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Chercheurs d'or

Original title: Go West
  • 1940
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
6K
YOUR RATING
Groucho Marx, Chico Marx, and Harpo Marx in Chercheurs d'or (1940)
ComedyMusicalWestern

The Marx Brothers come to the rescue in the Wild West after a young man, trying to settle an old family feud so he can marry the girl he loves, runs afoul of crooks.The Marx Brothers come to the rescue in the Wild West after a young man, trying to settle an old family feud so he can marry the girl he loves, runs afoul of crooks.The Marx Brothers come to the rescue in the Wild West after a young man, trying to settle an old family feud so he can marry the girl he loves, runs afoul of crooks.

  • Director
    • Edward Buzzell
  • Writers
    • Irving Brecher
    • Buster Keaton
  • Stars
    • Groucho Marx
    • Chico Marx
    • Harpo Marx
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Edward Buzzell
    • Writers
      • Irving Brecher
      • Buster Keaton
    • Stars
      • Groucho Marx
      • Chico Marx
      • Harpo Marx
    • 50User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos27

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    Top cast46

    Edit
    Groucho Marx
    Groucho Marx
    • S. Quentin Quale
    Chico Marx
    Chico Marx
    • Joe Panello
    Harpo Marx
    Harpo Marx
    • 'Rusty' Panello
    John Carroll
    John Carroll
    • Terry Turner
    Diana Lewis
    Diana Lewis
    • Eve Wilson
    Walter Woolf King
    Walter Woolf King
    • Beecher
    Robert Barrat
    Robert Barrat
    • 'Red' Baxter
    June MacCloy
    June MacCloy
    • Lulubelle
    George Lessey
    George Lessey
    • Railroad President
    Iris Adrian
    Iris Adrian
    • Mary Lou
    • (uncredited)
    Al Bain
    Al Bain
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Barbara Bedford
    Barbara Bedford
    • Baby's Mother on Stagecoach
    • (uncredited)
    Margaret Bert
    • Train Passenger
    • (uncredited)
    Clem Bevans
    Clem Bevans
    • Railroad Official
    • (uncredited)
    Rudy Bowman
    Rudy Bowman
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Frederick Burton
    Frederick Burton
    • Johnson
    • (uncredited)
    Earl Covert
    • Specialty in 'As If I Didn't Know'
    • (uncredited)
    Edgar Dearing
    Edgar Dearing
    • Bill - Train Engineer
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Edward Buzzell
    • Writers
      • Irving Brecher
      • Buster Keaton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews50

    6.86K
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    Featured reviews

    7rbverhoef

    Not bad

    'Go West' was the first movie from the Marx Brothers that I saw. Because I saw this one before their great movies like 'Duck Soup' I was able to appreciate this one completely. I don't want to call the movie great but since everything was new to me I had a very good time.

    Groucho Marx is S. Quentin Quale and Chico and Harpo are the brothers Joe and Rusty Panello. The two brothers and Quale are heading west to find fortune. The movie starts with a very funny sequence where the two brothers steal some money from Quale. After this the movie has some slow sequences without very big laughs, especially when the brothers and Quale are not yet working together. There is a nice scene with Chico playing the piano in a great and very funny way that gives the movie some spirit again. Everything leads up to the scenes on a train and I have to say that once they are on the thing every gag is good for a laugh. May be some of the events are inspired by Buster Keaton's 'The General' but they're funny anyway.

    Why the brothers and Quale have to work together, what the story is, is not really important. The story is just there to prepare a new joke. Because most of them work I think this is a very nice movie with a great start and finish and may be a part that is a little too slow in the middle. The Marx Brothers have a great talent for comedy and they do show that here, although we know they can do better.
    theowinthrop

    Groucho and Buster don't mix.

