Deux joueurs de baseball du début du siècle, qui font des spectacles de music-hall hors saison, se heurtent au nouveau propriétaire de l'équipe, une femme, et à un parieur qui ne veut pas qu... Tout lireDeux joueurs de baseball du début du siècle, qui font des spectacles de music-hall hors saison, se heurtent au nouveau propriétaire de l'équipe, une femme, et à un parieur qui ne veut pas qu'ils remportent le championnat.Deux joueurs de baseball du début du siècle, qui font des spectacles de music-hall hors saison, se heurtent au nouveau propriétaire de l'équipe, une femme, et à un parieur qui ne veut pas qu'ils remportent le championnat.
- Récompenses
- 2 nominations au total
- Dancer
- (non crédité)
- Wolves Player
- (non crédité)
- Zalinka
- (non crédité)
- Girl in Bathing Suit
- (non crédité)
- Kid
- (non crédité)
- Girl on Train
- (non crédité)
- Wolves Player
- (non crédité)
- Wolves Player
- (non crédité)
- Wolves Player
- (non crédité)
- Wolves Player
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFrank Sinatra's career was struggling at the time and this was made during a period when the only time he did well at the box office was when paired with Gene Kelly. Two of his previous solo appearances, Tout le monde chante (1947) and Le brigand amoureux (1948) did very poorly at the box office.
- GaffesDuring the Opening Day scene, the color of the opposing team's uniforms changes from gray & red to gray & green.
- Citations
Eddie O'Brien: Denny talks about you in his sleep. He keeps waking me up. Like, last night, for instance, all of the sudden he woke up yelling, "Slide, Katherine, Slide!"
K.C. Higgins: Denny even dreams baseball.
Eddie O'Brien: He wasn't dreaming about baseball.
K.C. Higgins: Well, how do you know?
Eddie O'Brien: Because when I leaned over to wake him up he embraced me. Like this! And then he kissed me. Like this.
[kiss]
- ConnexionsEdited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
- Bandes originalesTake Me Out to the Ball Game
Music by Albert von Tilzer
Lyrics by Jack Norworth
Performed by Gene Kelly (uncredited) and Frank Sinatra (uncredited)
Reprised by Esther Williams (uncredited)
The action is set in the first decade of the 20th century. Ed O'Brien (Kelly) and Dennis Ryan (Sinatra) are song-and-dance men in the winter and star players for 'The Wolves', a major league baseball team, during the summer. K.C. Higgins (Esther Williams) is a rich and beautiful young woman who buys the club and becomes involved in the personal lives of O'Brien & Ryan.
Baseball is the ideal setting for a nostalgic movie of this kind, and not just because it provides a team matrix in which to slot the male stars. Baseball has a venerable history to it, so the film can be set convincingly in the past. Kelly very nearly pursued a career as short stop with the Pittsburgh Pirates, and 'The Wolves', with their overwhelmingly Irish ethnicity, are fairly obviously based on the real-life Boston Redsox.
Busby Berkeley directs in a restrained, conservative style which suits this middle-of-the-road family entertainment. Esther Williams is terrific as Katherine. She sings, she dances, she acts - and yes, she even gets to swim! Sinatra crooning a romantic ballad to Esther is one of cinema's more unlikely permutations, but it happens here.
The songs are serviceable but little more, though the lyrics are sometimes amusing, pushing metre and rhyme into interesting contortions:
"I've gone and studied up on my astrology, I'm really knowledge-y!"
The only memorable song is the title number, but that dates back to the early 1900's. A clam bake on Giddy's Landing is all-American fun and gives scope for a big production piece. Notice how Berkeley makes the most of a cramped set by filming the chorus line at an oblique angle.
If this likeable but inconsequential film has some enjoyable moments (I liked the unsporting opponent tagging out the unconscious Ryan), it also contains a few curious editing decisions. At the end of the big number at the clam bake, there is a rapid forward-reverse 'hiccup', more usually seen in pop videos. In the latter part of Kelly's solo on the wharf, the scene strangely shifts to a new set. Both Shirley and O'Brien have distracting shadows across their faces in the protracted dancing on the wharf.
The end comes a little suddenly and without proper resolution, and then we get the rather oddly tacked-on vaudeville sequence. It all works, but with considerably less polish than its sister movie, "On The Town".
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Take Me Out to the Ball Game?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 1 725 970 $US (estimé)
- Durée1 heure 33 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1