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IMDbPro

All-American Co-Ed

  • 1941
  • Approved
  • 49min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
4,9/10
468
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Johnny Downs and Frances Langford in All-American Co-Ed (1941)
ComediaMusical

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaAll-girl school Mar Brynn tries to get more pupils and publicity by making fun of the Quincton college. For revenge, the boys there sent Bob Sheppard to Mar Brynn, dressed as a girl, to give... Leer todoAll-girl school Mar Brynn tries to get more pupils and publicity by making fun of the Quincton college. For revenge, the boys there sent Bob Sheppard to Mar Brynn, dressed as a girl, to give them a slight scandal.All-girl school Mar Brynn tries to get more pupils and publicity by making fun of the Quincton college. For revenge, the boys there sent Bob Sheppard to Mar Brynn, dressed as a girl, to give them a slight scandal.

  • Dirección
    • LeRoy Prinz
  • Guión
    • Cortland Fitzsimmons
    • Kenneth Higgins
    • LeRoy Prinz
  • Reparto principal
    • Frances Langford
    • Johnny Downs
    • Marjorie Woodworth
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    4,9/10
    468
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • LeRoy Prinz
    • Guión
      • Cortland Fitzsimmons
      • Kenneth Higgins
      • LeRoy Prinz
    • Reparto principal
      • Frances Langford
      • Johnny Downs
      • Marjorie Woodworth
    • 22Reseñas de usuarios
    • 5Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado para 2 premios Óscar
      • 2 nominaciones en total

    Imágenes5

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    Reparto principal29

    Editar
    Frances Langford
    Frances Langford
    • Virginia Collinge
    Johnny Downs
    Johnny Downs
    • Bob Sheppard…
    Marjorie Woodworth
    Marjorie Woodworth
    • Bunny
    Noah Beery Jr.
    Noah Beery Jr.
    • Slinky
    Esther Dale
    Esther Dale
    • Aunt Matilda Collinge
    Harry Langdon
    Harry Langdon
    • Hap Holden
    Alan Hale Jr.
    Alan Hale Jr.
    • Tiny
    Kent Rogers
    • Henry
    Allan Lane
    Allan Lane
    • Second Senior
    Joe Brown Jr.
    • Third Senior
    Irving Mitchell
    • Doctor
    Lillian Randolph
    Lillian Randolph
    • Deborah - the Washwoman
    Carlyle Blackwell Jr.
    Carlyle Blackwell Jr.
    • Fourth Senior
    Mickey Tanner
    • Tanner Sisters Trio Member
    • (as The Tanner Sisters)
    Betty Tanner
    • Tanner Sisters Trio Member
    • (as The Tanner Sisters)
    Martha Tanner
    • Tanner Sisters Trio Member
    • (as The Tanner Sisters)
    Helen Chapman
    Helen Chapman
    • Cabbage Queen
    • (sin acreditar)
    Majory Dean
    • Co-Ed
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • LeRoy Prinz
    • Guión
      • Cortland Fitzsimmons
      • Kenneth Higgins
      • LeRoy Prinz
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios22

    4,9468
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    Reseñas destacadas

    dougdoepke

    Cute Little Farce

    About as light-weight as a puff of smoke, the movie still manages to be a rather delightful surprise. The songs are pretty forgettable, though LeRoy Prinz's choreography helps compensate. And catch that opening—I had to look twice to make sure I wasn't imagining. The premise is a loaded one. A boys' fraternity gets revenge on an all-girls' school by dressing one of the brothers as a girl and sending him over to cause trouble. Actor Downs in drag is a hoot and some boy's nightmare blind date. Naturally, he falls for one of the girls, but can't give away his disguise. There're a number of cute set-ups, energetically executed by a lively cast, including yokels Beery Jr. and Hale. Watching Downs negotiate a girdle while lying on a bed is a real hoot. All in all, it's an amusing little farce, rather like Alan Dwan's two farcical set-ups of the same period, Getting Gertie's Garter (1945), and Up in Mabel's Room (1944).
    7ptb-8

