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Rio Rita

  • 1929
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
785
YOUR RATING
Bebe Daniels in Rio Rita (1929)
ComedyMusicalWestern

Capt. James Stewart pursues the bandit "The Kinkajou" over the Mexican border and falls in love with Rita. He suspects, that her brother is the bandit.Capt. James Stewart pursues the bandit "The Kinkajou" over the Mexican border and falls in love with Rita. He suspects, that her brother is the bandit.Capt. James Stewart pursues the bandit "The Kinkajou" over the Mexican border and falls in love with Rita. He suspects, that her brother is the bandit.

  • Director
    • Luther Reed
  • Writers
    • Luther Reed
    • Guy Bolton
    • Fred Thompson
  • Stars
    • Bebe Daniels
    • John Boles
    • Bert Wheeler
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    785
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Luther Reed
    • Writers
      • Luther Reed
      • Guy Bolton
      • Fred Thompson
    • Stars
      • Bebe Daniels
      • John Boles
      • Bert Wheeler
    • 24User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Photos22

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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Bebe Daniels
    Bebe Daniels
    • Rita Ferguson
    John Boles
    John Boles
    • Captain Jim Stewart
    Bert Wheeler
    Bert Wheeler
    • Chick Bean
    Robert Woolsey
    Robert Woolsey
    • Ned Lovett
    Dorothy Lee
    Dorothy Lee
    • Dolly Bean
    Don Alvarado
    Don Alvarado
    • Roberto Ferguson
    Georges Renavent
    Georges Renavent
    • General Ravinoff
    Helen Kaiser
    • Mrs. Katie Bean
    Tom Smith
    Tom Smith
    • Texas Ranger
    • (as Thomas C. Smith)
    Richard Alexander
    Richard Alexander
    • Gonzales
    • (uncredited)
    Hank Bell
    Hank Bell
    • Texas Ranger
    • (uncredited)
    Sammy Blum
    Sammy Blum
    • Mexican Cafe Owner
    • (uncredited)
    Fred Burns
    Fred Burns
    • Wilkins
    • (uncredited)
    Lita Chevret
    Lita Chevret
    • Louie's Wife
    • (uncredited)
    Cimini Male Chorus
    • Vocal Ensemble
    • (uncredited)
    Andy Clark
    Andy Clark
    • Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    Ben Corbett
    Ben Corbett
    • Texas Ranger
    • (uncredited)
    Nick De Ruiz
    • Padrone
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Luther Reed
    • Writers
      • Luther Reed
      • Guy Bolton
      • Fred Thompson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    6.0785
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    Featured reviews

    kos-3

    An interesting film for aficionados of film history

    Though Rio Rita has a big reputation among aficionados, I think it's probably due more to its success as a stage vehicle than as a film.

    Nevertheless, for those who are interested in historical films, I feel Rio Rita serves as a good example of the kinds of obstacles that faced early film makers and actors. As the sound and music was recorded live, there are a number of mistakes, slips and awkward moments. But rather than detract, I think it's interesting to see how the actors and staff negotiated these difficulties. Particularly in the reprise of "Sweetheart We Need Each Other" you can see Dorothy Lee struggling to follow the conductor while Bert Wheeler keeps on distracting her, while Helen Kaiser is clearly trying to follow Lee but both Woolsey and Wheeler keep on getting in her way.

    Then there are moments that, because the recording was done live, are just over the top. The most hysterical moment has got to be when, after 5 minutes of singing and tap-dancing in a single take, and then after a series of double summersaults, Bert Wheeler literally jumps on Dorothy Lee's back and rides piggy-back while she resumes singing. Wow!

    And of course, with so few surviving films with two-strip Technicolor, it's always interesting to see how early film makers took advantage of it.
    didi-5

    nothing sweeter than Rita

    Bebe Daniels, with a ridiculous accent and a trilling voice to rival Jeanette MacDonald, is Rita, being romanced by mysterious gringo John Boles. Their operetta duets are fairly pretty and Bebe gets to wear some good costumes.

