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IMDbPro

Un jour au cirque

Original title: At the Circus
  • 1939
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
6.6K
YOUR RATING
Groucho Marx, Eve Arden, Chico Marx, and Harpo Marx in Un jour au cirque (1939)
The Marx Brothers try to help the owner of a circus recover some stolen funds before he finds himself out of a job.
Play trailer3:14
1 Video
52 Photos
ComedyMusical

The Marx Brothers try to help the owner of a circus recover some stolen funds before he finds himself out of a job.The Marx Brothers try to help the owner of a circus recover some stolen funds before he finds himself out of a job.The Marx Brothers try to help the owner of a circus recover some stolen funds before he finds himself out of a job.

  • Director
    • Edward Buzzell
  • Writers
    • Irving Brecher
    • Buster Keaton
    • Laurence Stallings
  • Stars
    • Groucho Marx
    • Chico Marx
    • Harpo Marx
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    6.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Edward Buzzell
    • Writers
      • Irving Brecher
      • Buster Keaton
      • Laurence Stallings
    • Stars
      • Groucho Marx
      • Chico Marx
      • Harpo Marx
    • 67User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:14
    Official Trailer

    Photos52

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    Top cast52

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    Groucho Marx
    Groucho Marx
    • Attorney Loophole
    Chico Marx
    Chico Marx
    • Antonio
    Harpo Marx
    Harpo Marx
    • 'Punchy'
    Kenny Baker
    Kenny Baker
    • Jeff Wilson
    Florence Rice
    Florence Rice
    • Julie Randall
    Eve Arden
    Eve Arden
    • Peerless Pauline
    Margaret Dumont
    Margaret Dumont
    • Mrs. Dukesbury
    Nat Pendleton
    Nat Pendleton
    • Goliath
    Fritz Feld
    Fritz Feld
    • Jardinet
    James Burke
    James Burke
    • John Carter
    Jerry Maren
    Jerry Maren
    • Little Professor Atom
    • (as Jerry Marenghi)
    Barnett Parker
    Barnett Parker
    • Whitcomb
    Mariska Aldrich
    • Mannish Woman
    • (uncredited)
    Irving Bacon
    Irving Bacon
    • Telegraph Clerk
    • (uncredited)
    Willie Best
    Willie Best
    • Redcap
    • (uncredited)
    John Binns
    • Old Man
    • (uncredited)
    William A. Boardway
    William A. Boardway
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    George Bookasta
    • Member of Quartette
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Edward Buzzell
    • Writers
      • Irving Brecher
      • Buster Keaton
      • Laurence Stallings
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews67

    6.86.6K
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    Featured reviews

    6ma-cortes

    This time Marx Brothers invade the circus to save from bankruptcy and causing their usual insanity

    Mercilessly and outrageous Marx Brothers comedy that partially works well , thanks to some funny sketches , though they've done it better before . It suffers from excessive musical comedy plotting , but it gives the zany threesome some funny and really comic elaboration . Here the Marx Brothers try to help the owner of a circus recover some stolen funds before he finds himself out of a job. Antonio Pirelli (Harpo Marx) and Punchy (Chico Marx) , who work at the circus, together with roguish lawyer Loophole (Groucho Marx) , attempt to find the thief and get the money back. The 3 Mad Mullahs of Mirth in their grandest, goofiest roar rodeo! . A tentful of girl-gorgeous musical fun! . Not suitable for general exhibition ! .They're a circus.... in a circus !. This Way Folks...to a tentful of Girl Glamorous Musical Fun! A 30-ring circus of laugh-splashed thrills! The animals are in cages...but the Mad Marxes are on the loose! The Show of Shows...to keep the world Singing and Laughing!. Keep the world laughing!

