Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA gossip columnist helps a Broadway ingenue beholden to a penthouse gangster.A gossip columnist helps a Broadway ingenue beholden to a penthouse gangster.A gossip columnist helps a Broadway ingenue beholden to a penthouse gangster.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
André Luguet
- Max Boncour
- (as Andre Luguet)
William Burress
- Ollie
- (escenas eliminadas)
George Raft
- Sneaky
- (escenas eliminadas)
George Beranger
- Manager of Elizabeth Morgan's
- (sin acreditar)
Gino Corrado
- Sardi's Waiter
- (sin acreditar)
George Ernest
- Newsboy
- (sin acreditar)
Harrison Greene
- City Editor
- (sin acreditar)
Eddie Kane
- Sardi's Captain of Waiters
- (sin acreditar)
John Larkin
- Tod - Jimmy's Elevator Operator
- (sin acreditar)
John Marston
- George Curley
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
This is a highly entertaining film that just misses being a pre-Code era classic. Doug Jr. is a Broadway columnist and Tracy his sidekick in this comedy-melodrama told in Wellman's odd straight-ahead style. Doug's a winning hero, and Frances Dee perfect as a truly sexy, selfish bitch who could string anyone along. Warren Hymer is better than usual as a doofus who's nonetheless fairly quick witted. Tracy is a bit muted, but, as always, is a joy to watch. In this cynical world, the high road is NOT doing an expose of milk price-fixing. The wise-cracks are plentiful and fun, but they don't quite jump up off the paper.
Douglas Fairbanks Jr. plays a worldly-wise newspaperman whose beat is Broadway. He always seems to be one step ahead of everyone and is never a chump...except when it comes to one woman (Frances Dee). This lady has written some bad checks and he decides to help her. However, it all ends up backfiring on him. It's a shame, as his lovely assistant (Ann Dvorak) can't get him to notice her. When his lady love gets in trouble, he decides to help her....with results he never anticipated. Along for the ride are Lee Tracy as his sidekick and Lyle Talbot as the tough guy who has the rubber checks.
While this isn't a bad film, it isn't all that great either. One way I knew this is that as I watched, I kept finding my attention drifting. The dialog is a bit snappy but there just seems to be SOMETHING missing. I think it's fun...and perhaps an interesting plot. A time-passer and nothing more.
While this isn't a bad film, it isn't all that great either. One way I knew this is that as I watched, I kept finding my attention drifting. The dialog is a bit snappy but there just seems to be SOMETHING missing. I think it's fun...and perhaps an interesting plot. A time-passer and nothing more.
Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Is the Broadway columnist for a big New York paper. He's also in love with gorgeous Frances Dee, just back in the City with her aunt Cecil Cunningham. She's trying to promote a career, either on the stage or Park Avenue, and Doug is trying to help her with the former, as well as a fortune in rubber checks she's passed. But gangster Lyle Talbot is also interested in the lady, and has paid off the checks. He's expecting something in return. Can newspaper pals Lee Tracy and Ann Dvorak figure out where Fairbanks has been kidnapped to?
With that title and William Wellman directing, I was expecting a sardonic comedy; after all, he would helm NOTHING SACRED and ROXIE HART. But Wellman was a master of the tough-men-bonding-in-tough-circumstances stories that Howard Hawks and John Ford liked to tell, and it became clear about halfway through that this movie is about that. The humor starts to drain out of movie about a third of the way in, along with the idea of romantic love. It is replaced, though, with love born of respect and risks faced together. Nor does it limit itself to men, with Miss Dvorak giving one of her graceful, understated performances.
With that title and William Wellman directing, I was expecting a sardonic comedy; after all, he would helm NOTHING SACRED and ROXIE HART. But Wellman was a master of the tough-men-bonding-in-tough-circumstances stories that Howard Hawks and John Ford liked to tell, and it became clear about halfway through that this movie is about that. The humor starts to drain out of movie about a third of the way in, along with the idea of romantic love. It is replaced, though, with love born of respect and risks faced together. Nor does it limit itself to men, with Miss Dvorak giving one of her graceful, understated performances.
