The Marx Brothers made a string of comic masterpieces for Paramount
Pictures, but when the last and best of them all, DUCK SOUP, did poorly
at the box office, the studio gave Groucho the ax, Chico the boot,
Harpo the pink slip, and Zeppo was nowhere to be found by then so it
didn't matter anyway. After two years of thumb-twiddling, the
brothers landed a deal at the biggest studio of them all, MGM, when
producer Irving Thalberg decided to take them under his wing and spiff
up their image a bit. He removed just enough of their anarchy
so
that it was barely noticed (unless you were looking closely), and he
reinstated romantic subplots into their pictures in the manner of THE
COCOANUTS and ANIMAL CRACKERS, but
now the brothers were more directly
involved in patching up broken romances and helping those adorable
youngsters pitch woo. For one picture, the Thalberg Formula
worked like a charm; for their next picture, it worked less well but
the comedy was good enough to salvage things; and thereafter the
slavish adherence to the formula was one of the factors that killed the
Marx Brothers' career. Thalberg deserves praise for making
this
comic masterpiece, just as he deserves to be damned for lighting the
long and slow fuse that led to the Marx's demise (he's also the guy who
destroyed GREED and insisted that the public be as charmed by Norma
Shearer as he was). A NIGHT AT THE OPERA is a great comedy in
every respect. But watch it immediately after one of their
Paramount classics and you'll understand what was sacrificed and
compromised along the way.
- JL
My friendship with my co-webmaster John L. began in 1996 when
he
wrote me an email about my opinion in a newsgroup that A Night at the
Opera was a better movie than Duck
Soup. From that one email
came
a great friendship and several websites. In 2008, I
rewatched A
Night at the Opera and wrote this to him:
"I am watching A Night at the Opera on TCM right now and guess what? Our friendship has come full circle! Our correspondence began because I expressed the idea that Opera was better than Duck Soup. Finally I see I am wrong. Opera is still a great movie, but after two dozen viewings, it has worn out its welcome with me, and now I see all the flaws instead of the gags. Anyway, Duck Soup is the better picture. You win."
Still, that was in 2008, and if I watch it tomorrow, I know I will like it again. So...
½ - JB
The Marx Brothers The Age of Comedy
ADD ANOTHER
QUOTE AND MAKE IT A
GALLON
"Do they allow tipping on the boat?"
"Yes sir!"
"Have you two fives?"
"Oh, yes sir!"
"Well, then you don't need the ten cents I was going to give you."
A BOW FOR HARPO
AND CHICO
Harpo's Solo: "Alone"
Chico's Solo: "All I Do is Dream of You"
PLAY, DON!
After DUCK SOUP but before the Marx Brothers signed with MGM, Zeppo
decided to leave the team and strike out on his own as a talent
agent. Show biz legend has it that when Irving Thalberg
pondered
if the Three Marx Brothers should get paid at the same scale as the
Four Marx Brothers, Groucho argued that without Zeppo, they were worth
twice as much.