    Relentlessly comical and busy comedy with musical interludes that still works at times . Definitely sub-standard Marxism as the brothers set about saving a circus from bankruptcy in various hilarous set pieces. Amusing moments , mucho ado with badges , Groucho singing ¨Lydia the Tattoooed Lady¨ and the endless insulting repartee with Margaret Dumont , but the whole thing is rather dull and over-familiar. Beginning of the end for the Marxes , a step down in quality from their classic work , though frequently dam fun . Excellent Harpo Marx , as usual , he even did many of his own stunts , he later said it was a silly thing for a 49-year-old . At the Circus (1939) is annoyed by a lot of dated and bored songs , such as : Step up and take a bow , Lydia and Tattoed lady , two blind loves , blue moon . The motion picture was regular but professionally directed by Edward Buzzell , known for : Transient Lady (1935), Little Johnny Jones (1929) y Ain't Misbehavin' (1955) , among others .

    Other important films starred by Marx Brothers -many of them Broadway farce plays transfered by scenarists into vehicle for the Brothers- , they are the following ones : ¨Animal crackers¨, ¨Duck soap¨ that was a flop when first released but today considered a masterpiece , ¨Horse Feathers¨, ¨At the circus¨, ¨A night at the Opera¨,¨Day at the races¨ , ¨Room service¨ , ¨Go West¨, ¨Love Happy¨ and ¨Night in Casablanca¨, though in 1946 the Marx formula was weak and wearing thin . Any film with Groucho , Chico , Harpo and Margaret Dumont is well worth seeing .
    6Cinemayo

    At the Circus (1939) **

    Middle-of-the-road Marxes, with some good scenes and laughs unevenly weighted down by those ever-intrusive and out-of-place musical numbers that so often plagued these movies. No, I'm not referring to Groucho's spirited rendition of 'Lydia the Tattooed Lady'; I'm talking about hearing those two useless lead lovers crooning their sappy romantic tunes to each other ('Two Blind Loves', which is sung over and over at intervals throughout the picture, is especially grating on the nerves). There is also a song and dance sequence that comes out of left field later in the film that really feels out of place and gets in the way of things.

    There are certainly some witty Groucho zingers, as well as vintage Harpo madness, to be found here. It's just that there's not enough consistency and too much of the fluff. It's a pity the filmmakers just didn't realize that it's the Marx Brothers we're here to see; not Kenny Baker and Florence Rice.
    Bunuel1976

    AT THE CIRCUS (1939) ***

    This was my third time watching AT THE CIRCUS and, the characteristically anaemic leads (who somehow always seem to be able to carry a tune) notwithstanding, I've always been kind of partial to this one (even if the end result is, decidedly, a notch or two below their finest work). Plot and setting provide several opportunities for the Marxes to shine, both as a team and individually: Groucho (as always) is the film's trump card, however, especially in his rendition of 'Lydia, the Tattooed Lady' and the separate scenes he shares with befuddled aristocrat Margaret Dumont and scheming circus performer Eve Arden; other highlights include Groucho and Chico's interrogation of the suspicious-looking dwarf, Chico and Harpo's frenzied search for stolen money in the strong-man's room (while the latter is asleep!), and the typically busy climax in which Dumont receives the ultimate humiliation.

    AT THE CIRCUS is the Marxes' third best MGM picture (demonstrating a steady decline for them from picture to picture) but it's still inferior to the later A NIGHT IN CASABLANCA (1946), in my opinion – or any of their early Paramount films, for that matter.
    6theowinthrop

    The Problems Of Circus Movies.

    The decline of the Marx Brothers does not begin with ROOM SERVICE, which is hysterical at it's conclusion, but with AT THE CIRCUS. Groucho always insisted that had Irving Thalberg lived his care would have made the other films in the contract after A DAY AT THE RACES as good as that and A NIGHT AT THE OPERA. This meant that the film had to be taken on the road as a Vaudeville show, and the material tested carefully. But Thalberg was dead, and Louis B. Mayer was quite unsympathetic to these three clowns who were...well clowns, and who had gotten too good a sweetheart contract from Thalburg in terms of profits. Mayer thought of comedians as interchangeable, and could not care about allowing talented ones to test their material - you hand them a script and that was that: they are paid to make it funny. If they don't you fire them.

