Film Review
The Marx Brothers followed up their phenomenonally successful
A Night at the Opera with this
equally frenetic comedy which proved to be an even greater box office
hit. Irving Thalberg, the boy wonder producer who persuaded
the Marxes to join him at MGM and who had considerable input into the
films they made for him, died from pneumonia mid-way through the
shooting of this film, aged 37. The loss of Thalberg was a blow
to the Marx Brothers and could explain the decline in the quality of
their subsequent films: they had lost a valuable guiding hand, someone
who knew how to get the best out of their unique brand of comedy.
Whilst it still divides critical opinion,
A Day at the Races contains some of
the Marx Brothers most memorable comedy routines. Amongst these,
the best is the Tootsie-frootsie ice cream scam, in which Chico offers
Groucho a betting tip and ends up getting him to buy a small library of
useless guides in order to decode the tip. Almost as
hilarious is the sequence in which Chico and Harpo try to rescue
Groucho from being exposed
in
flagrante delicto with a scheming femme fatale, their solution
being to wallpaper over the offending female. The best visual gag
is where Harpo casually smashes up grand piano and pulls his trademark
harp from the debris. This film shows us the Marx Brothers at
their slickest and most inventive, although we miss the wild anarchy
and lunatic improvisation of their earlier films.
With some judicious trimming and a little less excess padding this
could easily have been the best of the Marx Brothers films.
Unfortunately, in their infinite wisdom, MGM insisted on shoehorning
several song and dance numbers into the proceedings, and these take
away much more than they add. Who, going to watch a Marx Brothers
film, wants to see a languorous ballet routine or listen to a
succession of insipid romantic ballads? It would be an
interesting exercise to see what kind of film this would become if all
this unnecessary padding were removed and we were left only with the
Marx Brothers' material. Maybe MGM believed that this high
concentration of humour would be too much for audiences to
endure...?
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Judy Standish is the unhappy owner of a sanatorium which faces closure
unless she can raise the money to pay the mortgage. Her only hope
is her wealthy client Emily Upjohn, an inveterate hypochondriac, but
she has opted to leave the sanatorium when the doctors tell her that
there is nothing wrong with her. Judy's chauffeur, Tony, comes to
the rescue. He persuades Judy to appoint Dr Hugo Z. Hackenbush as
the new director of the sanatorium. Hackenbush is in truth a
veterinary but he convinces Mrs Upjohn that her imaginary ailments are
real and so persuades her to stay on. This development does not
please the property magnate Mr Morgan, who is determined to buy the
sanatorium from Judy. Realising that Hackenbush is a fraud,
the ruthless Mr Morgan sets about trying to expose him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.