Young and Beautiful (1934) Poster

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6/10
The Last of the Wampas Babies!!
kidboots29 May 2011
The Wampas Baby Stars were created in 1923 in which 13 new actresses were chosen "who during the past year have shown the most talent and promise for eventual stardom". The first ceremony was almost akin to the Oscars - Bebe Daniels sang and Buster Keaton, Wallace Reed, Nazimova and Jackie Coogan appeared. In the beginning a lot of the stars really made good and exceeded all of the expectations (Colleen Moore, Evelyn Brent, Laura La Plante, Clara Bow, Dorothy Mackaill) but by the early thirties (1931 being an exceptional year with Joan Blondell, Frances Dee, Sidney Fox etc, in fact the majority became stars) with the depression and hard times forcing economy, the contest came to an end. No Wampas Babies were chosen in 1933 but in 1934 Paramount and Mascot created films in which the "babies" were to appear - Paramount's was "Kiss and Make Up" and Mascot's was "Young and Beautiful". By the time William Haines made "Young and Beautiful" he was established as one of the best interior designers in Hollywood and his heart just wasn't in movies anymore. He was still playing the wise cracker go getter.

Bob Preston (Haines) is a publicity agent for Superba Pictures and his latest stunt is a doozy - June Dale (Judith Allen) has been kidnapped!!! of course she turns up but she is getting pretty fed up with all the silly stunts. Ted Fio Rita is on hand with his band to provide the proceedings with some catchy dance music. Bob is trying his hardest to get June a Hollywood contract - but someone else is very interested in her as well. It's John Miljan - so there may be some underhanded tricks along the way!! There is a very snappy musical number - I didn't catch the title but given as good a production as Mascot could give. Girls dance on tables, on a piano, even a painting comes to life!! everyone gets in on the act.

Wampas baby Katherine Williams is the only girl who stands out with her dreams of serious roles conflicting with the reality of cheesecake and publicity. When she finally gets her chance, nerves get the better of her and it ends tragically. Funnily enough, Judith Allen was not a Wampas Baby and she should have become a star. She started out in a Cecil B. DeMille movie "This Day and Age' and starred opposite Bing Crosby in "Too Much Harmony", she also played in "The Witching Hour" and with Shirley Temple in "Bright Eyes" but she finished up in westerns and quickies. Stardom can be fickle. 1934 was a lean year for Wampas Babies - the only two that made a mark were Jacqueline Welles (who didn't appear in this movie) who continued on through the 1940s as Julie Bishop, and Lucille Lund, who appeared as Bela Lugosi's wife in "The Black Cat" (Welles had the female lead) and played the villainous "Duchess" in the serial "Blake of Scotland Yard" (1937).
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4/10
Those uber-creepy masks...that's reason enough to watch this film!
planktonrules11 February 2016
Years ago, I read a book that said that William Haines' huge career of the late 1920s and into the 30s came to an abrupt halt because folks pushing for the new Production Code were also concerned about at least cosmetically cleaning up the image of the Hollywood stars. And, since Haines was rather open about being gay, his contract with MGM was dropped and he became a has-been. Well, perhaps this isn't 100% true. First, apparently Haines landed on his feet and became a very successful interior decorator. Second, the once boyish good looks of Haines were not at all evident by 1934. Now, in films like this one and his final picture (also made in 1934), he looks like a very ordinary bank teller sort of guy--with a receding hairline and a bit of a paunch--and quite a bit like Grady Sutton! I think time just caught up with the guy and that would explain his fading from the screen. This would explain why he was now making films for tiny Mascot Films. So, is the paunchier and more ordinary Haines any good in this film? And, since it's from Mascot is it any good at all? Well, at least it is not horrible!

While Haines is the star of this picture, the real stars are the Wampas Baby Stars. Who are these folks? Well, each year from 1922 to 1935, a group of young actresses were chosen by this organization as the stars to look for in the future. A few of the up and coming stars did go on to great fame (such as Clara Bow, Mary Astor and Ginger Rogers)...most just faded into obscurity after the year of promotions was finished. Considering the 1934 lot was the last selected, you wonder if perhaps this film finished them off!