    After the success of A DAY AT THE RACES the Marx Brothers had a serious problem. The man who brought them back into the movie game has been Irving Thalberg, who took them seriously as comic artists, let them rehearse and hone their material on stage, and gave them a percentage of the gross sales, had died in 1937. Thalberg's rival, Louis B. Mayer grabbed control of Thalberg's production unit. Mayer (whose negative effects on careers from John Gilbert to Judy Garland are becoming more known as time passes) hated comedians, and he disliked people who got contracts that took profits away from his company. He was, in fact, a selfish individual who got his just deserts in the 1950s when he was thrown out of his job by his shareholders, and found nobody in Hollywood wanted anything to do with him.

    Mayer had no great love for the Marxes, and allowed RKO a loan out of them for ROOM SERVICE. I feel that film has a lot still going for it, but many people don't like it as too confining for the antics of the Marxes. Then in 1939 MGM put them into AT THE CIRCUS, even bringing back Margaret Dumont. But the results are generally mediocre (although Groucho has one of his best songs, "Lydia the Tattooed Lady"). It was symptomatic of Mayer's lack of interest in their film work - they were not sent out to test their material.

    Then in 1940 came GO WEST.

    The Marx Brothers had not been the first comedians that Mayer disliked. He had a negative view of silent film genius Buster Keaton. Keaton's masterpieces of the silent films had been successful for the most part, but he had been produced by Joseph Schenck, his brother-in-law, and a rival of Mayer. Joe Schenck died in the early 1930s. At that time Keaton's films were not doing as well as in his heyday, mostly due to contracts with MGM that took away his independence in production matters. Also his wife, Nathalie Talmadge, was finding her movie stardom ending, and their marriage was collapsing. Keaton took to heavy drinking, which hurt his performances in the sound films he made. Jimmy Durante was co-starred in several films with Keaton, like THE PASSIONATE PLUMBER and WHAT, NO BEER! but though the men became friends their styles of humor did not mesh. By 1935 Keaton was a has-been in Hollywood, and by the end of the decade was only appearing in minor films as comedy relief, or used as a gag writer.

    Possibly Mayer decided (for some twisted reason) to put Keaton on the writing staff for GO WEST. It certainly was not with any belief in the "Great Stone Face" as a gag man or a comedian. But it is also more than likely that he put him into it to damage the Marxes still more, and to humiliate Keaton. Knowing Mayer I would not put it past him.

    Groucho Marx lived to become a national icon due to his movie, radio, and television career. In his later years (before senility began to affect him) he was invited on all the talk shows, and would discuss his brothers and their films, and comedy in general. He would also drop off his acid comments which made the audiences laugh (it helped Groucho that he lived long enough to find less censorship of his lines than he faced in the 1930s and 1940s). But he was a disagreeable man in private life, being thoroughly honest on one hand, but thoroughly nasty on the other. With Keaton, given his recovering alcoholic state in 1940, you had to be respectful and kindly.

    Keaton had a dream that never reached the screen. In 1933 he had seen GRAND HOTEL, and liked the concept of interlocking stories involving sets of big name stars. He wanted to do a comic version called GRAND MILLS HOTEL, with himself, Laurel and Hardy, Marie Dressler, and other comedians (Edward Everett Horton was another) intermingling in a third rate hotel. The idea never came to fruition. No doubt, in thinking of it, Keaton might have considered having the Marxes in the film too. He was a genuine appreciator of comic genius.

    But here it was 1940, and Keaton was working on a film with the Marxes. Keaton went to a script meeting, and outlined an idea for a scene. Groucho listened. His expression was bland. When it was finished, apparently with a sneer, Groucho said: "You really think that was funny?" Keaton, somewhat crestfallen, replied: "I just thought it might work...you fellows are pretty funny by yourselves."

