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Clear All Wires!

  • 1933
  • Passed
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
194
YOUR RATING
Lee Tracy in Clear All Wires! (1933)
ComedyCrimeDramaRomance

Buckley is an unethical reporter who manipulates the news for his own benefit as much as he reports it. When he is in Paris to get a medal for being rescued from his alleged kidnappers, he f... Read allBuckley is an unethical reporter who manipulates the news for his own benefit as much as he reports it. When he is in Paris to get a medal for being rescued from his alleged kidnappers, he finds that his boss, Stevens, at the Chicago Globe is going with his old gal Dolly. When St... Read allBuckley is an unethical reporter who manipulates the news for his own benefit as much as he reports it. When he is in Paris to get a medal for being rescued from his alleged kidnappers, he finds that his boss, Stevens, at the Chicago Globe is going with his old gal Dolly. When Stevens learns that Dolly is staying with Buckley in Moscow, he fires Buckley. To get his jo... Read all

  • Director
    • George W. Hill
  • Writers
    • Bella Spewack
    • Sam Spewack
  • Stars
    • Lee Tracy
    • Benita Hume
    • Una Merkel
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    194
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George W. Hill
    • Writers
      • Bella Spewack
      • Sam Spewack
    • Stars
      • Lee Tracy
      • Benita Hume
      • Una Merkel
    • 10User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Photos9

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    Top cast15

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    Lee Tracy
    Lee Tracy
    • Buckley Joyce Thomas
    Benita Hume
    Benita Hume
    • Kate
    Una Merkel
    Una Merkel
    • Dolly
    James Gleason
    James Gleason
    • Lefty
    Alan Edwards
    Alan Edwards
    • Pettingwaite
    Eugene Sigaloff
    • Prince Alexander
    Ari Kutai
    • Kostya
    C. Henry Gordon
    C. Henry Gordon
    • Commissar
    Lya Lys
    Lya Lys
    • Eugenie
    John Bleifer
    John Bleifer
    • Sozanoff
    • (as John Melvin Bleifer)
    Lawrence Grant
    Lawrence Grant
    • MacKenzie
    Guy Usher
    Guy Usher
    • J. H. Stevens
    Mischa Auer
    Mischa Auer
    • Arab Leader
    • (uncredited)
    Rolfe Sedan
    Rolfe Sedan
    • French Radio Operator
    • (uncredited)
    Akim Tamiroff
    Akim Tamiroff
    • Moscow Hotel Clerk
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • George W. Hill
    • Writers
      • Bella Spewack
      • Sam Spewack
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    6.0194
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    Featured reviews

    6rhoda-9

    Strange, lumpy mix of comedy and politics

    Lee Tracy plays his usual role of the fast-talking, unprincipled hotshot, this time as a foreign correspondent who exaggerates, lies, and even sets up a mock assassination to scoop his rivals. Some of this is funny, some just silly and dumb, and some creepy. Russia under Stalin (whom Tracy calls Sta-LEEN) was no joke. Indeed, when Tracy visits the headquarters of the secret police, he sees two leaders of a student protest marched past him in chains, then out to a courtyard where men are waiting with rifles. Soon afterwards we hear shots in the background. Yet Tracy never comments on this, and the comedy carries on regardless, with many hasty and unlikely events.

    Una Merkel gets to forsake her switchboard for a change, which she must have appreciated, and amusingly play a cutie pie who is supposed to be Tracy's girlfriend but is more interested in what she can get from a wealthy sugar daddy. Benita Hume, as the attractive, sensible woman who loves Tracy but is ignored or exploited by him, is given a part so perfunctory as to be practically invisible.

