A director of escapist films is forced to reassess reality when he researches his next film by taking to the road as a hobo. Read more
| Starring | Joel McCrea, Veronica Lake, Veronica lake, Robert Warwick |
|---|---|
| Director | Preston Sturges |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Comedy, Romance |
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A director of escapist films is forced to reassess reality when he researches his next film by taking to the road as a hobo.
| Starring | Joel McCrea, Veronica Lake, Veronica lake, Robert Warwick, William Demarest, Franklin Pangborn |
|---|---|
| Director | Preston Sturges |
| Studio | UNIVERSAL PICTURES UK |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 27 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Comedy, Romance |
| Language | English |
| Released | DVD: 02 Oct 2006 Production year: 1941 |
| Format | DVD |
A sparkling satire from writer/director Preston Sturges that centres on the age-old Hollywood dilemma of art versus entertainment. Giving perhaps his best performance, Joel McCrea plays a hugely successful slapstick comedy director who yearns to make a serious movie. So he hits the road, disguised as a tramp, in a concerted attempt to find out what it means to suffer. With Veronica Lake in a star-making turn as McCrea's travelling companion, the plot veers from inspired insight to corny contrivance at such a rattling pace the sheer vigour of the action carries you along. This classic comedy should leave you in no doubt where Sturges thought a movie's first duty lay, yet it's also one of the few films that manages to strike a winning balance between the horns of its own dilemma.
A gem, an almost serious comedy not taken entirely seriously, with wonderful dialogue, eccentric characterisations, and superlative performances throughout.
If you've never heard or seen any of the director Preston Sturge's films you'll be pleasantly surprised by this film: it's up there with the great romantic comedies like 'The Apartment'. Coen Bros. homage to it- 'O Brother Where Art Thou' is shallow and humourless in comparison. There's a real chemistry between Sullivan and the girl(Virginia Lake- known as the one with the weird hairdo)Don't miss it! It's the kind of film that sticks in the mind. Still fresh after 60 years!
Now well known as the source of the title of the Coen Brothers title O Brother Where Art Thou this story of a comedy director who wants to make a tragedy but feels he has to do some research and ends up doing rather more than he bargained for is a delight. Preston Sturges screenplay and direction are fast, funny and original (Though it's a shame he has to include a black character so insultingly stereotyped as the cook who crops up from time to time) Joel McCrea underplays all the way, getting lots of funny lines and moments but never playing for the joke. It's a terrific performance. Veronica Lake isn't, on this evidence, a great actress but she's radiant in the role of The unnamed Girl who accompanies McCrea on his travels and gets plenty of laughs, notably in her first scene, the best in the film. A clever, early, satire on Hollywood Sullivan's Travels is recommended viewing for any film fan