Details for log entry 31904076

21:34, 10 February 2022: Just Another Cringy Username (talk | contribs) triggered filter 172, performing the action "edit" on Million Dollar Legs (1932 film). Actions taken: Tag; Filter description: Section blanking (examine | diff)

Changes made in edit



Critic [[Pauline Kael]] named ''Million Dollar Legs'' as one of her favorite films, calling it a "lunatic musical satire".<ref>{{cite news|last=Wilmington|first=Michael|url=http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2006-02-10/entertainment/0602100373_1_star-block-cinema-pauline-kael|title='Million Dollar Legs' rates critic Kael's high opinion|newspaper=Chicago Tribune|date=February 10, 2006|access-date=February 4, 2015}}</ref>
Critic [[Pauline Kael]] named ''Million Dollar Legs'' as one of her favorite films, calling it a "lunatic musical satire".<ref>{{cite news|last=Wilmington|first=Michael|url=http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2006-02-10/entertainment/0602100373_1_star-block-cinema-pauline-kael|title='Million Dollar Legs' rates critic Kael's high opinion|newspaper=Chicago Tribune|date=February 10, 2006|access-date=February 4, 2015}}</ref>

==Notes==
{{unreferenced section|date=September 2015}}
[[Susan Fleming]], who portrayed the president's daughter in the film, later married [[Harpo Marx]].

According to [[Bill Marx (pianist)|Bill Marx]], son of [[Harpo Marx]], Mankiewicz originally developed this story with the intent of making it a Marx Brothers film, but they declined.

[[Hank Mann]], comedian, silent film star and founding member of the [[Keystone Cops]], apparently played the role of a customs inspector in the film, but his part was cut from the final release. All promotional material for the film lists him in the main cast, and one lobby card shows him in costume with [[George Barbier (actor)|George Barbier]].{{citation needed|date=January 2016}}