    Jimmy Demarest is, as ever, welcome as the gravel-voiced, hapless fall guy. At one point he leaves on a mission to make inquiries at a government department; he returns after hardly enough time to have left the building. Such devices point to the film's origin as a ramshackle, wacky stage play, in which a casual approach to believability and consistency of tone could be laughed off as part of the fun. Movies, however, are more realistic, and the flaws make for almost as much annoyance as comedy.
    1view_and_review

    Mendacious Report Looking for Laughs

    "Clear All Wires!" is another movie about unscrupulous journalism. In this case it wasn't serious like "Scandal Sheet" (1932) or "Five Star Final" (1931). It was silly, it was stupid, it was bad.

    The movie starred Lee Tracy which was already a negative. He played a lying, deceptive journalist who fabricated just about every bit of news report he turned in. The only reason he hadn't been found out is that he was an overseas correspondent so there was no other journalist there to fact check him.

    I can only take Lee Tracy in small doses. His voice is annoying and his type of comedy is not for me. He played Buckley Joyce Thomas, a reporter for a Chicago newspaper. He could out-talk anyone and it seemed to work; especially on women. He didn't go anywhere without his faithful sidekick Lefty (James Gleason) who'd do anything for him.

    ***Side bar

    Servants and assistants were extremely faithful back then according to Hollywood. Whether their employer could pay them or not they'd stick around, fully vested in the well-being of their employer. They'd even lie, cheat, and steal for them. Why do I find that hard to believe?

    ***End side bar

    Buckley's antics got even worse when he went to Russia to cover the fifteen year anniversary of the Russian revolution. His attempts to make news there were as dangerous as they were brainless. If only it were funny.

    Meanwhile, Buckley had at least three women hanging onto his coattail. He had Dolly (Una Merkel), his main squeeze and his boss's sweetheart. There was Eugenie (Lya Lys), a Russian paramour he'd forgotten about. And there was Kate (Benita Hume), the smart, decent woman who he largely ignored, but who would patiently wait until Buckley got around to recognizing she was the best thing for him. Those women are the worst.

    Free on Internet Archive.
    6planktonrules

    Not particularly new or unusual for Tracy...but enjoyable.

    Lee Tracy was a very unusual actor in that he played the same sort of character in tons of his 1930s films....a snappy talking newspaper reporter. So, the plot here isn't too unusual, although the film IS set in the Soviet Union.

    In "Clear All Wires!", Buckley (Tracy) is an unethical reporter who is declared a hero in Paris, when he really didn't do anything! Well, this same attitude about stories is Buckley's m.o....make up the news instead of actually reporting it. But when his boss fires him because he thinks Buckley was cutting in on his girl, Buckley decides to create an insane story about the last of the Romanovs being shot....and, as you'd expect, it's all crap...though he actually DOES end up getting shot himself. What's next? See the film.

    If you've never seen any of Tracy's newspaper reporter stories, then this one is worth seeing...though it's far from his best. If you've seen quite a bit of these films, then you might just want to skip the movie because it's not among his best reporter films...mostly due to the silly script.
    6tjhodgins

    For Fans of Lee Tracy, A Must!

    The portrait of newspaper reporters in '30s films is hardly complimentary, for the most part. Fast talking, glib, often quite amoral, anything goes for a story, including fabricating one, if necessary.

    Broadway actor-turned-Hollywood-actor Lee Tracy was simply one of the best at playing this kind of unscrupulous breed. With his machine gun nasel voiced delivery and strong facial comic reactions, Tracy was always curiously likable no matter what scheme his characters, in this case American reporter Buckley Joyce Thomas, may have connived.

    Clear All Wires, made while he was briefly at MGM in 1933, captures the actor very much in his fast talking prime. The film is fast and hectic, with more than capable support from James Gleason as Tracy's faithful henchman, ready to do anything, including literally shooting someone, if it will help his boss, as well as Una Merkel, as a former paramour of the reporter who now, rather inconveniently, has become the girlfriend of his boss.

    Above all, though, this comic adventure, which starts in the Moroccan desert (look for Mischa Auer as a sheik), gradually shifting to Moscow where, of course, anything goes for a news story, is Tracy's show.