A "pretty good" starring role for the dashing Douglas Fairbanks jr, who had good movies and bad movies. Here, he is a newspaper reporter Jimmy Russell, trying to catch a gal who cannot seem to settle down. Co stars are Ann Dvorak (Merrily we Live and Three on a Match) and Frances Dee (Little Women, Human Bondage), and Lee Tracy (Dinner at Eight), who has a most interesting biography on his page on IMDb. Oddly, we don't really know much about his character in this movie... he's just kind of there. Dedicated black- and- white- movie watchers will see Eddie Kane and Gino Corrado, who play waiters at Sardi's restaurant they were assistants or sidekicks in just about every movie made since dirt was invented. Of course Russell (Fairbanks) has an adversarial relationship with his newspaper boss (although this film probably pre-dated most of the others that used that ploy).... and there are a couple of other hard to believe things going on here, but I won't spoil any plot monkey-business. Watch for the cool telephone gadget at the very beginning....and a long, lecture on love and life at the very end.
This almost seventy-five year old programmer holds up amazingly well due in large part to the skilled acting of the leads, a witty script that keeps everything lighthearted, and the masterful direction of William A. Wellman. The title may sound silly but if the viewer watches the entire film, "Love is a Racket" is explained by Douglas Fairbanks Jr. at the very end via a harangue on the ephemeral nature of romantic love.
Filled with cynicism draped with roses Fairbanks learns about love from all the wrong people, in particular from the wily, ambitious Mary Wodehouse (Frances Dee), who has been spoiled rotten by her Aunt Hattie Donovan. Seems Mary has been bouncing checks and wants Jimmy Russell (Fairbanks) to bail her out. When he attempts to retrieve the hot checks by asking the holders to wait a while before cashing them, he learns that a mobster has picked them up already. When Jimmy finds the mobster dead, he takes possession of the checks and makes it all look like a suicide unawares that his columnist buddy, Stanley Fiske (Lee Tracy), is watching.
This little gem from the early days of the Great Depression is well worthwhile and still entertaining even after seven decades.
Filled with cynicism draped with roses Fairbanks learns about love from all the wrong people, in particular from the wily, ambitious Mary Wodehouse (Frances Dee), who has been spoiled rotten by her Aunt Hattie Donovan. Seems Mary has been bouncing checks and wants Jimmy Russell (Fairbanks) to bail her out. When he attempts to retrieve the hot checks by asking the holders to wait a while before cashing them, he learns that a mobster has picked them up already. When Jimmy finds the mobster dead, he takes possession of the checks and makes it all look like a suicide unawares that his columnist buddy, Stanley Fiske (Lee Tracy), is watching.
This little gem from the early days of the Great Depression is well worthwhile and still entertaining even after seven decades.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesDuring his tenure with Warner Bros., William A. Wellman churned out a number of energetic, fast-paced entertainments which are often overlooked by admirers of his work but stand out from the assembly-line programmers they were intended to be. Among the highlights from this early period are Enfermeras de noche (1931) with Barbara Stanwyck, the grim Pre-Code drama A salvo en el infierno (1931) and Love Is a Racket (1932) (1932) starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr. as a newspaper columnist working the Broadway beat. The latter film is not only a fascinating time capsule of its era, with glimpses of then-popular New York City nightspots such as Sardi's, but also presents an unapologetic, cynical view of reporters who often resort to any means necessary to score a front-page story.
Wellman would go on to make several more distinctive B-pictures for Warner Bros. including the post-World War I social drama Gloria y hambre (1933) and the picaresque railroad adventure, Wild Boys of the Road (1933), but Love Is a Racket (1932) is a fun, unpretentious introduction to his Pre-Code films for the studio.
- Citas
James 'Jimmy' Russell: [Giving her a gift of 'nylon' stockings] Here you are, ya' peroxide pirate.
Switchboard Operator: Oh, Mr. Russell... they're lovely! And extra length, too!
James 'Jimmy' Russell: Yeah... winter'll soon be here.
- ConexionesAlternate-language version of En baja forma (1932)
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Detalles
- Duración
- 1h 12min(72 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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