Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA writer bets a friend that he can write a 10,000-word novel in 24 hours. The friends takes the bet, and gives him the keys to his Baldpate Inn, which has been closed for the winter, so he c... Leer todoA writer bets a friend that he can write a 10,000-word novel in 24 hours. The friends takes the bet, and gives him the keys to his Baldpate Inn, which has been closed for the winter, so he can write in complete seclusion. Things start heating up, though, when a succession of peop... Leer todoA writer bets a friend that he can write a 10,000-word novel in 24 hours. The friends takes the bet, and gives him the keys to his Baldpate Inn, which has been closed for the winter, so he can write in complete seclusion. Things start heating up, though, when a succession of people who also have keys to the inn begin showing up.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Myra Thornhill
- (as Elda Furry)
- Thomas Hayden
- (as C. Warren Cook)
Reseñas destacadas
The film is about a strange proposition. A very prolific writer, George Washington Magee (Cohan), is bet he cannot write an entire book in 24 hours. So, to make it easier, Magee heads to the small town of Baldpate to work on his book in the peace and quiet. Oddly, however, there is anything but peace and quite--and one crazy character after another come into the place where he's staying an Magee is pulled into a world of intrigue instead of working on his book.
The film is free to download from archive.org and it's worth it. A well made film that might seem a bit old fashioned today, but it's quite engaging.
James Cagney aped Cohan's acting style to a good degree in Yankee Doodle Dandy, but he forgot one very important characteristic. Cohan might be pushy, he might be ruthlessly self-centered, but he backs his self-esteem up with loads of charm. Can you imagine a charming Cagney? No! Cagney is all bluster, but no charm. No wonder Cohan was unimpressed with Cagney's performance. He left out the most telling ingredient of Cohan's unparalleled success.
Because he is so ingratiating, the audience is rooting for Cohan right from the start of this celebrated mystery comedy. True, there are no belly laughs in the play and the intriguingly atmospheric mystery elements often tend to overwhelm the quiet humor of the central situation, but cleverly (if somewhat outrageously) they never wholly succeed.
A great support cast led by the lovely Anna Q. Nilsson and a dazzling Hedda Hopper help maintain the pace. Eric Hudson, in his second of only three movie appearances (he died in 1918), also deserves a special pat on the back.
The movie is well-produced and most capably staged, although some critics might argue that the director tends to overdo all the lightning changes in tinted stock. But I found these atmospheric ploys not only novel but most effective.
*** (out of 4)
George Washington Magee (George M. Cohan) has another hit book on his hands but the critics aren't as kind as they feel he's wasting his talents by writing for the lowest forms of people. Magee makes a bet with his friend that he can write a great novel in a twenty- four hour period and agrees to stay at the isolated Baldpate Hotel where soon murder occurs.
SEVEN KEYS TO BALDPATE was a smash on Broadway so it was only natural that Cohan would take his talents to the movie screen. This adaptation of his play is certainly a very entertaining movie and it remains worth watching today because of you getting a chance to see Cohan in action. Most people think of James Cagney and YANKEE DOODLE DANDY when they think of Cohan today but he's a chance to see the real man in action.
The film is actually very well-made and especially when you consider when it was made. The cinematography is extremely good and I'd argue that the performances were as well. The story itself gets lost on you a time or two but this probably wasn't a problem back when the film was made as I'm sure most people were already familiar with it. As far as Cohan goes, I thought he gave a strong performance here and it's really too bad he didn't do more movies.
This was based on Cohan's hit stage play version, but he and director Hugh Ford do a decent job of spreading out the action to keep it from getting too stage bound. The play must have been dialogue heavy, as there are a lot more intertitles used than the usual. Cohan is very good, funny and lively. This seems to have been a precursor/inspiration for the "old dark house" sub-genre of horror-mystery-comedies. I enjoyed it.
Cohan had had a hit on the boards with the play, adapted from a story by Earl Derr Biggers, so successful that this was the second screen version; there would be seven big-screen versions eventually, of this Old Dark House comedy-drama.
Whence the type of story? I suspect it originally arose as a lampoon of Gothic romances, the sort which are still published in paperback, with the cover illustration showing a woman in something gauzy fleeing an old mansion with three lights in the upper windows. This particular story is a wacky one, judging by the other versions I have seen, but the principal pleasure lies in seeing George M. Cohan in his prime, playing George Washington Magee; the man of whom it is said he was born on the Fourth of July couldn't be yclept 'William' of course. You can see a lot of his stage performance on the screen here, soothed a bit for the screen. You the voice I hear in my mind when I read the titles of his words is Jimmy Cagney's.
With Anna Q. Nilsson and Hedda Hopper.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesFilm debut of George M. Cohan.
- ConexionesFeatured in The Gothic Horror Comedy in Hollywood (2023)
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- De sju nycklarna
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora 5 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1