| Index | 5 reviews in total |
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Spike Jones fans will rejoice at seeing Milt Britton..., 25 December 2002
Author:
John A. Potwora from Cleveland, OH
Attention Spike Jones fans: this film is essential viewing if you are fortunate enough to have the opportunity! Quite unlike the previous reviewer, I was nearly giddy upon seeing the lowbrow slapstick sequence of Gil Lamb playing clarinet in Milt Britton's band. Milt and Frank Britton, along with other comedy/novelty/"corn" outfits (The Kidoodlers; Freddie Fisher and his Schnickelfritz Band), have been cited as major "musical" influences on the young maestro Jones. According to Spike Jones biographer Jordan R. Young, "By all accounts the Brittons had far and away the zaniest act of its day - they were the only "jazz band" whose members routinely fell into the orchestra pit, squirted water at one another, fired pistols in the air or broke violins over each other's heads." Unfortunately, apart from a Soundie musical short of "The Poet and Peasant Overture" not much Milt Britton footage is readily available. So when I came across a black and white print of this Technicolor flick on eBay, well, I had to have it. I was not disappointed: here we are able to see what helped inspire Jones's "Musical Depreciation Revue". Any Three Stooges fan will love this completely over-the-top, violent routine that climaxes with the entire orchestra reducing the stage, along with a breakaway grand piano, to smithereens. (Remember the protracted destruction of Jonathan Winters leveling a gas station in Stanley Kramer's "It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World"?) Sure, most moviegoers will find this film's plot threadbare, but what do you expect from a low budget musical? In fact, fans of "B" movies and "turkeys" shouldn't miss a couple of its outlandish "production" numbers, including one with a painfully politically incorrect American Indian theme. Now if only I can find a Technicolor print!
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
De gustibus, 19 January 2002
Author:
andy-345 from Glasgow, U.K.
Not one of the great musicals.Good lyrics by Johnny Mercer but forgettable melodies. Whether you enjoy it or not depends on your taste.Victor Moore does his Victor Moore act and Cass Daley gives a Cass Daley performance. Some will be amused by her grimaces as she belts out "He loved me till the all clear came"(the film was made during WW2) and "Willie the wolf of the west".Others will think that she is like a female Jim Carrey. The dresses by Edith Head for Dorothy Lamour and the chorus are excellent but the dance routines are weak apart from a solo eccentric dance by Cy Landry.There are two band routines.The first involves Cass Daley and two others as non-playing fiddlers.The second is longer. It features Gil Lamb and the band in expertly timed knock-about comedy. Warning - - The average shot length in these routines is high, there are very few close-ups, there are no audience reaction shots, a static camera is used and a clear view of the perfomers is given at all times. Watch it and decide for yourself - Some like oysters - some don't.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Mildly Amusing, But Not To Dick Powell, 8 October 2008
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Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
Riding High marked the end Dick Powell's association with Paramount
Pictures. He never went back on the Paramount lot after finishing
Riding High.
Seeing it now, Riding High has the look of a Bob Hope film and I have a
feeling that's who the original male lead was supposed to be. My guess
is that Rapid Robert was entertaining the troops on some far distant
shore and Powell was shoved into this film to appear opposite Dorothy
Lamour. Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer wrote some forgettable songs for
this film.
Funny thing is that Paramount seemed to spend a pretty penny on Riding
High. It was shot on location in Arizona, not on the studio back lot
and it did actually get an Academy Award nomination for sound.
Poor Dick Powell just walked through this film and supporting players
like Cass Daley and Victor Moore and Gil Lamb stole the film right out
from under him. Powell plays a salesman who has sold mining stock to
Dorothy Lamour's father George Carleton who has no operating capital
though and relies on Powell to get some.
In trying to raise the capital Powell gets himself involved with Victor
Moore, a mild mannered counterfeiter who's carrying a nice wad of the
bogus cabbage. Moore passes it when he has to, but he's evolved his own
system based on the old Mark Twain story that was later made into a
Gregory Peck film, Man With A Million. The premise is that if people
know you are well heeled, doors of credit automatically open for you
and you need not necessarily pass the stuff and thereby endanger your
freedom.
A lot of the comedy here is based on Victor Moore constantly trying to
fend off one lug-nut of a sheriff in Gil Lamb who is trying to catch
him with the goods. Moore also is at the same time fending off the
amorous intentions of amazon Cass Daley. These three totally steal the
film from Powell and Lamour. There's a chuck wagon race at the end
where rich rancher Russell Simpson bets against Cass Daley's rig with
Moore and that gets pretty wild. It's Powell and what he does in that
race that makes me think this was intended for Bob Hope.
While shooting this film, Powell who had been promised by Paramount
executives that he would be getting some serious dramatic roles,
learned that a part he wanted very badly in Double Indemnity was given
to Fred MacMurray. According to the films of Dick Powell, he got a
release from his contract and refused to ever work there again in the
same way he never worked for Warner Brothers again either after leaving
them in the Thirties for the same reason.
Riding High is a mildly amusing film today with the supporting cast
just taking over from the uninterested leads. Not a film Dick Powell
had pleasant memories of.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Too Many Songs, 14 August 2008
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Author:
Maliejandra Kay (Maleejandra@yahoo.com) from United States
A train arrives in the west and deposits a showgirl (Dorothy Lamour),
an eligible bachelor (Dick Powell), and a swindler (Victor Moore). The
bachelor is in search of investors for his mine but can't seem to get
anyone interested enough. The swindler makes his own thousand dollar
bills and convinces the bachelor to flash them around; money attracts
money. The scheme works, but the swindler's reputation catches up to
him and soon the law is after those fake thousands.
There is a reason why this title is so hard to find. It isn't that
great. Although the story is fun enough and it boasts a decent cast,
Riding High is utterly forgettable. It is one of those wartime movies
that is packed with music to entertain the troops "over there," but
none of the tunes are memorable and the music takes over the story.
Lamour handles her songs well enough, after all, she was a radio star,
but Powell has too few songs himself.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Grade B musical - mildly entertaining, totally forgettable, 26 February 2001
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Author:
Arne Andersen (aandersen@landmarkcollege.org) from Putney, VT
There have been five films released with the title RIDING HIGH. This 1943 effort is a very slight attempt at a musical. It has seven numbers (Whistling in the Light of Day, Secretary of the Sultan, Injun Gal, Till the All Clear Came, You're The Rainbow, Get Your Man, Willie, the Wolf of the West) - all completely forgettable, as is the dull plot re a young man (Powell) trying to raise money to work a mine, the daughter of the man he has hoodwinked (Lamour) and a counterfeiter (Moore) who proposes not to pass bad currency but to simply flourish it in the belief that those who believe someone has money will be willing to invest in projects. Cass Daley's broad and tiresome humor nearly sinks the enterprise and there is an excruciatingly long and very unfunny sequence involving Gil Lamb and an orchestra run amok. The Academy did give it a nom for Sound, which was deserved (crisp and resonant and sound effects included in a climactic wagon chase sequence), but for the general public this piece of fluff is not worth bothering to see.
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