    There are Keatonian touches in the movie: Harpo's showdown with the saloon keeper town boss, where he pulls out a shaving brush that fires a shot into the floor. Also the wrecking of the train at the conclusion, which reminds one of Keaton's love of trains (OUR HOSPITALITY, THE GENERAL). Possibly he had a hand in the great opening of the film, where Groucho is the city slicker fleeced by Chico and Harpo when he tries to fleece them. It did not help GO WEST that only three years before Laurel and Hardy made one of their two best features, WAY OUT WEST, nor that W.C.Fields and Mae West did MY LITTLE CHICKADIE in 1939. Both of those films are way better than the slow going GO WEST.

    One wishes that Groucho had been more charitable to Keaton, because the latter did finally find a comedian who listened and worked with him. That was Red Skelton, who would work on several films with Keaton in the late 1940s and early 1950s, one of which, A SOUTHERN YANKEE, is very funny indeed. But Keaton allowed Groucho precedence of being a successful comic in GO WEST, with mediocre results. Perhaps Groucho deserved the failure that resulted. Hubris is it's own reward.
    4-Eyes

    Even though "lesser", I like it "more-er"

    I have a real soft spot for "Go West". It's a little less frantic, has a

    mellow vibe and it's obvious they enjoyed making it. I liked the

    songs and many of the sequences, particularly the "outfitter" and

    also the train sequence which is such a metaphor for modern life

    (they are in such a hurry to "get there" that they totally destroy and

    burn the entire contents and structure of the train so when they

    arrive at their destination there is nothing left but skeletal

    wreckage). This alone is worth any other disappointments the film

    may hold for you. I would say, don't skip over this one. And, to get

    to the required 10 lines, I will say it again: don't skip over this one.

    LOL
    8rainking_es

    Going' West with the craziest brothers ever...

    The movies from the Marx Bros. are just like my old Bowie's vinyls, or my Oscar Wilde's books: they're always there, and always will be. They're just like those old friends that will never let you down.

    "Go West" has each and everyone of the essential ingredients of the movies from Groucho and co. : hilarious dialogs, crazy situations, Harpo's hooliganism, the music... everything goes as quick as a flash. So, if some youngster thinks that this movie hasn't anything to offer because it was made 65 years ago, thats belongs to the Pleistocenic... OK, I won't waste my time explaining why the Marx Brothers are bigger than life. I'd rather watch "Duck Soup" or "A Night At The Opera" one more time, and let the party begin once again...

    *My rate: 8/10
    8ccthemovieman-1

    Under-Appreciated Marx Brothers Film

    Despite not having a reputation as one of the better Marx Brothers films, I still found this to be a typical MB movie with crazy scenes and a few songs. No, it may not have been as funny as their better-known films of the 1930s, but I didn't think it much below them, either.

    It's not as totally outrageous as the boys' earlier stuff but it also has fewer stupid stuff, too. Make no mistake: it has its share of genuinely funny material, both in dialog and in sight gags. The finale is a wild chase scene on a train that is very, very entertaining. That holds true for a wild stagecoach ride earlier in the picture. Once again, Chico comes up with the funniest lines.

    I think this is a solid comedy and an underrated Marx Brothers film . If you like "the boys" in their more well-known films, don't pass this one by.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The name of Groucho Marx's character, "S. Quentin Quale", caused a stir when the film was first released due to the subtle but clear joke: the use of the term "San Quentin quail", which means "jail bait".
    • Goofs
      After Terry rides in to see Eve, his horse's rein tightens as an offscreen crew member starts to lead it away.
    • Quotes

      S. Quentin Quale: Lulubelle, it's you! I didn't recognize you standing up.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening card: Foreword: In 1851, Horace Greeley uttered a phrase that did much to change the history of these United States. He said: Go West, young man, go west. This is the story of three men who made Horace Greeley sorry he said it.
    • Connections
      Edited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
    • Soundtracks
      As If I Didn't Know
      (1940) (credit only)

      Music by Bronislau Kaper

      Lyrics by Gus Kahn

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 4, 1946 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Go West
    • Filming locations
      • Sonora, California, USA(train scenes)
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 20m(80 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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