Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaActor Lionel Barrymore and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer executive Dore Schary present clips from the studio's 1951 releases, including "Quo Vadis".Actor Lionel Barrymore and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer executive Dore Schary present clips from the studio's 1951 releases, including "Quo Vadis".Actor Lionel Barrymore and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer executive Dore Schary present clips from the studio's 1951 releases, including "Quo Vadis".
Dore Schary
- Self - Host
- (as Mr. Dore Schary)
Lionel Barrymore
- Self - Introduction
- (as Mr. Lionel Barrymore)
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LIONEL BARRYMORE introduces a one hour segment of uninspired film clips from mostly sub-par movies that MGM was getting ready to release in 1951, when the studio was facing declining box-office receipts because of competition from television.
The films are shown in a bunch of uninspired clips that only indicate some of them should have been shelved. The B&W films come first, followed by the Technicolor features.
There's barely a jewel in MGM's crown--since none of the upcoming projects with the exception of one or two are anything to write home about. None of this looks good for Dore Schary, taking over after Louis B. Mayer stepped down. Films like GO FOR BROKE, IT'S A BIG COUNTRY, THE PAINTED HILLS (a Lassie story that didn't even get a film review from The N.Y. Times) and MR. IMPERIUM (Ezio Pinza and Lana Turner) and other even lesser products give no indication of quality films that have endured the test of time.
Might as well skip this puffed up commercial since it's tiresome and completely lacking in imagination and quality.
The films are shown in a bunch of uninspired clips that only indicate some of them should have been shelved. The B&W films come first, followed by the Technicolor features.
There's barely a jewel in MGM's crown--since none of the upcoming projects with the exception of one or two are anything to write home about. None of this looks good for Dore Schary, taking over after Louis B. Mayer stepped down. Films like GO FOR BROKE, IT'S A BIG COUNTRY, THE PAINTED HILLS (a Lassie story that didn't even get a film review from The N.Y. Times) and MR. IMPERIUM (Ezio Pinza and Lana Turner) and other even lesser products give no indication of quality films that have endured the test of time.
Might as well skip this puffed up commercial since it's tiresome and completely lacking in imagination and quality.
Hour-long promotional film with Lionel Barrymore introducing MGM head Dore Schary, who hawks the upcoming releases from MGM for the year 1951. We get clips from Show Boat, The Red Badge of Courage, Quo Vadis, Night Into Morning, Father's Little Dividend, It's a Big Country, An American in Paris, and many others. The framing sequences with Barrymore and Schare are in beautiful Technicolor. The film clips are in both color and black & white. It's a mildly interesting little curiosity but there's not much here that will appeal to anyone who isn't a die-hard fan of classic Hollywood. I found it watchable enough because I was bored but it's not something I would go out of my way to see again.
Lionel Barrymore introduces the segment about 1951 MGM films, which VP of production Dary Schory elaborates on.
First, trailers for the B/W films are shown: Go For Broke! - Asian Americans at war with Japan with Van Johnson
Inside Straight - Period piece about gamblers with Mercedes Mccambridge and David Brian and Arlene Dahl
People In Love - story about sudden loss -Ray Milland ad Nancy Davis.
Father's Little Dividend - Sequel to Father of the Bride with Spencer Tracy and Elizabeth Taylor.
Red Badge of Courage - Civil War story with Audie Murphy.
Four Guys Named Mike - Barry Sullivan, Van Johnson, Howard Keel, Jane Wyman in a romantic comedy
It's a Big Country - self-described propaganda with a big cast
Teresa - story of a war bride in Italy brought to the US by her soldier husband who is a moral coward
The Magnificent Yankee - Biopic of Oliver Wendell Holmes with Louis Calhern
Calling Bulldog Drummond - Walter Pidgeon in title role.
