) When they learn that Armstrong is coming to visit, they assume he's wealthy and that he plans to buy Challoner Hall. Young relative Dolly eagerly hopes that she'll be able to land a rich husband. (Dolly is played by Elizabeth Inglis, who would soon land a very rich husband indeed; in real life, she married the president of NBC television and became the mother of Sigourney Weaver.)

    When Armstrong shows up on their doorstep, we get the usual hackneyed 'Our American Cousin' situations, contrasting a brash Yank with some buttoned-up British bluebloods. When the Glenarvons inquire into the fate of Armstrong's grandfather, Robinson has the only funny line in this movie: "It was his ambition to be an inmate in every state in the Union. But he died before he got to South Dakota."

    Armstrong has a 'meet cute' scene with Lady Patricia: nice work by her stunt double here, as Lady Pat falls off her horse. Lady Patricia is supposed to be an English blueblood, but she's played by untalented Austrian actress Luli Deste with an accent full of wienerschnitzel. There's a line of dialogue to explain that Lady Pat has spent a lot of time in Vienna. Luli Deste's scenes are so painful to watch (and listen to) that she ruins the few merits this film possesses. The movie would have made more sense if Elizabeth Inglis and Luli Deste had swapped roles during rehearsal.

    Learning that the Glenarvons' investments are all tied up in Rhodesian mines, Armstrong whips up a publicity campaign for a 'miracle metal' called Magnalite (it might as well be McGuffinite) that these mines allegedly produce. Soon, he has a veritable South Seas Bubble on his hands, as English working-class folk (with bad Cockney accents) queue up to invest their savings in this sure-fire deal. (When you see Sid, tell him not to bother.)

    Speaking of bad accents, the English actors who play Americans in this film (mostly in the early scenes) aren't very believable. Veteran film composer Miklos Rozsa has never impressed me, yet here he surpasses himself by bringing in every possible musical cliche. When Robinson arrives in England, the soundtrack plays 'Land of Hope and Glory'. When he visits a funfair, the soundtrack plays 'The Loveliest Time of the Year' ... the same waltz music that shows up in almost *every* movie featuring a scene at the circus or carnival.

    The ending of the film manages to be very sudden and extremely muddled. There are good things in 'Thunder in the City', but they're few and far between. Nigel Bruce gives a good performance as the Duke of Glenarvon; I wish I could say as much for the annoying Constance Collier as his wife. I've savoured Ralph Richardson's distinctive performances elsewhere, but here he merely takes up space. Fans of Edward G Robinson who want to see this movie should be forewarned that Robinson does nothing here that he didn't do much more skilfully in almost any of his Hollywood films. I'll rate 'Thunder in the City' only 3 out of 10, mostly for those delicious montages - which belong in a better movie - and for that one impressive stunt-doubling when Lady Patricia comes a cropper.
    61930s_Time_Machine

    Edward G Robinson does a Jimmy Stewart!

    If you imagine a whimsical Frank Capra film but without any of the cheesy sentimentality you're imagining this. For once EGR plays a normal, natural and completely believable character but he's far from dull. You can forget sometimes that because he often played over-the-top roles what a good actor he was. He makes this normal, nice guy seem completely real and likeable. It's not EGR being EGR, this could be your best mate.

    Like a typical Capra/Riskin movie, the plot doesn't really make sense but when skilfully made, even the daftest storylines are believable and this is no exception. What makes it work is top quality production. Here we have direction from one of Hollywood's best - yes best directors, Marion Gering (you'll never find one of his films which isn't either excellent or at least very good). He came to England to make this for his friend, the Hungarian director Alexander Esway who had decided to set up his own independent film studio in England.

    For Esway's first production he picked a top director, a top actor and a top writer. The result was a very classy, gentle uplifting picture. Audiences at the time however didn't appreciate EGR's nuanced delivery they didn't want him subtle acting like a normal actor - they wanted explosive EGR. When looked at today that nuanced thoughtful style of acting which he demonstrates in this seems much more akin to the style of acting we see these days rather than what was common in the 1930s.

    It's not an especially memorable film. It's not a classic but it's got that same charm and warm feeling you get from a Capra film. You'll never see another Atlantic Pictures production - 1937 wasn't the best time to start up a new film company but considering that this was a brand-new start up the quality is comparable with what the likes of Paramount and Gaumont-British were doing.
    5bkoganbing

    Madison Avenue Comes To Piccadilly

    In the middle of one of his disputes with the Brothers Warner, Edward G. Robinson went over to the United Kingdom to make this feature about a fast talking promoter who essentially inflates the value of some mining stock to get more money for the owner who is being squeezed by a tough minded businessman in the purchasing negotiations. The owners are Nigel Bruce and Constance Collier and the businessman is Ralph Richardson in one of his early screen roles.

    The role Robinson is playing is one Pat O'Brien probably would have been better suited for, it's the kind of fast talking ballyhoo artist that O'Brien did in his sleep. Bruce and Collier are fine, but Ralph Richardson really gives the best performance with Donald Calthrop as a French chemist who has patented the process to manufacture the 'magnalite' ore from the Bruce/Collier mines, a close second.

    If anyone can tell me what magnalite is I'd like to know. Robinson promotes it in the way that Rock Hudson promoted Vip in Lover Come Back.

    Thunder in the City is a great deal cheaper on the production values than anything Robinson was doing at Warner Brothers and unfortunately it shows. Still it's not a bad film and it certainly shows British business practice sure ain't different than American ones.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This movie received its earliest documented U.S. telecasts July 31, 1944 on New York City's pioneer television station WNBT (Channel 1), in Washington, D.C. Thursday, August 14, 1947 on WTTG (Channel 5), and in Los Angeles Sunday, November 2, 1947 on KTLA (Channel 5). It first aired in Chicago Sunday, September 11, 1949 on WGN (Channel 9), in Detroit Sunday, September 19, 1949 on WWJ (Channel 4), in Atlanta Wednesday, October 5, 1949 on WSB (Channel 8), in Boston Sunday 23 October 1949 on WBZ (Channel 4), and in Cincinnati Sunday, November 20, 1949 on WLW-T (Channel 4).
    • Quotes

      James: Was he the fellow that stole the mummy from the British Museum?

      Sir Peter: Hmm, yes

      Dolly: What did he do with the mummy?

      James: It was found next day wearing a top hat occupying the front bench of the House of Lords

    • Soundtracks
      Pomp and Circumstance March No.1 in D
      (uncredited)

      Music by Edward Elgar (1901)

      Played at the first sight of the Union Jack

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 14, 1937 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Thunder in the City
    • Production company
      • Atlantic Film Productions.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 28m(88 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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