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Plumes de cheval

Original title: Horse Feathers
  • 1932
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 8m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Groucho Marx, Chico Marx, Harpo Marx, Thelma Todd, and The Marx Brothers in Plumes de cheval (1932)
Quincy Adams Wagstaff, the new president of Huxley University, accidentally hires bumblers Baravelli and Pinky to help his school win the big football game against the rival Darwin University.
Play trailer1:14
1 Video
31 Photos
Classic MusicalFarceFootballSatireSlapstickComedyFamilyMusicalRomanceSport

Quincy Adams Wagstaff, Huxley University's new president, accidentally hires bumblers Baravelli and Pinky to help his school win the big football game against their rival, Darwin University.Quincy Adams Wagstaff, Huxley University's new president, accidentally hires bumblers Baravelli and Pinky to help his school win the big football game against their rival, Darwin University.Quincy Adams Wagstaff, Huxley University's new president, accidentally hires bumblers Baravelli and Pinky to help his school win the big football game against their rival, Darwin University.

  • Director
    • Norman Z. McLeod
  • Writers
    • Bert Kalmar
    • Harry Ruby
    • S.J. Perelman
  • Stars
    • Groucho Marx
    • Chico Marx
    • Harpo Marx
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Norman Z. McLeod
    • Writers
      • Bert Kalmar
      • Harry Ruby
      • S.J. Perelman
    • Stars
      • Groucho Marx
      • Chico Marx
      • Harpo Marx
    • 117User reviews
    • 60Critic reviews
    • 83Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:14
    Trailer

    Photos31

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    Top cast25

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    Groucho Marx
    Groucho Marx
    • Professor Quincy Adams Wagstaff
    • (as The Four Marx Brothers)
    Chico Marx
    Chico Marx
    • Baravelli
    • (as The Four Marx Brothers)
    Harpo Marx
    Harpo Marx
    • Pinky
    • (as The Four Marx Brothers)
    The Marx Brothers
    The Marx Brothers
      Zeppo Marx
      Zeppo Marx
      • Frank Wagstaff
      • (as The Four Marx Brothers)
      Thelma Todd
      Thelma Todd
      • Connie Bailey
      David Landau
      David Landau
      • Jennings
      Bobby Barber
      Bobby Barber
      • Speakeasy Patron
      • (uncredited)
      Reginald Barlow
      Reginald Barlow
      • Retiring College President
      • (uncredited)
      Vince Barnett
      Vince Barnett
      • Speakeasy Patron
      • (uncredited)
      Sheila Bromley
      Sheila Bromley
      • Wagstaff's Receptionist
      • (uncredited)
      E.H. Calvert
      E.H. Calvert
      • Professor in Wagstaff's Study
      • (uncredited)
      Edgar Dearing
      Edgar Dearing
      • Speakeasy Bartender
      • (uncredited)
      Robert Greig
      Robert Greig
      • Biology Professor Giving Lecture
      • (uncredited)
      Theresa Harris
      Theresa Harris
      • Laura - Connie's Maid
      • (uncredited)
      Edward LeSaint
      Edward LeSaint
      • Professor in Wagstaff's Study
      • (uncredited)
      Florine McKinney
      Florine McKinney
      • Peggy Carrington
      • (uncredited)
      Nat Pendleton
      Nat Pendleton
      • MacHardie - Darwin Player
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Norman Z. McLeod
      • Writers
        • Bert Kalmar
        • Harry Ruby
        • S.J. Perelman
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews117

      7.513.8K
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      Featured reviews

      Snow Leopard

      Lots of Good Material

      There's a lot of good material in this Marx Brothers feature, with just enough plot to hold it together and to set up a very entertaining final sequence. As usual, there are a number of memorable scenes to choose from when picking your favorite parts of the movie.