    At one point, ironically, his character is fired for "conduct unbecoming a gentleman." This would actually foreshadow events in the actor's own life, for the following year he would be fired by MGM on the on-location set of Viva Villa!, bringing to an end, unfortunately, Tracy's time in major Hollywood productions, for his own "ungentlemanly behaviour" from a Mexican balcony.

    And it was a loss, not only for the actor but viewers of '30s films, when Lee Tracy was afterward relegated to working with lesser material in smaller studios. It would never again be quite the same for him, though he would storm back on stage and then screen thirty years later with strong Oscar-nominated character work as the U.S. President in Gore Vidal's The Best Man. That, however, would be a distinctly older, grim Tracy just a few years shy of his death from cancer.

    Clear All Wires gives the viewer the opportunity to see the young Tracy still in his prime, and he's fun to watch, even if the material, ultimately, may not be quite as funny as it is smartly paced.
    8kidboots

    Lee Predicts the Future!!

    Snappy Lee Tracy's role in his first MGM movie "Clear All Wires" was almost prophetic in view of how he left the studio. At the end of 1933 MGM sent him to Mexico for "Viva Villa" where his behaviour on a balcony in front of a passing parade had him hustled out of the country and saw his MGM contract cancelled. But at the start of 1933 everything was rosy and in "Clear All Wires" he played a high powered newspaper correspondent who almost sparks an international incident when he has to create news out of a vacuum. The studio was extremely happy with him and his ability (like Glenda Farrell) to rattle off the rate of 40 words in ten seconds (Glenda was even faster - in "Torchy Gets Her Man" she gave a 400 word speech in 40 seconds!!) Anyway Tracy confided that he always slowed down his speech just before a rapid fire delivery to give the impression he was faster than he was!!

    Buckley Joyce Thomas never lets a no news day stand in the way of a good story. Whether it's finding human interest in the taciturn answers of a peasant, a worker or a new woman of Russia or fast talking his way into the middle of a meeting between Stalin and Lenin, Buckley is always at the forefront, even if he has to side swipe his rival reporters to get the scoop. With his faithful sidekick "Lefty" (Russell Gleason in a pretty thankless role) and his girl, Kate (Benita Hume was lovely but could they have found another actress who had less chemistry with Lee - I doubt it!!!) he is always able to get out of any scrape.

    To be honest this is definitely not my favourite Tracy movie - maybe it was just the dour setting and as another reviewer said poking fun at Russia may have been funnier in the early 30s than it is now. The person who comes off best is Una Merkel - but doesn't she always. Her leading lady parts gone and now doing what she did best - golden supporting parts where she mostly stole the show. She played Buckley's former flame who has found a new "daddie" - one who appreciates her voice and wants to see her renowned throughout the Continent. But Dolly is not at all shy about having Buckley in her life again. As usual Una takes whatever small morsel of a part she is given and runs with it, making even a line like "and if I wasn't wearing my shoes, they'd have stolen them too" sound like the funniest line in the movie!! - Buckley had promised her a luxurious "Orient Express" type train compartment but, believing his lies, she found herself on a freight train to Siberia!!!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The play opened on Broadway in New York City, New York, USA on 14 September 1932 and had 93 performances. The opening night cast included Thomas Mitchell, Dorothy Tree, Dorothy Mathews and Harry Tyler as the four leads. John Bleifer and Eugene Sigaloff originated their movie roles in the play.
    • Goofs
      The James Gleason character "Lefty" is shown to be clearly right-handed when he takes notes.
    • Connections
      Featured in Lee Tracy: The Fastest Mouth in the West (2022)
    • Soundtracks
      La Marseillaise
      (1792) (uncredited)

      Music by Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle

      Played during the opening credits

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 24, 1933 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • French
      • Russian
      • English
    • Also known as
      • De última hora
    • Filming locations
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 18 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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