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Music in the Air

  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
1K
YOUR RATING
John Boles and Gloria Swanson in Music in the Air (1934)
ComedyMusicalRomance

Constantly quarreling couple decide to try the jealousy angle when a naive young couple comes along.Constantly quarreling couple decide to try the jealousy angle when a naive young couple comes along.Constantly quarreling couple decide to try the jealousy angle when a naive young couple comes along.

  • Director
    • Joe May
  • Writers
    • Jerome Kern
    • Oscar Hammerstein II
    • Howard Irving Young
  • Stars
    • Gloria Swanson
    • John Boles
    • Douglass Montgomery
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joe May
    • Writers
      • Jerome Kern
      • Oscar Hammerstein II
      • Howard Irving Young
    • Stars
      • Gloria Swanson
      • John Boles
      • Douglass Montgomery
    • 9User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

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    Top cast65

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    Gloria Swanson
    Gloria Swanson
    • Frieda Hotzfelt
    John Boles
    John Boles
    • Bruno Mahler
    Douglass Montgomery
    Douglass Montgomery
    • Karl Roder
    June Lang
    June Lang
    • Sieglinde Lessing
    Al Shean
    Al Shean
    • Dr. Walter Lessing
    Reginald Owen
    Reginald Owen
    • Ernst Weber
    Joseph Cawthorn
    Joseph Cawthorn
    • Hans Uppman
    Hobart Bosworth
    Hobart Bosworth
    • Cornelius
    Sara Haden
    Sara Haden
    • Martha
    Marjorie Main
    Marjorie Main
    • Anna
    Roger Imhof
    Roger Imhof
    • Burgomaster
    Jed Prouty
    Jed Prouty
    • Kirschner
    Christian Rub
    Christian Rub
    • Zipfelhuber
    Fuzzy Knight
    Fuzzy Knight
    • Nick
    Frank Austin
    Frank Austin
    • Peasant
    • (uncredited)
    Peanuts Banks
    • Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    Lynn Bari
    Lynn Bari
    • Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    Kathryn Barnes
    Kathryn Barnes
    • Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Joe May
    • Writers
      • Jerome Kern
      • Oscar Hammerstein II
      • Howard Irving Young
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    6.01K
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    Featured reviews

    10georgestrum

    Music In The Air Music To Your Ears

    This was an excellent adaptation to film from the stage hit by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II. The opening Alpine scene reminds you of a later film, "Sound of Music". A strong screenplay by Howard Young and Billy Wilder that avoided becoming too saccharine.Gloria Swanson was given top billing as a tempestuous German Prima Donna and she did all her own singing which was quite good. She really was a hoot in her role and she really was a natural for comedy. John Boles plays the show's lyric writer and is suave as ever and sung on his own rather well too. Douglas Montgomery is fun to watch. He's a little bit on the goofy side and his songs were dubbed by a James O'Brien. June Lang played the heroine trying to break into show business but fails. Her vocals were dubbed as well by a Betty Hiestand. Ms. Lang showed great effort but like her character she played, doesn't quite cut it. Perhaps she took the same advice and went home. We never heard from her again. Al Shean is also a classic act as the Poppa.
    arneblaze

    Kern-Hammerstein froth with stars at their peak

    This is a lightweight piece of musical fluff- very stagebound from the Broadway hit as it is transferred to early musical film. The libretto isn't much and only one of the seven songs became a hit - I'VE TOLD EVERY LITTLE STAR. However, it is the star personalities that make this a delightful romp.

    Gloria Swanson and John Boles are the protypes for Fred and Lili Graham, the feuding husband and wife leads in KISS ME KATE. Here they perfectly assess the comedic and vocal requirements of their roles and play them to the hilt. As the young male lead Douglass Montgomery gives one of his finest performances, full of joy and innocence. June Lang fares somewhat less as the ingenue support, registering neither talent nor personality. Al Shean does his usual Charles-Winniger want to be turn as the old song writer. Marjorie Main has a silent role as Swanson's maid.

    The score contains two dances and the songs: SCHOOL PRAYER; BEYOND THE HILL; WE BELONG TOGETHER; I'M COMING HOME; ALL ALONE; ONE MORE DANCE; and the hit I'VE TOLD EVERY LITTLE STAR.

    A must-see for Swanson fans - after seeing this and TONIGHT OR NEVER, it stll baffles me why she wasn't a big talkies star - she could do anything - drama, comedy, musical - with flair and inventiveness. It was certainly our loss.
    6bkoganbing

    Operetta backstage story

    When Gloria Swanson sang Love Your Magic Spell Is Everywhere in The Trespasser Hollywood discovered she had a great singing voice. Sad to say though that this film adaption of Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein,II's Broadway show Music In The Air was the only film that really exploited her vocal talents.

    In fact we're lucky that this film was made at all. It was right about now that German subjects became not very popular. Sigmund Romberg's The Student Prince had to wait until 1954 for a film version. Among the Jewish moguls in Hollywood, Germany was now symbolized by its Fuehrer and his goosestepping sycophants.

    Music In The Air is set in Bavaria in the small village of Elmendorf where Al Shean has written a song inspired by a bird call that becomes I've Told Every Little Star. Shean is an old friend of a music publisher in Munich and he and daughter June Lang and her bashful beau Douglass Montgomery head there to see if he can get the song published.

    Shean and his old friend Reginald Owen get the song inserted in a new operetta. But Lang and Montgomery become pawns in the diva like machinations of John Boles and Gloria Swanson, a talented but always quarreling couple. Lang winds up with the lead in the show, but does she have the right stuff?