      This time the brothers are let loose on a college campus that is getting ready for a big football game. Groucho and Zeppo are the new college president and his son, while Harpo and Chico arrive from a nearby neighborhood in time to add their own kind of confusion. The campus setting allows them to satirize many aspects of college life, and there are some good off-campus scenes as well, most memorably the 'swordfish' scene in the speakeasy. It's capped off with a hilarious football game that is one of their best sequences.

      This ranks highly on almost anyone's list of favorite Marx Brothers features - if you're a fan, make sure to see it.
      9planktonrules

      my favorite Marx Brothers movie

      While this film ISN'T as famous as DUCK SOUP or A NIGHT AT THE OPERA, it's my personal favorite. I think it's probably because unlike these other two pictures, there isn't all the singing and dancing in HORSE FEATHERS plus it has at least as much energy as any other film they made. Plus, unlike THE COCOANUTS and ANIMAL CRACKERS, there is a real honest-to-goodness plot!!! So, it's not just one gag after another after another.

      Groucho is wonderful as the incompetent and perpetually horny Professor Wagstaff at Huxley College. Plus, as idiots mistaken for professional ringers, Chico and Harpo are at their best. Oh, and I guess Zeppo is in the movie, but as in all their early Zeppo films, he is pretty much a non-entity. You can really see why he never caught on as one of the Marx Brothers (nor did his other brother, Karl, who was by far the LEAST funny Marx Brother).

      About the only negative about the film is the climactic football game. Even for a Marx Brothers film, this does get a little too stupid! But, the rest of the movie is so good, you really don't mind.

      UPDATE: I just saw this film on the big screen and upon viewing it again, I am reducing the score to 8. Yes, it is good for the Marx Brothers but the plot, such as it is, is barely a plot at all, the film's ending is bizarre and senseless and a few of the jokes a bit less funny after re-watching. Still good and still worth seeing if you just turn off your brain and enjoy all the nonsense.
      tedg

      Humor, Youth, and Everyone SAYING They Love You

      I was challenged by a reader, because I wrote that a movie was funny. His belief was that the movie wasn't funny, that it couldn't be because the comedians were too old, and I wouldn't know in any case because I was also too old. So I turned to the good old Marx Brothers.

      Fortunately, some other unhappy soul had deleted my comment for this movie, so I can write a replacement.

      I think this is funny. It shouldn't really matter to me whether anyone else does, except insofar as they support the market forces that guarantee I can access it. But as it happens, lots of other people also think it funny and I wonder why.

      "Horse Feathers," if you do not know, was the frontier term for split boards about two feet long that were nailed on barns in an overlapping fashion like shingles. These were primitive, but had the advantage of keeping your major investment, your horse, warm. They are themselves ad hoc, somewhat random with some order, and an effective container. Such a barn was wholly man-made, but clearly the mind finds it handy to make the joke that if the barn looked like a chicken, then its name should follow.

      Lexicographers know that language often naturally grows from these jokes. The older the term gets, the deeper the joke: "horsefeathers" probably originated in the 1870-80's homesteading era, and gained popularity as farm boys from those areas were mixed into the WW I army, the term used as a substitute for one whose use would have been punished for insubordination. It subsequently entered the print world when used in Wilson's second presidential campaign.

      A youngster with no knowledge of its origin would simply hear "nonsense." but a wizened farmer would recall the image of a building that looks ridiculous, like a chicken. He would have recalled chuckling when thinking what part of the chicken he would enter and exit each day when doing his chores. It would contribute to giving his life enough richness to keep going.

      I believe that the best humor is humor like this. It combines small twists of language with implied bigger twists of incited images. And it gets warmer and deeper (and funnier) the more you live with it.

      The first (language and image), is what the Marx brothers invented in cinema. These guys had honed a stage act based on clever language — timing, twists, perspectives implied by stereotypes. Its all in the words. But they were able to bring it to us in a frantic, ad hoc visual manner, so that we could have a blizzard of images like the feathered barn, the images themselves feathered together in a sort of story.

