Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA European royal couple come to New York to sell some of the royal family's crown jewels. A gang of international jewel thieves plans to steal the gems, so a private detective is assigned to... Tout lireA European royal couple come to New York to sell some of the royal family's crown jewels. A gang of international jewel thieves plans to steal the gems, so a private detective is assigned to guard them. Unfortunately, the private eye turns out to be a bumbling, inept fool--or so ... Tout lireA European royal couple come to New York to sell some of the royal family's crown jewels. A gang of international jewel thieves plans to steal the gems, so a private detective is assigned to guard them. Unfortunately, the private eye turns out to be a bumbling, inept fool--or so everyone thinks.
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During his long career (starting in vaudeville, culminating as a headliner in the Ziegfeld Follies), Ed Wynn was very proud of the fact that every single line he ever spoke onstage he had written himself. He didn't write this movie. According to 'Variety' at the time, the production rushes for 'Rubber Heels' were so bad that Ed Wynn offered to pay Paramount the full amount they'd spent to make this movie, so that he could buy it back and destroy it. When Adolph Zukor refused Wynn's offer, Wynn spent the next few months publicly knocking this movie at every opportunity ... and then sailed off to Europe shortly before the film's premiere, so that he would be out of the country until the stench faded.
The eyeglasses which Wynn wears in this movie are not his distinctive hornrims, possibly because the similarly-bespectacled Harold Lloyd (a much bigger box-office name) was also under contract to Paramount at this time. Also, this is a silent film, so Wynn's distinctive vocal crotchets (which served him so well in radio and onstage) are absent.
Here's the so-called plot: the Prince and Princess of Backachia have come to New York City to sell their crown jewels. The Princess is played by Thelma Todd ... who looks quite sexy here -- with brunette hair for once, and a jewelled tiara -- but she isn't very impressive in a poorly-written role. The Prince is played by some untalented guy who's old enough to be Thelma Todd's father. Chester Conklin (very funny elsewhere, but not here) is the leader of a gang of thieves who plot to steal the sparklies. Ed Wynn is the inept detective who (for some reason) is assigned to guard the jewels. In this movie, Wynn plays one of those stupid bumblers who turns out not to be so stupid nor so incompetent after all. I've always found this sort of character much less plausible than the other sort of movie bumbler (played by, for example, George Formby or Norman Wisdom) who wins out at the end by sheer chance.
SPOILERS COMING. This movie is painfully unfunny and implausible. There's an alleged climax, when the thieves bring the steamer trunk containing the jewels to Niagara Falls, intending to smuggle them over the bridge into Canada. Wynn ends up locked in the trunk (of course), and the trunk accidentally goes over the falls (of course) ... except we're supposed to be impressed with a three-way surprise here, because (#1) the trunk didn't really go over the falls after all; (#2) the jewels weren't really in the trunk; and (#3) neither was Wynn. But we don't much care, partly because this movie is so wretched anyway ... but largely because the rear-projection process during the "Niagara Falls" sequences is so inept that we never for one moment believe that any of the characters are anywhere outside of Paramount's Astoria studio.
This movie was directed by Victor Heerman, who will not be totally forgotten any time soon ... because he directed the Marx Brothers in 'Animal Crackers'. That film's success is down to the talents of the Marxes and their writers, not the director. 'Rubber Heels' is much more typical of Heerman's abilities ... in other words, not much. Ruth Donnelly, later a splendid character actress at Warner Brothers, is very funny here in a brief role with the double-entendre name Fanny Pratt. I'm a fan of Ed Wynn's later work as a dramatic actor (again, successful only in supporting roles) so it saddens me to rate this movie only 2 points out of 10.
- F Gwynplaine MacIntyre
- 15 avr. 2003
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 10 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1