Film Review
The Marx Brothers were so disappointed with
The Big Store (their tenth film,
not counting their aborted silent short
Humor Risk) that they decided this
would be the time for them to retire gracefully from the movies.
Of course, it wasn't their last film - they would return five years
later in
A Night in Casablanca
(1946) and then
Love Happy (1949) (primarily to
rescue Chico from his mass of gambling debts). It was however the end of
an era - the Marxes' last film for MGM and the beginning of their
decline from international comedy superstars to past-their-prime
celebrities.
The Big Store is mercifully
not all bad and, in fact, it contains some of the Marxes' best
material. The scene at the start of the film in which Margaret
Dumont (the brothers' customary stooge) pays a visit to Groucho's seedy
Sam Spade office is classic Marx
Brothers, packed to the rafters with visual gags and inventive
wordplay. Who cannot fail to be delighted when Chico and Harpo
throw themselves into a humorous piano duet which ends up resembling a
tug-of-war? And who can forget the scene in which Harpo, decked
out as a regency beau, performs a concert trio with two images of
himself seen in mirrors? But, alas, these nougats of pure
comedy gold are few and far between in this film. Too much time
is squandered on silly Mack Sennett-style slapstick and intrusive,
over-long musical numbers which are drenched in the most truly hideous lyrics.
It can be argued that MGM was just about the worst thing that happened
to the Marx Brothers. Whilst it is true that the studio was
instrumental in rebooting their career after the failure of
Duck
Soup (1933), it is obvious that MGM undervalued the Marxes
and were unsure how to employ them. Time and again the comic
potential of the brothers was compromised by MGM's insistence on using
them as comic support in an otherwise conventional Hollywood romantic
comedy. Extravagant musical numbers and overly complicated plots
would provide unwelcome distractions from the Marxes' elaborate,
anarchic and unceasingly funny, comedy routines.
The Big Store exemplifies what a
wasted opportunity the MGM Marx Brothers films were - a unique comedy
genius straitjacketed by Hollywood conformity.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
Singer Tommy Rogers intends to sell his share in Phelps Department
Store so that he can open a music school in a poor area of New
York. Unfortunately, his business partner, Mr Grover, has no
intention of seeing the store change hands and so plans to arrange for
Tommy to meet with a little accident. After a first attempt on
Tommy's life fails, his aunt, the wealthy Mrs Phelps, engages private
detective Wolf J. Flywheel as his personal bodyguard. With the
help of his dumb assistant Wacky and Tommy's former music teacher
Ravelli, Flywheel exposes Grover as the villain of the piece - but will
he live to tell the tale...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.