Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThis is RKO's first sound musical. It centers on a pair of vaudevillians who are quite close on and off the stage until a dashing millionaire comes around and begins wooing the female partne... Tout lireThis is RKO's first sound musical. It centers on a pair of vaudevillians who are quite close on and off the stage until a dashing millionaire comes around and begins wooing the female partner.This is RKO's first sound musical. It centers on a pair of vaudevillians who are quite close on and off the stage until a dashing millionaire comes around and begins wooing the female partner.
Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians
- Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians
- (as Waring's Pennsylvanians)
Leon Barte
- Artino
- (as Leon Barté)
Tom Waring
- Tom Waring - Pennsylvanians Pianist
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
SYNCOPATION was produced under the FBO banner (Joe Kennedy) but released as the first RKO film. It's typical of the early talkies in that the actors muff lines but keep right on going. The musical numbers are surprisingly good and fit in nicely with the backstage theme.
The stars are a little awkward here. Bobby Watson plays Benny to Barbara Bennett's Flo. They are a dance team trying to hit the big time. After getting good reviews for a show that closes right away, they get an offer to appear at a swank nightclub run by Ian Hunter. Of course he steals Flo away, changes her name to Fleurette and opens a new club named for her and with a new leading man. The opening night is a disaster and the story resolves itself from there.
Watson (who played the diction coach in SINGIN' IN THE RAIN while Gene Kelly and Donald O'Connor sing "Moses Supposes"), is only OK as the leading man here. Bennett (sister of the more famous and glamorous Constance and Joan) isn't bad at all but she sure seems nervous. Hunter is solid as the cad.
Co-stars include the perky Dorothy Lee, the ear-piercing Morton Downey, Osgood Perkins, Verree Teasdale, Mackenzie Ward, and Fred Waring and his band. Waring does a good novelty number called "Tin Pan Parade" and Downey and Lee had a nice number in "Do Do Something."
The stars are a little awkward here. Bobby Watson plays Benny to Barbara Bennett's Flo. They are a dance team trying to hit the big time. After getting good reviews for a show that closes right away, they get an offer to appear at a swank nightclub run by Ian Hunter. Of course he steals Flo away, changes her name to Fleurette and opens a new club named for her and with a new leading man. The opening night is a disaster and the story resolves itself from there.
Watson (who played the diction coach in SINGIN' IN THE RAIN while Gene Kelly and Donald O'Connor sing "Moses Supposes"), is only OK as the leading man here. Bennett (sister of the more famous and glamorous Constance and Joan) isn't bad at all but she sure seems nervous. Hunter is solid as the cad.
Co-stars include the perky Dorothy Lee, the ear-piercing Morton Downey, Osgood Perkins, Verree Teasdale, Mackenzie Ward, and Fred Waring and his band. Waring does a good novelty number called "Tin Pan Parade" and Downey and Lee had a nice number in "Do Do Something."
This rare film is a must to see if you are a Dorothy Lee fan. She was the last of the flappers and was adorable as Peggy. The story used in the film was plot number seven but 2 cute tunes make you forget that and Morton Downey's voice will blow the wax right out of your ears. News paper hats and army surplus cloths worn by Fred Waring's band will give you an idea of the budget provided for this film and I wont mention the dancing if you don't but its a piece of history I'm glad I didn't miss.
Bobby Watson and Barbara Bennett are married, and successful vaudeville hoofers. Ian Hunter wants them for his night club, but he doesn't want Watson around at other times.
This movie is best remembered for being RKO's first musical, and it shows its age, with its simple camera set-ups and fixed camera. Morton Downey is around to sing a few songs, and Fred Warming's band likewise. It's a good musical for 1929, but that isn't saying much for fans of what the musical will become; its novelty was undoubtedly a huge factor in its contemporary success. The result is decent, but far more interesting for its place in movie history than its music or story.
This movie is best remembered for being RKO's first musical, and it shows its age, with its simple camera set-ups and fixed camera. Morton Downey is around to sing a few songs, and Fred Warming's band likewise. It's a good musical for 1929, but that isn't saying much for fans of what the musical will become; its novelty was undoubtedly a huge factor in its contemporary success. The result is decent, but far more interesting for its place in movie history than its music or story.