Soldiers Three - Kipling story - Walter Pidgeon and Stewart Granger
Color films: Showboat - Musical with Howard Keel and Kathryn Grayson
Across the Wide Missouri - Western epic with Clark Gable
Mr. Imperium - Musical romance with Lana Turner
The Painted Hills - A lesser Lassie tale that is not set in Scotland
Rich Young and Pretty -, Musical with Vic Damone and Jane Powell
Excuse My Dust - Comedy with Red Skelton
Pandora and the Flying Dutchman - adventure with Ava Gardner and James Mason
The Great Caruso - Musical biopic with Mario Lanza
Vengeance Valley - Western with Burt Lancaster and Joanna Dru
An American in Paris - Musical with Gene Kelly and Leslie Caron
King's Solomon's Mines - African adventure with Stewart Granger and Deborah Kerr
Royal Wedding - Musical about the Wedding of the Queen of England several years late - Fred Astaire and Jane Powell
Schary then makes special mention of "Quo Vadis" which is about Nero starring Robert Wagner and Deborah Kerr.
So B/W films are largely MGM's message pictures, which was Dory Schary's specialty. The color films are usually epics, musicals, and adventures. I named the stars you are likely to know. Quite a few I didn't mention were featured in a couple of MGM films, but their careers never went anywhere. This is probably worthwhile for the film historian.
First, trailers for the B/W films are shown: Go For Broke! - Asian Americans at war with Japan with Van Johnson
Inside Straight - Period piece about gamblers with Mercedes Mccambridge and David Brian and Arlene Dahl
People In Love - story about sudden loss -Ray Milland ad Nancy Davis.
Father's Little Dividend - Sequel to Father of the Bride with Spencer Tracy and Elizabeth Taylor.
Red Badge of Courage - Civil War story with Audie Murphy.
Four Guys Named Mike - Barry Sullivan, Van Johnson, Howard Keel, Jane Wyman in a romantic comedy
It's a Big Country - self-described propaganda with a big cast
Teresa - story of a war bride in Italy brought to the US by her soldier husband who is a moral coward
The Magnificent Yankee - Biopic of Oliver Wendell Holmes with Louis Calhern
Calling Bulldog Drummond - Walter Pidgeon in title role.
Soldiers Three - Kipling story - Walter Pidgeon and Stewart Granger
Color films: Showboat - Musical with Howard Keel and Kathryn Grayson
Across the Wide Missouri - Western epic with Clark Gable
Mr. Imperium - Musical romance with Lana Turner
The Painted Hills - A lesser Lassie tale that is not set in Scotland
Rich Young and Pretty -, Musical with Vic Damone and Jane Powell
Excuse My Dust - Comedy with Red Skelton
Pandora and the Flying Dutchman - adventure with Ava Gardner and James Mason
The Great Caruso - Musical biopic with Mario Lanza
Vengeance Valley - Western with Burt Lancaster and Joanna Dru
An American in Paris - Musical with Gene Kelly and Leslie Caron
King's Solomon's Mines - African adventure with Stewart Granger and Deborah Kerr
Royal Wedding - Musical about the Wedding of the Queen of England several years late - Fred Astaire and Jane Powell
Schary then makes special mention of "Quo Vadis" which is about Nero starring Robert Wagner and Deborah Kerr.
So B/W films are largely MGM's message pictures, which was Dory Schary's specialty. The color films are usually epics, musicals, and adventures. I named the stars you are likely to know. Quite a few I didn't mention were featured in a couple of MGM films, but their careers never went anywhere. This is probably worthwhile for the film historian.
Despite its misleading title, this is not a condensed history of M-G-M Studios. It is a one-hour promotional piece for what seems like every single one of M-G-M's then-upcoming releases for late 1950 and all of 1951, and although it's fun to watch to see the way film studios used to publicize its releases, it plays like a one-hour commercial, and can quickly get tiresome if you're not passionately interested.
At the beginning, the great actor Lionel Barrymore appears onscreen, making us hope that he will be our guide for the film; no such luck, unfortunately. Dore Schary, the then-new head of M-G-M, who ousted Louis B. Mayer from power, is our host, and he is quite bland and forgettable. We see clips (some of them quite familiar) from both Metro classics and obscure films, none lasting more than a minute or two, and one of the few interesting things about "The Metro-Goldwyn Mayer Story" is that some of these clips were shot before the films were actually finished. So, we get to see bass-baritone William Warfield shot from an entirely different camera angle, one that does not appear in the finished film, as he sings "Ol' Man River" in M-G-M's 1951 version of "Show Boat".