      Eye and mind played with, and played through practice. These masters were not kids. Groucho by the time this was made was 43. He got funnier every year after that in working with these sorts of ad libbed word images. His "secret word" bit in "You Bet your Life," was even a part of this.

      These, I think, are basic to the both the notion of what makes cinema work (folded images and narrative) and what makes humor attractive (naming enriched by ambiguous image). If you want to know yourself, you navigate through your cupboard of these that you have collected. You go to school. You play the game. You can only do this and truly laugh if you are old enough (or young and aggressive enough in collecting) to have something to rumble around in.

      Marx brothers: old school funny. At least to me.

      This is one of their Paramount projects before being reinvented again by MGM. More random; more eggs.

      Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
      8utgard14

      "I married your mother because I wanted children. Imagine my disappointment when you arrived."

      Hilarious Marx Bros. film with Groucho as the new president of Huxley College and Zeppo as his son, who convinces his dad to recruit professional football players to help the college's losing team. Groucho sets out to do just that but instead of getting two pros, he recruits speakeasy 'icemen' Chico and Harpo. Chaos naturally ensues at the college leading up to the big football game, which has to be seen to be believed.

      All of the brothers are in top form here, with the main three getting lots of funny bits and Zeppo getting possibly his best role from any of their films. Thelma Todd appears in her second Marx Bros. movie, playing the girlfriend of villain David Landau who sets out to seduce Zeppo and winds up seducing the rest of the brothers, too. Sadly there's no Margaret Dumont this time. This is probably the best Marx movie that didn't feature Dumont. Nat Pendleton plays one of the football players on the opposing team. Look out for Walter Brennan as a commentator on the big game. Some funny tunes and several great gags, including "The password is swordfish," the crazy football game, Groucho teaching a class, and all those funny things Harpo pulls out of that coat of his. It's one of the Marx Brothers' best. Definitely recommended.
      dougdoepke

      Chaos Comes to College

      Plot (or should I say plan of attack)— Entering a college campus, the gang gets to deconstruct the whole idea of higher education.

      The gags fly faster than speeding bullets. There's no real let-up, not even for hasty romantic interludes with Zeppo and Todd. It's like the boys have a hundred pages of material to squeeze into 70-minutes. Harpo's got more to do than usual, even a harp solo, while Groucho is at his caustic best with a zillion one-liners. I did miss his usual foil, Margaret Dumont, who should have been lurking somewhere in the faculty lounge. Instead, as a college president, he gets to insult anything collegiate, including America's unofficial national religion-- football. And check out that big game that looks more like Ben Hur than a sports contest. But what I really liked was Thelma Todd in the slinkiest gowns this side of Jean Harlow. And what a fine comedienne she was; too bad her life ended as several probing pages in Hollywood Babylon. All in all, this is the chaos brothers at their liveliest, and may cause highschoolers to rethink the whole idea of higher education.

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        During filming, Chico Marx was in a car accident and shattered his kneecap. In some scenes, he can be seen limping.
      • Goofs
        After Huxley kicks an extra point following Pinky's touchdown, Darwin kicks off to Huxley.
      • Quotes

        Professor Wagstaff: Baravelli, you've got the brain of a four-year old boy, and I bet he was glad to get rid of it.

      • Alternate versions
        There is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA Srl: "PIUME DI CAVALLO (I fratelli Marx al college, 1932)" (in double version 1.33:1 and 1.78:1), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
      • Connections
        Featured in L'univers du rire (1982)
      • Soundtracks
        Whatever It Is, I'm Against It
        (1932) (uncredited)

        Music by Harry Ruby

        Lyrics by Bert Kalmar

        Sung by Groucho Marx and Chorus

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      FAQ17

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • October 6, 1932 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Horse Feathers
      • Filming locations
        • Occidental College - 1600 Campus Road, Eagle Rock, Los Angeles, California, USA
      • Production company
        • Paramount Pictures
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Gross worldwide
        • $208
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 8m(68 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1

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