    In another storyline interwoved with that of Rita are Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey (with little Dorothy Lee) in a comic divorce-based plot. Woolsey is the wise-cracking cigar-chomper with the glasses, Wheeler the little guy with the high voice and a nice line in song 'n dance.

    Rio Rita is a fun early musical with primitive Technicolor bits and one Berkeley-esque overhead shot with the frilly girlies doing their thing round Wheeler. Dorothy Lee's voice reminded me of Helen Kane (the lady who introduced I Wanna Be Loved By You before Marilyn got her hands on it).

    My favourite bit music-wise is the catchy 'Sweetheart, We Need Each Other'; otherwise the invisible girl only seen by the boys after quaffing some seriously strong plonk is a really funny bit.

    And I did like the fact that for 1929 this wasn't as primitive as other early talkies I've seen. Good stuff (and an invaluable record of a Ziegfeld show of course).
    GManfred

    Maximum History, Minimal Entertainment

    "Rio Rita" is a filmed stage play with a couple of outdoor scenes tossed in. Taken just as a movie it would be a near-flop, but as a historical document it is an essential part of Hollywood's rich past of musical motion pictures. It is also a rare look at a production overseen by Broadway showman nonpareil Florenz Ziegfeld, which most of us have never seen but can only read about.

    Presumably, the spectacle's the thing with a Ziegfeld show, because Rio Rita's book is just plain goofy and as entertaining as oatmeal. The story is absurd and wanders about for 103 minutes and is saved only by musical interludes and by the comedy team of Wheeler and Woolsey, who are forced to work with some unfunny material but bring much-needed energy to the show. The music is very good, even though my DVD from Warner Archives collection omits the "Kinkajou" song and dance number. I have it on a CD recording and sounds almost like the show's best number - but I can't tell, since it's been left out.

    Bebe Daniels was excellent but I found John Boles a lumpen and paunchy Texas Ranger, but with a good singing voice. The overall look of the show was somewhat primitive and static, except for the last 20-30 minutes which was shot in Technicolor. I gave the film a rating of 6, which I think is passable (historically speaking) - if you are a serious film fan you should really check it out and make up your own mind. It's what makes horse racing.
    7bkoganbing

    The Ranger's Get Their Man

    When movies began to talk a whole new vista of motion pictures opened up with the musical. Not that musical properties hadn't been done before, most famously Rudolf Friml's Rose Marie was done as a silent film with Joan Crawford in the lead. The Student Prince was also done with Norma Shearer. But singing and dancing was something new and it's no accident that the first talking film, The Jazz Singer was a musical.

    The guy who made the best musicals back in those days was Florenz Ziegfeld. One of his best was the operetta Rio Rita which ran for 494 performances in 1927-1928. Since the setting was the west, to be exact the Texas-Mexican border, we essentially get the screen's first musical western.

    Rio Rita was the newly formed RKO Studios big budget film for 1929 and it starred John Boles and Bebe Daniels and Rio Rita was her talking picture debut. She surprised the world with a really nice soprano voice doing those Harry Tierney-Joseph McCarthy songs. Boles was one film's earliest singers and he does the famous Ranger song with gusto in the best Nelson Eddy manner. The other big song from the score was the title song that is sung as a duet with Boles and Daniels. Bebe's best solo number is an item that Tierney and McCarthy wrote specifically for the screen, You're Always In My Arms.

    Repeating their roles from the stage show are the comedy team of Wheeler and Woolsey who also make their screen debut as well. The team itself was a creation of Florenz Ziegfeld and he used them in one of his Ziegfeld Follies editions. They're involved in a subplot about playboy Wheeler getting a Mexican divorce and getting into the clutches of a shyster attorney in Woolsey.

    I could see that both of them were individual performers because Bert Wheeler gets himself a fine song and dance number in Out On The Loose. He was quite the dancer, something we rarely saw in his comedy films with Robert Woolsey. Still it was as a team that they have come down to us.

    The main plot involved Texas Ranger captain John Boles going across the border to ferret out and apprehend a bandit called El Kinkajou and finding romance with Bebe Daniels. Like the first version of Rose Marie though his main suspect is her brother and Texas Rangers like Canadian Mounties put duty first.