Unfortunately, "The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Story" does not go into detail about any of the films or how they were made, so all we basically get are tons of clips from M-G-M's 1950-51 films, and no single clip is long enough to keep us entertained (unlike, say, the "That's Entertainment!" films). "The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Story" is good for curiosity value, but it is no substitute for either a documentary about M-G-M or one of the "That's Entertainment" films.
At the beginning, the great actor Lionel Barrymore appears onscreen, making us hope that he will be our guide for the film; no such luck, unfortunately. Dore Schary, the then-new head of M-G-M, who ousted Louis B. Mayer from power, is our host, and he is quite bland and forgettable. We see clips (some of them quite familiar) from both Metro classics and obscure films, none lasting more than a minute or two, and one of the few interesting things about "The Metro-Goldwyn Mayer Story" is that some of these clips were shot before the films were actually finished. So, we get to see bass-baritone William Warfield shot from an entirely different camera angle, one that does not appear in the finished film, as he sings "Ol' Man River" in M-G-M's 1951 version of "Show Boat".
Unfortunately, "The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Story" does not go into detail about any of the films or how they were made, so all we basically get are tons of clips from M-G-M's 1950-51 films, and no single clip is long enough to keep us entertained (unlike, say, the "That's Entertainment!" films). "The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Story" is good for curiosity value, but it is no substitute for either a documentary about M-G-M or one of the "That's Entertainment" films.
The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Story (1951)
** 1/2 (out of 4)
As the 1950s came around, MGM was in some major financial trouble after several movies didn't catch on at the box office so they produced this 50 minute documentary hosted by Lionel Barrymore. The point of this documentary was to highlight several of the MGM films that were going to be released in the year in hopes that theater owners would be excited and not lose faith in them.
So what you basically have is a trailer compilation so if you enjoy such things then you'll probably have fun watching this. Countless trailers are shown including VENGEANCE VALLEY, ROYAL WEDDING, THE RED BRIDGE OF COURAGE, SOLDIERS THREE, THE PAINTED HILLS, THE GREAT CARUSO, EXCUSE MY DUST, SHOW BOAT, AN American IN Paris and QUO VADIS among others. It should be noted that each film doesn't have the trailer played in full but overall this is just a way for the studio to show what was coming up. It's certainly nothing special and will mainly appeal to people who would want to see clips from these films.
** 1/2 (out of 4)
As the 1950s came around, MGM was in some major financial trouble after several movies didn't catch on at the box office so they produced this 50 minute documentary hosted by Lionel Barrymore. The point of this documentary was to highlight several of the MGM films that were going to be released in the year in hopes that theater owners would be excited and not lose faith in them.
So what you basically have is a trailer compilation so if you enjoy such things then you'll probably have fun watching this. Countless trailers are shown including VENGEANCE VALLEY, ROYAL WEDDING, THE RED BRIDGE OF COURAGE, SOLDIERS THREE, THE PAINTED HILLS, THE GREAT CARUSO, EXCUSE MY DUST, SHOW BOAT, AN American IN Paris and QUO VADIS among others. It should be noted that each film doesn't have the trailer played in full but overall this is just a way for the studio to show what was coming up. It's certainly nothing special and will mainly appeal to people who would want to see clips from these films.
Você sabia?
- Erros de gravaçãoIn the segment on A Glória de um Covarde (1951), Dore Schary lists some previous credits of director John Huston. For O Tesouro da Sierra Madre (1948), Schary mispronounces "Sierra Madre" as "Sierra Madrayz".
- ConexõesFeatures As Minas do Rei Salomão (1950)
- Trilhas sonorasThere's No Business Like Show Business
from "Annie Get Your Gun"
Music and lyrics by Irving Berlin
Performed by studio orchestra
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- Tempo de duração1 hora
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Story (1951) officially released in Canada in English?
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