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IMDbPro

Estrellados

  • 1930
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
87
YOUR RATING
Buster Keaton in Estrellados (1930)
Comedy

A matinée idol and a bumbling manager fight for the love of a would-be starlet.A matinée idol and a bumbling manager fight for the love of a would-be starlet.A matinée idol and a bumbling manager fight for the love of a would-be starlet.

  • Directors
    • Salvador de Alberich
    • Edward Sedgwick
  • Writers
    • Salvador de Alberich
    • Paul Dickey
    • Richard Schayer
  • Stars
    • Buster Keaton
    • Raquel Torres
    • Don Alvarado
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    87
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Salvador de Alberich
      • Edward Sedgwick
    • Writers
      • Salvador de Alberich
      • Paul Dickey
      • Richard Schayer
    • Stars
      • Buster Keaton
      • Raquel Torres
      • Don Alvarado
    • 5User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Buster Keaton
    Buster Keaton
    • Canuto Cuadratin
    Raquel Torres
    Raquel Torres
    • Elvira Rosas
    Don Alvarado
    Don Alvarado
    • Larry Mitchell
    María Calvo
    • La Mamà Rosas
    Juan de Homs
    • Director
    Carlos Villarías
    Carlos Villarías
    • Jack Collier
    Joe Dominguez
    Joe Dominguez
    • Assistant Director
    Emile Chautard
    Emile Chautard
    Enrique Acosta
    • Alcalde de Río Seco
    Julio Abadía
    C.R. Dufau
      Jackie Coogan
      Jackie Coogan
      • Jackie Coogan (Guest Appearance at Premiere)
      Lionel Barrymore
      Lionel Barrymore
      • Lionel Barrymore (Guest Appearance)
      William Haines
      William Haines
      • William Haines (Guest Appearance)
      John Miljan
      John Miljan
      • John Miljan (Guest Appearance)
      Gwen Lee
      Gwen Lee
      • Gwen Lee (Guest Appearance)
      Cecil B. DeMille
      Cecil B. DeMille
      • Cecil B. DeMille (Guest Appearance)
      Fred Niblo
      Fred Niblo
      • Fred Niblo (Guest Appearance)
      • Directors
        • Salvador de Alberich
        • Edward Sedgwick
      • Writers
        • Salvador de Alberich
        • Paul Dickey
        • Richard Schayer
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews5

      6.887
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      Featured reviews

      6AlsExGal

      I give it six points for being of historical interest...

      ... because you get to see how early talking films were made for those who do not speak English. Often, a studio would dub an important film into Spanish, German, Italian, and French. This is the Spanish language version of Buster's talking film debut, "Free and Easy".

      Buster is present from the original cast, along with people who are actual employees of MGM studio, such as Lionel Barrymore and Fred Niblo. The rest of the cast is Hispanic, the most prominent being Raquel Torres, who had a few leading roles at MGM during the late silent/early sound era. Her most prominent role was probably in "White Shadows in the South Seas" (1928). Torres takes the role played by Anita Page in the English language version.

      In terms of art form, this is NOT the Spanish language version of Dracula, which in artistic and photographic terms was as good as or better than the English speaking Dracula. So the way that studios would, for the first few years of talkies, make these alternative language versions is to have the English speaking stars read their lines phonetically off of cue cards just off stage. So poor Buster was often stuck going all the way through a dismal film several times in several languages. No wonder his drinking problem worsened after 1930.

      For years unavailable, Estrellados is now available from the Warner Archive on DVD as a double feature with "Free and Easy", the English language version.
      5wmorrow59

      'Free and Easy' en español . . . which doesn't help

      In the early days of talkies, many Hollywood films were remade in foreign languages for audiences overseas. Most often, as with Universal Pictures' Spanish version of Dracula, the producers would recast with an entirely new set of actors. A handful of stars were bilingual, and were able to repeat their roles in French (like Jeanette MacDonald) or German (like Greta Garbo). But in some instances, comedies were handled differently. Star comedians delivered their lines phonetically; apparently, the idea was that even if they spoke other languages poorly, the effect would be funny in itself. Comics who appeared in these alternate versions included Laurel & Hardy, Charley Chase, Harry Langdon, and Buster Keaton.