==References==
==References==

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'{{distinguish|Million Dollar Legs (1939 film)}} {{Use mdy dates|date=December 2020}} {{short description|1932 film}} {{Infobox film | name = Million Dollar Legs | image = Susan Fleming Argentinean Magazine AD.jpg | image_size = | caption = [[Susan Fleming]] | director = [[Edward F. Cline]] | producer = [[Herman J. Mankiewicz]]<br/>[[B. P. Schulberg]] | writer = Nicholas T. Barrows<br/>[[Joseph L. Mankiewicz]] | starring = [[Jack Oakie]]<br/>[[W. C. Fields]]<br/>[[Andy Clyde]]<br/>[[Lyda Roberti]]<br/>[[Susan Fleming]]<br/>[[Ben Turpin]] | music = Rudolph G. Kopp (uncredited)<br/>John Leipold (uncredited) | cinematography = [[Arthur L. Todd]] | editing = | distributor = [[Paramount Pictures]] | released = {{Film date|1932|7|8}} | runtime = 64 minutes | country = United States | language = English | budget = | gross = }} '''''Million Dollar Legs''''' is a 1932 American [[Pre-Code Hollywood|pre-Code]] [[comedy film]] starring [[Jack Oakie]] and [[W.C. Fields]], directed by [[Edward F. Cline]], produced by [[Herman J. Mankiewicz]] (co-writer of ''[[Citizen Kane]]'') and [[B.P. Schulberg]], co-written by [[Joseph L. Mankiewicz]], and released by [[Paramount Pictures]]. The film was inspired by the [[1932 Summer Olympics]], held in [[Los Angeles, California]]. ==Plot== While visiting the mythical country of Klopstokia on business, brush salesman Migg Tweeny (Jack Oakie) collides with a young woman (Susan Fleming) on the street and the two fall instantly in love. Her name is Angela—all the women in Klopstokia are named Angela, and the men are named George—and she is the daughter of Klopstokia's president (W.C. Fields), whose country is bankrupt, and who relies upon his great physical strength to dominate a cabinet that is conspiring to overthrow him. Tweeny, hoping to win the hand of the president's daughter in marriage, presents him with a plan to remedy Klopstokia's financial woes: The president is to enter the 1932 Summer Olympics, win the weightlifting competition, and collect a large cash reward that has been offered to medalists by Tweeny's employer. Tweeny then sets out to find athletes to make up Klopstokia's Olympic team, and quickly discovers that the country abounds in athletes of preternatural abilities. The team, with Tweeny as their trainer, boards a steamship bound for America. Meanwhile, the rebellious cabinet ministers, who are determined to sabotage Klopstokia's Olympic bid, have enlisted the services of "Mata Machree, the Woman No Man Can Resist" ([[Lyda Roberti]]), a [[Mata Hari]]-based spy character who sets out to destroy the Klopstokian team's morale by seducing each athlete and then setting them against each other in a collective brawl. Her efforts have the intended effect: When the team arrives in Los Angeles, it is in no condition to compete. After a pep talk from Tweeny fails to inspire them, Angela tracks down Mata, defeats her in an underwater fight, and forces a confession from her before the assembled team, which restores the athletes' fighting spirit. They take to the field and begin winning events. By the time the weightlifting competition begins, Klopstokia needs only three more points for victory. In the film's final scene, Tweeny excites the president's fierce temper in order to inspire him to a final superhuman effort. The president throws a 1000-lb weight at Tweeny, missing him, but winning both the weightlifting competition and the [[shot put]] for Klopstokia. ==Cast== *[[Jack Oakie]] as Migg Tweeny *[[W.C. Fields]] as the President *[[Andy Clyde]] as the Major-Domo *[[Lyda Roberti]] as Mata Machree *[[Susan Fleming]] as Angela *[[Ben Turpin]] as Mysterious Man *[[Hugh Herbert]] as Secretary of the Treasury *[[Irving Bacon]] as Secretary of War (uncredited) *[[George Barbier (actor)|George Barbier]] as Mr. Baldwin *[[Dickie Moore (actor)|Dickie Moore]] as Willie - Angela's brother *[[Ben Taggart]] as the Ship Captain (uncredited) *[[Billy Gilbert]] as sneezing cabinet minister (uncredited) ==Reviews== In 1932, ''[[The New York Times]]''{{'}} reviewer described the film as "a hopefully mad sort of picture ... where a series of comedians conducted themselves with a total lack of dignity."<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9D07E6D61031E333A2575AC0A9619C946394D6CF |title=Bevy of Clownish Comedians and Lyda Roberti Save the Klopstokian Treasury. |author=L. N. |date=July 9, 1932 |newspaper=The New York Times}}</ref> After a June 2010 screening in [[Tribeca]], ''[[The New Yorker]]'' writer [[David Denby (film critic)|David Denby]] described the film's odd, fragmented structure as well as its overall [[Surrealism|surreal]] tone: {{quote|''Million Dollar Legs''...is about as close as Hollywood (in this case, Paramount) ever came to the spirit of [[Dada]]. The movie is so silly that it seems both artless and weirdly avant-garde, a style that the studios never quite explored again. Sequences begin and end abruptly; lovers talk parodistic nonsense to each other; [[Lyda Roberti]], a comic dancer and singer with a delicious pan-European accent and alarmingly active hips (she makes Kim Cattrall look inhibited), turns up as a femme fatale, apparently based on [[Marlene Dietrich]]. The film bears some resemblance to the Marx Brothers' manic ''[[Duck Soup (1933 film)|Duck Soup]]'', which came out the following year and is actually more disciplined.