    Music In The Air is one of Jerome Kern's best and most beloved shows which theatrical companies still produce. As is usual the show's score was cut to ribbons. I've Got Every Little Star which is the focal point of the whole show had to stay. But what possessed the folks at Fox to cut The Song Is You from the film? I'm sure lots of people who plunked down their Depression Era nickels to see this film were royally disappointed at not hearing The Song Is You. John Boles was supposed to sing it and I'll bet he was more than disappointed when his number was cut.

    By the way part of the Jerome Kern legend is that he actually did hear a bird call the way Al Shean does in the film and got the idea for I've Told Every Little Star. Shean is the only member of the Broadway cast to repeat his role for the film.

    The film version of Music In The Air will I fear be a disappointment to fans of Jerome Kern's music as I am. Nice the film got made at all, but without The Song Is You it is most incomplete.
    6planktonrules

    Enjoyable fluff...but fluff nonetheless.

    In many ways this is a very strange film. After all, three expatriates who escaped Europe due to the rise of Hitler all were major factors in creating this film. Joe May, Erich Pommer and Billy Wilder all worked to direct, produce and write this film...a film which brings us an incredibly idealized and Hitler-free version of Bavaria! In this fairy tale land, everyone is happy, there's no repression and militarization simply doesn't exist. I wonder how these three men felt about this. Was this their homage to the Germany they used to love or did they feel a bit dirty for producing such a pasteurized view of modern Germany? Who knows...all I know is that having these three men being responsible for bringing the play to the big screen is interesting.

    As for the film, it has LOTS of music...lots and lots. And it's not necessarily the enjoyable type by today's standards--being the operatic style popularized by Jeanette McDonald and Nelson Eddy. Still, the main song is very hummable and the plot slight, but enjoyable. Plus, while her voice was not brilliant, I was surprised because Gloria Swansen appeared to actually be singing in the film...competently. Overall, a silly but enjoyable piece of fluff that is a nice time passer about folks learning to accept their lots in life. I can see why this film did nothing to help the career of Erich Plommer, as it wasn't a bad film but an easy one for the studios to ignore...as well as his subsequent efforts.
    tashman

    Babes Vs. Diva's in more innocent era

    Here we find various famous talents converging at the height of their fame and appeal. Where has this film been all these years? This was a big Depression stage hit for the Master, Jerome Kern, and one of his equally accomplished partners, Oscar Hammerstein II, and transferred to the screen with much of the original delight intact. Definitely a slight tale from a much more innocent era, the story is literally a competition between a team of singing divas each latching onto an attractive, naive, and somewhat star-struck fan visiting from a small Tyrolean mountain village. If it weren't so well done, you might call it all "kitschy," but the result is so sincere that one gets swept up. There are marvelous moments, but surprisingly, not too many involving the famous star, Gloria Swanson, and her handsome sparring partner John Boles. Nothing wrong with their singing, which is, well, glorious! It's the "Diva" act. Although they just skirt going over-the-top on many occasions, there is an overall lack of punch, with too many blasts sailing over their targets. There's a lot of layered shouting, as if everyone were struggling to "work the screwball angle." The best moments are enjoyed during the lush and enchanting music, and in the scenes involving the village, particularly the school-room sequences with teacher and leading bucolic Douglass Montomerey, who turns in the best performance I've seen him give, with not a hint of that namby-pamby, self-pitying, "gloomy Gus" he specialized in. Here he is robust, cheerful, positive, and often found wearing the complete Tyrolean mountain-climbing uniform, which he definitely had the legs to wear. Indeed, he, along with his fellow villagers June Lang and Al Shean, make an energetic, thoroughly entertaining lot, much better at mining the script than their more sophisticated counterparts. The settings are impressive, the period detail attractive, and the costuming, particularly Miss Swanson's wardrobe (although Mr. Boles is decked out to the nines as well), is sensational throughout. Director Joe May pulled off an impressive feat, bringing together unlikely, if somewhat battered giants like Kern, Fox, and Swanson, and making them work so beautifully together. I believe if you enjoy Lubitsch, or European flavor musicals of that era, you'll certainly appreciate this picture.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
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    Musical
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The show's best-known song, "The Song is You," was recorded and filmed but cut out of the final release version. As filmed, John Boles sang it to June Lang in a dressing room scene. An instrumental of the song can still be heard under the opening credits.
    • Quotes

      Frieda Hotzfelt: [Frieda and Bruno enter, bickering; Frieda is cradling a Pekinese dog] ... Yes it is! It's all your fault.

      Bruno Mahler: What do you mean it's my fault? He started it. Pogo just bit me.

      Frieda Hotzfelt: Well what if he did? You made faces at him.

      Bruno Mahler: No, he made faces at me first

      Frieda Hotzfelt: [petting the dog] Little precious. Did naughty Bruno frighten you? My little Pogo... my sweet darling.

      Frieda Hotzfelt: [they see Karl holding an office assistant up by the ankles so she can reach the top of a cupboard] Did you see that?

      Bruno Mahler: Probably raised on goats' milk!

    • Crazy credits
      The film opens with a long shot of a mountain, and the title "Music in the Air" wafts in as if blown there by a mountain wind.
    • Connections
      Featured in Out of My Dreams: Oscar Hammerstein II (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      School Prayer
      Music by Jerome Kern

      Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II

      Performed by Douglass Montgomery (dubbed by Dave O'Brien) and children in the school

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 13, 1934 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Liebesreigen
    • Production company
      • Fox Film Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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