    Campus a row of tents

    What? this film is 65 years old? It plays like a sequel to PRISCILLA QUEEN OF THE DESERT or a prequel to SOME LIKE IT HOT. Apart from WONDERBAR I have never seen such a gay movie...in fact the ad line in 1941 (!) was "The year's gayest comedy" . It is gay in the way gay is a modern GAY expression. The head of the girls school, a single matronly sort, (keen to rub one girl's 'chest') takes a look at a pic of one girl posing with vegetables and exclaims "Look at those beautiful tomatoes!" and on it goes. There's a song on a train that the girls sing to each other: "I am up at the crack of Dawn (because I have been dreaming of you)".. Honestly! Rude risqué and believe it or not, a full scale drag queen comedy. Apparently there is a university called Quinceton (as in Princeton for Queens) which has a fraternity of good lookin' fellas who all do drag. See that opening scene: They're all in it! Tutus and all... They decide to send one guy to the girls school...in full drag.... The big finale has a song in it about how the Farmer's daughter is alone on the farm since the men have gone to war. The lyric repeated over and over is that "she's can't just rumba with an old cucumber"...... it's not just ME is it ?...hearing this and gasping in laughter and astonishment? Is it? Why are these lyrics in this film this way.. and all the drag antics.... this film is as modern today as any other drag film... and as rude. This gay coded one sidestepped the Hayes office in a dress... and an old cucumber. Hilarious! the DVD is excellent quality too. The music score is terrific: 2 Oscar noms. Because the DVD is spotless this film looks like a new production; and the modern risqué mindset makes it absolutely almost up to date. What also helps is the cast of 20 somethings ...especially the boys each of whom have modern haircuts. Noah Beery Jnr turns up late in the film styled exactly like someone you would see in a magazine today. Incredible;a 65 year old drag show! yeesh! Silent star Harry Langdon is a treat to see too.
    8F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    She pulls on his bellrope.

    The joke in this film's title was too subtle for me, but a Yank friend explained it: "All-American" formerly designated a group of male collegiate athletes, and a "Co-Ed" was a female college student ... so "All-American Co-Ed" is a sexual oxymoron. Here's a musical comedy about transvestism which (except for some unpleasant racial humour) manages to maintain at least a surface appearance of innocence. But under that surface ... whoops!

    The late choreographer LeRoy Prinz was openly gay: Max Wilk's book 'The Wit and Wisdom of Hollywood' contains an hilarious anecdote about Prinz working for "Aunt Sam" during WW2. Prinz usually subordinated his talents to other film-makers' vision. When Prinz decided to make his first movie as a director-producer, 'All-American Co-Ed' was the result. I can't help wondering to what extent this cross-dressed story struck a personal chord with Prinz. I'm aware that homosexuality and transvestism are two different phenomena, but there's inevitably some overlap. Considering that 'All-American Co-Ed' is almost entirely about cross-dressing, there's surprisingly little homosexual content here ... and most of it is sapphic rather than male.

    Every culture has its cross-dressed traditions. We Brits have got panto dames and principal boys. For some reason, the Americans have got Hasty Pudding clubs with college males in frocks and wigs. I normally dislike American college movies, since they're always about the Big Game or the Big Dance. (Classes? What classes?) 'All-American Co-Ed' gets a free pass for that crime with its witty disclaimer: 'Any similarity to actual college life depicted in this picture is purely coincidental.' Prinz starts out dangerously during the opening credits by showing a chorus line of shapely gams, inviting us to find them attractive ... then tilting upwards to reveal that these are college boys in drag. Good job for me I'd spotted the male kneecaps.

    There are some weird musical decisions here. Johnny Downs, in full drag but male voice (like Danny La Rue) warbles 'I'm a Chap with a Chip on His Shoulder' while tapping his shoulders. Why would a female impersonator deliberately call attention to his shoulders? (Elsewhere, some genuinely female chorines sing about 'The Crack of Dawn' ... is there a pattern here?) The 1940s seem to have been some golden age for drag, since women's fashions in that decade favoured padded shoulders, enabling transvestites to get by with linebacker clavicles. During one scene in this movie, Frances Langford's outfit has wider shoulders than Johnny Downs's! Some of the clothes on the (real) females in this movie are extremely attractive. However, Johnny Downs's stunt double (likewise in female garb), who shoulder-flips Noah Beery Jnr, is even less convincingly feminine than Downs.

    Considering that Bob Sheppard (Downs) is trying to pass for female, he makes some weird decisions ... such as choosing the tomboy name 'Bobbie' rather than a genuine female alias. (Femalias?) Even more fatally, he fakes a dainty swoon in the presence of Noah Beery Jnr and Alan Hale Jnr ... but deliberately falls into Beery's arms, letting Beery find out how heavy 'she' is. Oh, and Downs gets to speak that line (mandatory dialogue in every drag comedy) about how it 'sure feels good' to get out of those female clothes ... so we don't get any, erm, ideas.