    The film is a photographed stage musical essentially, just like the first two Marx Brothers films, The Cocoanuts and Animal Crackers. But the opulence of a Ziegfeld Show is preserved and that is the main reason to see Rio Rita. The last half hour is in color and we can thank the Deity that was preserved.

    So for film historians and those who want a glimpse at the showmanship of Florenz Ziegfeld, don't miss Rio Rita when broadcast.
    10Ron Oliver

    Wheeler & Woolsey - Together Again For The First Time

    Like a river in the parched desert, so the lovely señorita known as RIO RITA brings joy to all who know her. But with her brother being chased as a bandit, unwelcome attentions from a brutal Russian general & a new lover who refuses to divulge his true identity, pretty Rita has plenty of problems to distract her.

    Florenz Ziegfeld's smash Broadway hit was brought to the screen in this very early movie musical. At times it wheezes quite badly and shows its age. The transitions into the songs look very stagy & artificial. Many of the lyrics, especially sung by the female cast, are completely indecipherable.

    But it should be remembered that movie musicals were still in their cradle and the studios only had stage traditions to draw upon at first. So the few innovations showcased here are welcome. Some of the dance numbers are pleasingly elaborate, even including a primitive overhead shot. Occasional outdoor photography helps open up the screenplay, and the early Technicolor featured in the last half hour is a big bonus.

    Bebe Daniels & John Boles play the romantic leads. She is saddled with a thick accent & ludicrous script. He appears somewhat awkward & ill at ease. Much better film roles would await them both in years to come.

    The real highlight of RIO RITA is the film debut of the wonderful comedy team of Wheeler & Woolsey, who had appeared in the Broadway version. Here, although somewhat gynandroid, they cement what will be their screen personas through 26 films together. Bert Wheeler (1895-1968) plays a young, naive romantic. Robert Woolsey (1888-1938) portrays a shiftless, cigar-puffing conniver. Together, they would make a hilarious comedy team, their partnership only being sundered by Woolsey's untimely death. Today they are all but forgotten.

    It is only fitting that pert little Dorothy Lee (1911-1999), Wheeler's perennial love interest, should make the first of her 14 film appearances with the Boys here. This Kewpie-doll-cute actress would become an integral part of the Boys' cinematic success, as well as a constant delight for viewers.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      While the longer roadshow version of RIO RITA is still considered lost, two musical numbers that do not appear in the surviving 105 minute version showed up on YouTube. "The Kinkajou" and a Technicolor pirate ship dance number are both available online, but have not been restored back into the film.
    • Goofs
      When we see people dancing at the Fremont Cafe at the start of the movie while the Fremont Bank is being robbed next door, gunshots and shouts are heard on the soundtrack. The dancers however do not react at all to the shots until the next scene when they are seen panicking.
    • Quotes

      Ned Lovett: How would you like it if I told you your Mexican divorce is no good.

      Chick Bean: Yesterday you told me it was good.

      Ned Lovett: Yeh, but that was yesterday. Today's Friday. Here's a wire that I just received from your first wife's lawyer in New York. Scan it, my boy, scan it.

      Chick Bean: Please arrest the bigamist. Oh, now, wait, look. Now, you know that isn't right. Now, she calls me a bigamist.

      Ned Lovett: Yes now and that's what you are a bigamist. You married twice didn't you?

      Chick Bean: Yeh.

      Ned Lovett: Well, that proves it. For of all the fools, you are the bigamist.

    • Alternate versions
      The print of the film that is shown occasionally on Turner Classic Movies is only 104 minutes, indicating a reduction of about 35 minutes from the film's original running time.
    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood Singing and Dancing: A Musical History - The 1920s: The Dawn of the Hollywood Musical (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Jumping Bean
      (1927) (uncredited)

      Music by Harry Tierney

      Lyrics by Joseph McCarthy

      Performed by Dorothy Lee and chorus

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 10, 1930 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • Spanish
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Рио Рита
    • Filming locations
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 20m(140 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.20 : 1

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