The story itself has to do with Bob (Haines) and his attempt to make his girlfriend, June Dale, a star with Superba Pictures. The studio head is played by Joseph Cawthorn and it's obvious he's meant to be a Samuel Goldwyn-type. He looks almost exactly like Goldwyn and his language is filled with malapropisms just like those attributed to Goldwyn. However, Bob loses sight of June and has practically lost her by the end of the film.

In between there are lost of appearances by the Wampas girls...singing, dancing, lounging around the pool. They seem to be doing just about everything...except acting!! The weirdest moment, however, is the ultra-bizarro song and dance number where the women's partners are all guy wearing super-creepy masks of current Hollywood stars. Then, the women remove the masks and hold them high...much like they were lifting up severed heads following a guillotining!!! It's so sick and strange, it alone makes the film worth seeing. I also liked the funny dance number late in the film when the ladies are dancing...as are the workmen who are nearby. Goofy but also very self-aware and funny. Now I am not saying it's a good film overall...it's very episodic and second-rate. But for folks with a lot of patience, it's worth a look.
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5/10
It's your duty to be beautiful!
mark.waltz6 July 2018
Warning: Spoilers
There's two fantastic production numbers that come out of nowhere in this poverty row romantic comedy that features the Wampas Baby Stars, a beauty pageant of young hopefuls, none of whom here went onto anything outside of some minor parts. The first production number has the Wampas beauties being escorted by masked look-alikes of stars of the time: Laurel and Hardy, Clark Gable, George Arliss, Joe E. Brown, Buster Keaton, Maurice Chevalier, and yes, even Eddie Cantor who originated the song "Keep Young and Beautiful" in the Samuel Goldwyn musical epic, "Roman Scandals", the previous year. Three years before "A Pretty Girl is Like a Melody" in "The Great Ziegfeld" and 36 years before Sondheim had his own salute to those "Beautiful Girls" in "Follies", this Mascot film saluted what Broadway and Hollywood were striving for in keeping the public entertained during the depression. For a film studio that never rose above the low B's, Mascot had its share of glamorous looking programmers, even though it focused on quickly filmed action films and mysteries.

Having just finished up his long term contract at MGM, William Haines ended his career with two B films on Poverty Row, but in this one, he's still at the top of his form as the sneaky Robert Preston (!), a Hollywood publicity man out to find the next greatest female star. Like the real Robert Preston's Harold Hill of "The Music Man", Haines isn't above using a little bit of chicanery in getting what he wants, and what he wants is rising star beauty Judith Allen who is both amused and turned off by his antics. Tired of his sneaky antics, Allen turns to aging millionaire John Miljan whom she intends to marry for his money. Haines uses all his resources to get her back, and this leads to a very amusing finale where he cons her again, reminding me of the type of hijinks that fellow 30's fast talking actor Lee Tracy would get up to regularly. A second musical number, set on the studio streets, has an impromptu group of Wampas Baby Stars and some masculine crew men doing the same type of dance steps and is quite funny. Prints of this vary in length, the one I saw obviously a cut TV broadcast version, missing about 14 minutes. In smaller roles,Joseph Cawthorn and Vince Barnett give amusing performances. I would rank this high among poverty row films, one which I'd like to see fully restored. But what remains in its edited form is still worth seeing, surprising when you look at the history of the B-Z grade studios that tossed out movies on a weekly basis at the same rate as the people who went to see them were tossing out their weekly garbage. Some of those films are indeed garbage, but on occasion, a gem popped out, and this one is very close to being a gem.
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3/10
Meh
arfdawg-17 February 2018
The Plot. Bob Preston, publicity man for Superba Pictures, uses his publicity skills in an attempt to make this fiancée June Dale the most famous movie star in the world. But in doing so, he forgets that women want to be attended to for themselves, not as objects of fame.

I was looking forward to seeing this picture giving the stellar reviews. Unfortunately it's actually a poor excuse for a movie. Starring a bunch of unknowns, made by an unknown studio and directed by a largely unknown director whose only claim to fame that I can tell was co-directing The Marx Brother's Coconuts 5 years earlier.

Groucho said he didn't understand comedy.

It's a strange movie where in one musical number people where masks of famous Hollywood stars like Keaton and Gable and Chaplin.