This was the first picture ever made by fledgling movie studio RKO, formed in 1929 by - among others - Joe Kennedy. The film is about the married dance team of Fleurette and Benny. They haven't been doing great, but they haven't been doing poorly either. Mediocrity is OK with Benny as long as he has Fleurette, but Fleurette longs for the big time. The owner of a prominent nightclub notices their act and offers them a whopping 800 dollars a week to headline. Remember, that would be eight thousand a week in today's money. Fleurette was just on her way out the door and out of her marriage when the offer materializes. The sudden shower of money makes her reconsider. The team is a hit, but Fleurette wants to be part of society, not just wealthy. The nightclub owner puts the moves on her after Benny embarrasses Fleurette with some of their old vaudeville friends during a party, and the divorce is on again. However, a clumsy new dance partner and the nightclub owner's less than honorable intentions have Fleurette destined for a fall - literally.
If this seems like an old tired plot, it really is. On top of that, Fleurette and Benny are played by less than great actors who are not nearly as attractive or dynamic as movie stars generally are. In fact, physically they are almost plain. That's probably why you've never heard of them - Barbara Bennett (Fleurette) did only one other film after this one, and Bobby Watson (Benny) went back to being a comedian - he just wasn't the romantic leading man type. That's the strange thing about these early talkies, in the first crazy years of sound, having a presentable voice was more important than being attractive or even having acting skills. Nobody really knew what "acting skills" were at the dawn of sound anyways - everyone was just feeling their way through the transition.
The reasons to watch this eighty year old film? First there is the wise-cracking musical comedy pairing of Morton Downey and Dorothy Lee as Lew and Peggy. They provide needed punch in both the comedy and music departments at just the right intervals to keep this film moving. Then there is Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians providing musical accompaniment. Their musical act is a great example of entertainment at the height of the Jazz Age. The music is peppy and they do some unusual things like don newspaper hats for one number and make some odd cheerleader-like hand jive movements in another.
Not on DVD or VHS, never shown on Turner Classic Movies to the best of my knowledge (although TCM's parent company shoul have the rights to this film), and not even in the public domain, this one may be hard to track down, but it is worth watching for the novelty of it all if you ever get the chance.
If this seems like an old tired plot, it really is. On top of that, Fleurette and Benny are played by less than great actors who are not nearly as attractive or dynamic as movie stars generally are. In fact, physically they are almost plain. That's probably why you've never heard of them - Barbara Bennett (Fleurette) did only one other film after this one, and Bobby Watson (Benny) went back to being a comedian - he just wasn't the romantic leading man type. That's the strange thing about these early talkies, in the first crazy years of sound, having a presentable voice was more important than being attractive or even having acting skills. Nobody really knew what "acting skills" were at the dawn of sound anyways - everyone was just feeling their way through the transition.
The reasons to watch this eighty year old film? First there is the wise-cracking musical comedy pairing of Morton Downey and Dorothy Lee as Lew and Peggy. They provide needed punch in both the comedy and music departments at just the right intervals to keep this film moving. Then there is Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians providing musical accompaniment. Their musical act is a great example of entertainment at the height of the Jazz Age. The music is peppy and they do some unusual things like don newspaper hats for one number and make some odd cheerleader-like hand jive movements in another.
Not on DVD or VHS, never shown on Turner Classic Movies to the best of my knowledge (although TCM's parent company shoul have the rights to this film), and not even in the public domain, this one may be hard to track down, but it is worth watching for the novelty of it all if you ever get the chance.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesReleased as a "Radio Picture" during the period when FBO was transforming into Radio-Keith-Orpheum (RKO). A sizable hit, this was the first commercial test of RCA's Photophone sound system, which was the reason for RCA's hefty financial interest in RKO. The first "official" RKO production would be their next release, Street Girl (1929).
- ConnexionsFeatured in Évocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie (2012)
- Bandes originalesDo Something
(uncredited)
Music by Sam H. Stept
Lyrics by Bud Green
Performed by Dorothy Lee and Morton Downey
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Nöjenas gata
- Lieux de tournage
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 23 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.20 : 1
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By what name was Syncopation (1929) officially released in Canada in English?
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