Animal Crackers (film)
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Animal Crackers | |
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Animal Crackers 1930 Movie Poster |
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Directed by | Victor Heerman |
Written by | Bert Kalmar Harry Ruby George S. Kaufman |
Starring | Groucho Marx Harpo Marx Chico Marx Zeppo Marx Lillian Roth Margaret Dumont |
Music by | Bert Kalmar Harry Ruby |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date(s) | August 28, 1930 |
Running time | 97 min |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
Animal Crackers is a 1930 comedy film, and one of the Marx Brothers' most beloved and oft-quoted movies.
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[edit] Stars and direction
The film stars the four brothers, Groucho Marx, Chico Marx, Harpo Marx, and Zeppo Marx, as well as Lillian Roth and Margaret Dumont. It was directed by Victor Heerman and adapted from a successful 1928 Broadway play by George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind, also starring the Marx Brothers and Margaret Dumont. (See Animal Crackers).
The part of Hives the butler was played by Robert Greig, a character actor who appeared in over 100 films (many in the role of a butler). He also appeared with the Marx Brothers in Horse Feathers. A 15-second clip of the Marx Brothers, filmed on the set of Animal Crackers during the Captain Spaulding scene in Multicolor, was recently discovered (see below).
[edit] Plot
The plot concerns Groucho, as explorer Captain Geoffrey T. Spaulding, attending a party in his honor at the estate of society matron Mrs. Rittenhouse, and investigating the theft of a valuable painting during the party.
[edit] Jokes
Three of Groucho's best known quips:
- One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I don't know.
- (The American Film Institute listed this as one of the 100 Greatest Movie Quotes of All Time.)[1]
- While shooting elephants in Africa, we found the tusks very difficult to remove. Of course, in Alabama the Tusk-a-loosa. But that's entirely ir-elephant to what I was saying.
- We took some pictures of the native girls, but they weren't developed. But we're going back again in a couple of weeks!
They got away with that joke, but the censors cut a line from the song "Hooray for Captain Spaulding" in which Spaulding sang, in an aside about Mrs. Rittenhouse, "I think I'll try and make her", as in "seduce her".
The song was a hidden reference to a real Captain Spaulding, an army officer arrested a few years earlier for selling cocaine to Hollywood residents. See Hollywood Babylon, by Kenneth Anger. Groucho later used a somewhat jazzed-up version of the Spaulding song as the theme music for his TV quiz show, You Bet Your Life, and it ultimately became his all-purpose introductory theme in general.
The film has the Chico-Harpo scene in which Chico keeps asking Harpo for "a flash" (meaning a flashlight), and Harpo-- not understanding-- produces from his bottomless trenchcoat and baggy pants a "fish", a "flask", a "flute", a "flush", etc. Eventually he begins searching for the flashlight in the dark with a flashlight.
The often under-utilized Zeppo figures in a well-known gag in which Groucho dictates a letter to his lawyers, in rambling pseudo-legalese. Zeppo gets to one-up Groucho: When asked to read the letter back, Zeppo informs him, "You said a lot of things I didn't think were very important, so I left them out!" whereupon a minor skirmish ensues.
[edit] Re-release
Forty-four years after its original release, in June 1974, Animal Crackers was once again released in theaters. The film had been tied up in a copyright dispute since 1957, when Universal Pictures -- which owned all pre-1948 Paramount films -- renewed the copyright for the picture but neglected to renew the music rights or the rights to the original Broadway play. The 1974 re-release was big news at the time since the Marx Brothers were enjoying a resurgence in popularity among younger audiences. At the New York City re-release premiere, which Groucho attended, a riot broke out and he required police escort.
[edit] Musical numbers
Groucho's songs, "Hello, I Must Be Going" and "Hooray for Captain Spaulding" became recurring themes for Groucho through the years. The latter song became the theme of Groucho's radio and TV game show You Bet Your Life. The original full version of "Hooray for Captain Spaulding" was edited in compliance to the Hays Code when it was re-released in 1936: the sexually suggestive line "I think I'll try and make her" was removed - it came after Mrs. Rittenhouse's line: "He was the only white man to cover every acre." There is no known print or audio of those few seconds that were trimmed from the film.
- You Must Do Your Best Tonight (The Butler)
- I Represent (Zeppo)
- Hooray for Captain Spaulding Part I (The Cast)[2]
- Hello, I Must Be Going (Groucho/Spaulding)
- Hooray for Captain Spaulding Part II (Cast)
- Gypsy-chorus
- Why Am I So Romantic? (Zeppo)
- I'm Daffy Over You
- Silver Threads Among the Gold
- My Old Kentucky Home
[edit] References in popular culture
"Hello, I Must Be Going" became a theme in Oliver Stone's miniseries Wild Palms. It was the title of the final episode, and sung by villain Senator Kreutzer (Robert Loggia) as he died.
[edit] References
- ^ AFI's 100 YEARS...100 MOVIE QUOTES. Retrieved on April 2, 2007.
- ^ Lyrics to Hooray for Captain Spaulding. Retrieved on April 2, 2007.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Animal Crackers at the Internet Movie Database
- Animal Crackers at the TCM Movie Database
- Full description of Animal Crackers from Filmsite.org
- Internet Broadway Database entry on Animal Crackers
- Marx Brothers filmed in Multicolor on the set of Animal Crackers
- Hooray for Captain Spaulding
The Marx Brothers |
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Chico Marx | Harpo Marx | Groucho Marx | Gummo Marx | Zeppo Marx |
Films with Chico, Harpo, Groucho, and Zeppo |
Humor Risk (1921) • The Cocoanuts (1929) • Animal Crackers (1930) • |
Films with Chico, Harpo, and Groucho |
A Night at the Opera (1935) • A Day at the Races (1937) • Room Service (1938) • At the Circus (1939) • |