It just never really comes together. It's not horrible, but it's not really interesting enough to recommend.
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7/10
William Haines hurtles through a very funny satire of Hollywood.
David-24022 March 2002
In film mythology it is usually assumed that William Haines' final films, made for the little known Mascot Pictures, were low quality disasters. So I was pleasantly surprised to find that this movie is actually a very enjoyable comic romp through the back-lots of Hollywood. Sure, it's no masterpiece, but it is a lot of fun.

Haines, looking great, gives his usual exhaustingly energetic performance as a high-powered Hollywood publicist. One can only speculate on how much he may have enjoyed the scene where he tells off a pompous studio head, just a year after his famous fight with Louis B. Mayer. The studio head though seems to have been based more on Carl Laemmle than Mayer - and Joseph Cawthorn does a fine job in the role (he looks remarkably like Laemmle too).

There is some fairly unfunny comic routines from a couple of piano-movers that could have been cut, but the dance routines are pretty good - one involving some excellent caricatured masks of famous movie stars. Lots of pretty starlets, a fast-paced plot, and the glorious William Haines - what more could you ask for?
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7/10
One for the William Haines fan club!
JohnHowardReid19 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
"Young and Beautiful" (1934) must be included in any keen movie- lover's must-see list for its one outstanding musical number in which the engaging dancers wear masks of many famous Hollywood players. Whilst this sequence is definitely the high point of the movie, it is on the whole a very entertaining effort from "B" studios' Mascot Pictures, who are doubtless making a determined effort to step into the big time. Producer Nat Levine collared for his principal players, popular William Haines, recently fired by M- G-M, plus Joseph Cawthorn (who provides a wonderful running gag with his side-splitting impersonation of Universal's then-embattled founder, Carl Laemmle) and the beautiful Judith Allen. Whatever happened to her? 1934 was her greatest year, with no less than nine movies to her credit. Her career slowly wound down. After playing the female lead to Frankie Darro's "Tough Kid" (1938), she made a bad career move by accepting a job as a walk-on in "Four Girls in White" (1939). Anyway, getting back to the fast-paced "Young and Beautiful", also on hand are no less than twelve of the year's Wampas Baby Stars. We don't see much of them, despite all the razzamataz, and there should be thirteen. See how many you can count on the Alpha DVD!
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7/10
fun to see some big names at various stages of their career
ksf-223 January 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Right at the opening credits, we can see this one is badly in need of restoration. Alpha Home Movies has taken a scratchy, faded copy and put it on DVD, now available on Turner Classics page. I gave up waiting for this to come on TCM and ordered the DVD online. Some biggies in here... Franklin Pangborn, William Haines ( the second to last film that he did!) and the "Wampas Baby Stars"... the up and coming movie starlets chosen each year. We're sixteen minutes in, and there isn't really much of a plot yet... just an odd modeling show for the Wampas starlets. They are accompanied by guys wearing masks of movie stars of the day. One of the models (Judith Allen as "June") pretends to be almost kidnapped, and of course the papers put the story in big headlines. She gets a couple big breaks, and gets a contract and a husband, Bob. "Shaw and Lee" do a bit as piano movers... that bit goes on WAY too long. "Gordon" (John Miljan) is also after June, and never misses a chance to try to get between her and Bob. It's sort of a "behind the scenes" in Hollywood. All's well that ends well, I guess. It's mildly entertaining, but having seen it, I can see why no-one is in a hurry to restore it. Pretty simple plot, but the real story here is the collection of stars, at various stages of their career arc. Written and directed by Joseph Santley. According to IMDb, Santley had appeared in Pony Express in 1907, at the age of 17 !
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6/10
William Haines is Aging Rapidly
boblipton29 July 2018
This is one of those hodge-podge efforts that makes you wonder if it was planned so much as grew. The main plot concerns movie publicity man William Haines -- he appeared for two movies for Mascot this year, for no clear reason -- who promotes girlfriend Judith Allen into a star, but she leaves him over the constant work and pointless publicity stunts.

This state of affairs is interrupted by some musical numbers. In the first, the WAMPAS babies get to dance with men in masks representing then-hot stars, and in the second, Shaw and Lee (yay!) wander by with a piano and Ted Weems' old vocalist sits down and kicks over a chorus show. This soon vanishes to resume the story.

Perhaps this movie was begun before the Production Code bore down and the interludes were added to bring it up to Feature length. The individual bits are pretty good, although the line readings are a bit weak.
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