    So it is traditional to blame AT THE CIRCUS, GO WEST, and THE BIG STORE on Mayer's hostility. That hostility played a major role (there is just no denying it), but in the case of AT THE CIRCUS there is another point that is frequently overlooked. In movies by comedians, it was rare for a circus comedy to be really funny. W.C.Fields, YOU CAN'T CHEAT AN HONEST MAN was an exception - a truly funny circus comedy, but it's strength was the film record of Field's radio feud with ventriloquist dummy Charlie McCarthy. Had it been set in a movie studio or a bank or a foreign country it would have been just as successful. But other comedians were not as lucky. Charlie Chaplin worked two years on THE CIRCUS, and while a good film it was not the great film he hoped to make. The atmosphere of a circus should have been inviting to comics - after all, here clowns were really clowns. But for some reason the special needs of movie funny-men were hard to translate into the atmosphere of the big top. Possibly the best use of the big top as a comic background was in Laurel & Hardy's short film THE CHIMP. The first quarter of the film shows how they wreck the circus (which was on it's last legs anyway). But the remaining three quarters of the film deal with the boys problems with a rooming house owned by a jealous Billy Gilbert, and the title "chimp" they hope to sell to a zoo.

    With the Marxes the circus just does not absorb them too much. Groucho is there, hired as a lawyer to assist Kenny Baker and his pal Chico. Harpo, as Chico's brother, is a circus roustabout. But there is little example of their involvement in the circus life of the troop or of the animals (Harpo should have been involved with circus horses, anyway). Bits of the film are actually quite good - like Chico and Harpo trying to find papers in Nat Pendleton's (the circus strongman's) room. They manage to turn it into a Christmas nightmare for poor Pendleton. And Groucho certainly has two great moments: the business of trying to get on the circus train without knowing the password (even one of the animals knows the password), and his singing "Lydia The Tattooed Lady".

    There were some cuts, apparently. Groucho had a sequence where his trial skills were shown in a court presided over by Edgar Kennedy. One wishes they had kept that in the film. The poor portions, mostly tied to the sickeningly sweet and naive Kenny Baker (fighting the crooked James Burke) are overwhelming. At least Groucho was able to have another session with Margaret Dumont as Mrs. Dukesberry (Baker's aunt), and poor Margaret gets shot out of a cannon in the end. But the drab spots outnumber the good ones. Not too bad, but still just mediocre as a result.
    7dfloro

    One extra star for the great Eve Arden

    Not one of the best Marx Bros. Movies (i.e., Duck Soup, A Day at the Races, and A Night at the Opera) but also not one of the worst either. So, solidly mid-pack. The romantic subplot involving Florence Rice's character is a total waste of time because her suitor, the singer Kenny Baker (no, not Star Wars' Kenny Baker; this movie is from 1939!), is a terrible non-actor. Harpo's musical number, surrounded by black dancers, singers, and musicians, is way above average. And the best part of this one is the supporting role played by Eve Arden as a female "daredevil" circus acrobat who is also a pickpocket and scammer. As was so often the case with any movies featuring her "2nd banana" characters, she's the best thing about any scene she is in, and that's hard to pull off when Groucho Marx is your scene partner!

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      For Groucho Marx' performance of "'Lydia, the Tattooed Lady", additional lyrics were written by E.Y. Harburg exclusively for screenings of the film for Allied servicemen in European war zones. The special lyrics included the line "When she stands the world grows littler; When she sits, she sits on Hitler.' This version of the song was filmed, and included in prints of the film distributed in Great Britain and France, and was greeted with marked enthusiasm during screenings in those countries.
    • Goofs
      During the "Swingali" number, three boys playing saxophones stand up and play "Auld Lang Syne," but the instruments heard on the soundtrack are clarinets.
    • Quotes

      Peerless Pauline: I've waited so long to find someone like you.

      J. Cheever Loophole: Oh, someone *like* me, I'm not good enough for you, eh?

    • Connections
      Featured in From the Ends of the Earth (1939)
    • Soundtracks
      Lydia, the Tattooed Lady
      (1939) (uncredited)

      Music by Harold Arlen

      Lyrics by E.Y. Harburg

      Sung by Groucho Marx and chorus, with Chico Marx at piano

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 14, 1949 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • At the Circus
    • Filming locations
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 27 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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