<ref>Denby, David (2010). [https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010/06/07/the-seat-of-power "The Seat of Power"], Critic's Notebook, ''The New Yorker'', June 7, 2010. Retrieved January 6, 2018.</ref> }} Critic [[Pauline Kael]] named ''Million Dollar Legs'' as one of her favorite films, calling it a "lunatic musical satire".<ref>{{cite news|last=Wilmington|first=Michael|url=http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2006-02-10/entertainment/0602100373_1_star-block-cinema-pauline-kael|title='Million Dollar Legs' rates critic Kael's high opinion|newspaper=Chicago Tribune|date=February 10, 2006|access-date=February 4, 2015}}</ref> ==Notes== {{unreferenced section|date=September 2015}} [[Susan Fleming]], who portrayed the president's daughter in the film, later married [[Harpo Marx]]. According to [[Bill Marx (pianist)|Bill Marx]], son of [[Harpo Marx]], Mankiewicz originally developed this story with the intent of making it a Marx Brothers film, but they declined. [[Hank Mann]], comedian, silent film star and founding member of the [[Keystone Cops]], apparently played the role of a customs inspector in the film, but his part was cut from the final release. All promotional material for the film lists him in the main cast, and one lobby card shows him in costume with [[George Barbier (actor)|George Barbier]].{{citation needed|date=January 2016}} ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== *{{Internet Archive film | milliondollarlegs | Million Dollar Legs }} *{{IMDb title|id=0023225|title=Million Dollar Legs}} {{Edward F. Cline}} [[Category:1932 films]] [[Category:1932 comedy films]] [[Category:American comedy films]] [[Category:American films]] [[Category:American black-and-white films]] [[Category:English-language films]] [[Category:Films directed by Edward F. Cline]] [[Category:Paramount Pictures films]] [[Category:Films set in Europe]] [[Category:Films about the 1932 Summer Olympics]] [[Category:Films with screenplays by Joseph L. Mankiewicz]] [[Category:Films produced by Herman J. Mankiewicz]] [[Category:Films produced by B. P. Schulberg]]'
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
'{{distinguish|Million Dollar Legs (1939 film)}} {{Use mdy dates|date=December 2020}} {{short description|1932 film}} {{Infobox film | name = Million Dollar Legs | image = Susan Fleming Argentinean Magazine AD.jpg | image_size = | caption = [[Susan Fleming]] | director = [[Edward F. Cline]] | producer = [[Herman J. Mankiewicz]]<br/>[[B. P. Schulberg]] | writer = Nicholas T. Barrows<br/>[[Joseph L. Mankiewicz]] | starring = [[Jack Oakie]]<br/>[[W. C. Fields]]<br/>[[Andy Clyde]]<br/>[[Lyda Roberti]]<br/>[[Susan Fleming]]<br/>[[Ben Turpin]] | music = Rudolph G. Kopp (uncredited)<br/>John Leipold (uncredited) | cinematography = [[Arthur L. Todd]] | editing = | distributor = [[Paramount Pictures]] | released = {{Film date|1932|7|8}} | runtime = 64 minutes | country = United States | language = English | budget = | gross = }} '''''Million Dollar Legs''''' is a 1932 American [[Pre-Code Hollywood|pre-Code]] [[comedy film]] starring [[Jack Oakie]] and [[W.C. Fields]], directed by [[Edward F. Cline]], produced by [[Herman J. Mankiewicz]] (co-writer of ''[[Citizen Kane]]'') and [[B.P. Schulberg]], co-written by [[Joseph L. Mankiewicz]], and released by [[Paramount Pictures]]. The film was inspired by the [[1932 Summer Olympics]], held in [[Los Angeles, California]]. ==Plot== While visiting the mythical country of Klopstokia on business, brush salesman Migg Tweeny (Jack Oakie) collides with a young woman (Susan Fleming) on the street and the two fall instantly in love. Her name is Angela—all the women in Klopstokia are named Angela, and the men are named George—and she is the daughter of Klopstokia's president (W.C. Fields), whose country is bankrupt, and who relies upon his great physical strength to dominate a cabinet that is conspiring to overthrow him. Tweeny, hoping to win the hand of the president's daughter in marriage, presents him with a plan to remedy Klopstokia's financial woes: The president is to enter the 1932 Summer Olympics, win the weightlifting competition, and collect a large cash reward that has been offered to medalists by Tweeny's employer. Tweeny then sets out to find athletes to make up Klopstokia's Olympic team, and quickly discovers that the country abounds in athletes of preternatural abilities. The team, with Tweeny as their trainer, boards a steamship bound for America. Meanwhile, the rebellious cabinet ministers, who are determined to sabotage Klopstokia's Olympic bid, have enlisted the services of "Mata Machree, the Woman No Man Can Resist" ([[Lyda Roberti]]), a [[Mata Hari]]-based spy character who sets out to destroy the Klopstokian team's morale by seducing each athlete and then setting them against each other in a collective brawl. Her efforts have the intended effect: When the team arrives in Los Angeles, it is in no condition to compete. After a pep talk from Tweeny fails to inspire