      Keaton's first feature for MGM, Free and Easy, was remade in Spanish with Keaton repeating his role of Elmer Butts, and was retitled Estrellados. I've seen the English language version twice over the years, and share the widely-held opinion that it's among the weakest of Keaton's MGM features. (A couple of the later ones aren't so bad.) Here's where Buster lost control of his output. What little entertainment value Free and Easy has comes, first, in the glimpses we're afforded of the MGM studio and its personnel in the early talkie days, and second, in the musical number featuring Buster during the finale. Otherwise, we're stuck with long stretches of dull dialog, delivered by unappealing characters. In one sequence Buster gets chased around the MGM lot by a security guard, but the laughs are sparse. Even so, I was curious about the Spanish language version. For one thing, I wondered if Buster performed any pantomime bits not found in the more familiar version. I was also curious about how the 'star cameos' were handled.

      Unfortunately, Estrellados follows the original all too closely. Buster has no alternate gags, with only a couple of minor exceptions. In the movie premiere sequence, during a car-parking routine, his hat flies off and he has to go fetch it, but there's no payoff. It's not a huge improvement. Otherwise, Elmer -- here known as "Canuto" -- doggedly recites all that witless dialog in what sounds like halting Spanish. Most of his fellow players, recast for this version, speak the language fluently; Don Alvarado takes the Robert Montgomery role as the caddish movie star, and Raquel Torres (best remembered from Duck Soup with the Marx Brothers) is the sweet, naïve, bland leading lady, in place of Anita Page. You also get a glimpse of Carlos Villarías, better known as the Spanish-speaking Count Dracula, who acts as master of ceremonies at the movie premiere.

      But the celebrities who make brief appearances were not compelled to speak phonetic Spanish. When Jackie Coogan arrives at the premiere, and is asked to say a few words to radio listeners, he opens his mouth -- and we hear a boy deliver his lines in fluent Spanish. Coogan is dubbed, with little effort to match the words to his lips. Something similar happens later on the MGM lot, where Cecil B. DeMille and Fred Niblo discuss casting. The men turn away from the camera slightly to speak, as other actors deliver their lines in Spanish. It happens again when we see Lionel Barrymore directing a scene; he's dubbed by someone who sounds nothing like Lionel. And so it goes, except for the sequence with Karl Dane and Dorothy Sebastian, who perform a scene in a cave in the English language version; this was cut entirely from Estrellados, for unknown reasons.

      Eventually we get to that finale, the filming of a bizarre operetta. (It resembles the clunky studio musicals in production at the time; no wonder they fell out of favor so quickly before Busby Berkeley came along.) At long last Buster is permitted some action. He performs a lively slapstick number with Trixie Friganza -- who no longer plays his mother-in-law in this version, but was retained for this sequence -- and a lovely bit as a dancing marionette, a number that also symbolically represents his position at MGM. The song "Free and Easy" is mostly cut, except for the chorus. And we're still stuck with that mawkish ending, when it finally dawns on our hapless hero that the girl of his dreams loves someone else. Then it's over. Estrellados supposedly runs 96 minutes, but it sure does feel longer than that.
      mariposa5197

      Spanish Version of Free and Easy

      Estrellados is essentially the Spanish version of Free and Easy with Hispanic/Spanish speaking actors. In the early talkie days, films were made in several languages for wider audiences. It is believed that The Film Institute of Spain has a copy of the original film but will not release it for restoration. The movie is available in the English version with Spanish subtitles. The musical numbers were also translated to "La Reina De Mi Corazon" (Oh Queen/Oh King) and "Estrellados" (Free and Easy).

      There are a few pictures and some posters of the film on the internet. Despite the how poorly Free and Easy was made, I'd like to see this version to make a comparison. I'd also like to hear the translated musical numbers. Maybe the Spanish Film Institute will change their mind and release it one day.

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Estrellados is essentially the Spanish version of Free and Easy with Hispanic/Spanish speaking actors. In the early talkie days, films were made in several languages for wider audiences. It is believed that The Film Institute of Spain has a copy of the original film. The musical numbers were also translated to "La Reina de Mi Corazon" (Oh Queen/Oh King) and "Estrellados" (Free and Easy).
      • Connections
        Alternate-language version of Le metteur en scène (1930)
      • Soundtracks
        The Free And Easy
        (1930) (uncredited)

        Lyrics by Roy Turk

        Music by Fred E. Ahlert

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • July 7, 1930 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Language
        • Spanish
      • Also known as
        • Jeca de Hollywood
      • 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 36 minutes
      • Color
        • Black and White

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