    Johnny Downs was apparently unable to speak in a convincing female register, so 'Bobbie' pretends to have laryngitis. Downs should have used the trick that professional female impersonators use: practise speaking with only the upper half of his vocal cords, so that his voice will be in the female range and timbre with fewer overtones.

    There are quite a few double entendres in the dialogue and lyrics. Somebody comments that Johnny Downs (in female disguise) looks like 'orchids covered in dew'. Did anyone connected with this movie check the origin of the word 'orchid'? The women's school is cried Mar Brynn, an obvious parody of Bryn Mawr. I wonder if anyone realised that 'Bryn Mawr' is Welsh for 'big breast'.

    Harry Langdon has his best role (and gives his best performance) of his talkies career here, as a glib publicist, while Esther Dale is lumbered with the role of the headmistress who doesn't twig that "Bobbie" (with male jawline and falsetto voice) is a male, even when 'she' goes to bed in full make-up. Memo to all headmistresses: when a female student shows up at your boarding school with only one piece of luggage, she's no female.

    Downs (in male garb) and Langford 'meet cute' in a surprisingly erotic scene with a bellrope. (He ain't done right by our knell.) I could have done without dialogue like 'A girl doesn't want to live in a mind; she wants to live with a husband.' Also annoying are Kent Rogers's alleged impersonations of celebrities, including (just before the fade-out, in voice-over) Jerry Colonna. Black performer Dudley Dickerson is stuck in a 'yassuh' role but at least he gets to cut loose with some dance steps. Less pleasant is a scene in which Downs 'haunts' black laundress Lillian Randolph.

    Somehow, this impoverished all-female college devoted to 'horticulture' (oh, dear) manages to stage an elaborate musical with plenty of invisible musicians on the soundtrack, some wince-worthy lyrics, plus Downs doing some surprisingly graceful pirouettes. However, the photography and lighting throughout the film are excellent, especially during Langford's big number ... which contains a patriotic reference, possibly leading audiences in 1941 to wonder why all these big strong college boys are in frocks instead of uniforms. 'All-American Co-Ed' gets my rating of 8 out of 10. Now put your trousers on, lads.
    7campfire

    Kent Rogers

    The rather sourpuss comment by another reviewer, "In addition, having Kent Rogers along for support didn't help. While Rogers imitations were funny and helped in his brief appearance in STALAG 17 a decade later, here he just seemed like someone's obnoxious child mugging at the camera and doing some terrible impersonations" is aesthetically questionable and factually incorrect. Rogers' impressions were really quite good, although very badly integrated into the scenes in which he appeared. That was the script's fault, not his. And he was NOT in Stalag 17--he was killed in the war a couple of years after making this film.
    5bkoganbing

    A real drag Downer

    Quinceton University student Johnny Downs agrees to a practical joke by gaining a scholarship to girl's college Mar Brynn in drag. But the whole thing threatens to go south as Downs fall for Mar Brynn coed Frances Langford. Of course it all ends with a show in the best Mickey and Judy tradition.

    I think that Hal Roach probably had a longer and more coherent version of this film, but it was butchered by editors and probably further sliced and diced for television. Still a lot of funny people like former silent screen star Harry Langdon got some bits in.

    Also getting bits in were Noah Beery, Jr. and Alan Hale, Jr. At this time in their careers both Dad Rockford and the Skipper were only known as the offspring of some great character actors. Here they play a pair of lunkhead Quinceton jocks.

    All American Coed even got some Academy Award nomination recognition for Best Musical Scoring and Best Song. The song is Out Of The Silence and it truly has not stood the test of time. The winner was The Last Time I Saw Paris which truly has.

    I doubt we'll see a director's cut of All American Coed.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Alan Hale Jr.'s first credited film performance.
    • Citas

      Hap Holden: Oh, don't be silly. Everybody knows that Quinceton men don't succeed - they inherit

    • Banda sonora
      I'm a Chap with a Chip on My Shoulder
      by Walter G. Samuels and Charles Newman

      Performed by Johnny Downs (uncredited) with chorus

      Sung by Frances Langford (uncredited)

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    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 31 de octubre de 1941 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • All American Girl
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Hal Roach Studios - 8822 Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, Estados Unidos(Studio)
    • Empresa productora
      • Hal Roach Studios
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 49min
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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