them, Angela tracks down Mata, defeats her in an underwater fight, and forces a confession from her before the assembled team, which restores the athletes' fighting spirit. They take to the field and begin winning events. By the time the weightlifting competition begins, Klopstokia needs only three more points for victory. In the film's final scene, Tweeny excites the president's fierce temper in order to inspire him to a final superhuman effort. The president throws a 1000-lb weight at Tweeny, missing him, but winning both the weightlifting competition and the [[shot put]] for Klopstokia. ==Cast== *[[Jack Oakie]] as Migg Tweeny *[[W.C. Fields]] as the President *[[Andy Clyde]] as the Major-Domo *[[Lyda Roberti]] as Mata Machree *[[Susan Fleming]] as Angela *[[Ben Turpin]] as Mysterious Man *[[Hugh Herbert]] as Secretary of the Treasury *[[Irving Bacon]] as Secretary of War (uncredited) *[[George Barbier (actor)|George Barbier]] as Mr. Baldwin *[[Dickie Moore (actor)|Dickie Moore]] as Willie - Angela's brother *[[Ben Taggart]] as the Ship Captain (uncredited) *[[Billy Gilbert]] as sneezing cabinet minister (uncredited) ==Reviews== In 1932, ''[[The New York Times]]''{{'}} reviewer described the film as "a hopefully mad sort of picture ... where a series of comedians conducted themselves with a total lack of dignity."<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9D07E6D61031E333A2575AC0A9619C946394D6CF |title=Bevy of Clownish Comedians and Lyda Roberti Save the Klopstokian Treasury. |author=L. N. |date=July 9, 1932 |newspaper=The New York Times}}</ref> After a June 2010 screening in [[Tribeca]], ''[[The New Yorker]]'' writer [[David Denby (film critic)|David Denby]] described the film's odd, fragmented structure as well as its overall [[Surrealism|surreal]] tone: {{quote|''Million Dollar Legs''...is about as close as Hollywood (in this case, Paramount) ever came to the spirit of [[Dada]]. The movie is so silly that it seems both artless and weirdly avant-garde, a style that the studios never quite explored again. Sequences begin and end abruptly; lovers talk parodistic nonsense to each other; [[Lyda Roberti]], a comic dancer and singer with a delicious pan-European accent and alarmingly active hips (she makes Kim Cattrall look inhibited), turns up as a femme fatale, apparently based on [[Marlene Dietrich]]. The film bears some resemblance to the Marx Brothers' manic ''[[Duck Soup (1933 film)|Duck Soup]]'', which came out the following year and is actually more disciplined.<ref>Denby, David (2010). [https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010/06/07/the-seat-of-power "The Seat of Power"], Critic's Notebook, ''The New Yorker'', June 7, 2010. Retrieved January 6, 2018.</ref> }} Critic [[Pauline Kael]] named ''Million Dollar Legs'' as one of her favorite films, calling it a "lunatic musical satire".<ref>{{cite news|last=Wilmington|first=Michael|url=http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2006-02-10/entertainment/0602100373_1_star-block-cinema-pauline-kael|title='Million Dollar Legs' rates critic Kael's high opinion|newspaper=Chicago Tribune|date=February 10, 2006|access-date=February 4, 2015}}</ref> ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== *{{Internet Archive film | milliondollarlegs | Million Dollar Legs }} *{{IMDb title|id=0023225|title=Million Dollar Legs}} {{Edward F. Cline}} [[Category:1932 films]] [[Category:1932 comedy films]] [[Category:American comedy films]] [[Category:American films]] [[Category:American black-and-white films]] [[Category:English-language films]] [[Category:Films directed by Edward F. Cline]] [[Category:Paramount Pictures films]] [[Category:Films set in Europe]] [[Category:Films about the 1932 Summer Olympics]] [[Category:Films with screenplays by Joseph L. Mankiewicz]] [[Category:Films produced by Herman J. Mankiewicz]] [[Category:Films produced by B. P. Schulberg]]'
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff)
'@@ -54,12 +54,4 @@ Critic [[Pauline Kael]] named ''Million Dollar Legs'' as one of her favorite films, calling it a "lunatic musical satire".<ref>{{cite news|last=Wilmington|first=Michael|url=http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2006-02-10/entertainment/0602100373_1_star-block-cinema-pauline-kael|title='Million Dollar Legs' rates critic Kael's high opinion|newspaper=Chicago Tribune|date=February 10, 2006|access-date=February 4, 2015}}</ref> - -==Notes== -{{unreferenced section|date=September 2015}} -[[Susan Fleming]], who portrayed the president's daughter in the film, later married [[Harpo Marx]]. - -According to [[Bill Marx (pianist)|Bill Marx]], son of [[Harpo Marx]], Mankiewicz originally developed this story with the intent of making it a Marx Brothers film, but they declined. - -[[Hank Mann]], comedian, silent film star and founding member of the [[Keystone Cops]], apparently played the role of a customs inspector in the film, but his part was cut from the final release. All promotional material for the film lists him in the main cast, and one lobby card shows him in costume with [[George Barbier (actor)|George Barbier]].{{citation needed|date=January 2016}} ==References== '
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