The Gang's All Here (film)
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The Gang's All Here | |
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Directed by | Busby Berkeley |
Produced by | William Goetz William LeBaron |
Written by | Walter Bullock Nancy Wintner George Root Jr. Tom Bridges |
Starring | Alice Faye Carmen Miranda Phil Baker Benny Goodman Eugene Pallette Charlotte Greenwood Edward Everett Horton |
Music by | Leo Robin Harry Warren |
Cinematography | Edward Cronjager |
Editing by | Ray Curtiss |
Distributed by | Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation |
Release date(s) | December 24, 1943 |
Running time | 103 min. |
Language | English |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
The Gang's All Here is a 1943 Technicolor musical film produced and released by Twentieth Century Fox. Its stars included Alice Faye, James Ellison, Edward Everett Horton, Charlotte Greenwood, Eugene Pallette, Benny Goodman, and, in one of her most memorable roles, Carmen Miranda. It was directed by Busby Berkeley.
The film exhibits both the strengths and weaknesses of the musical films produced at Fox in the 1940s. It is visually striking, making lavish use of the period's saturated color-film technology, extravagant sets that range from an ocean liner that morphs into a New York nightclub stage to eye-popping musical number fantasy sets (including a multi-story version of Miranda's trademark banana hat), and costumes that showcase the era's exaggerated fashions.
The performances range from the competent -- Ellison, and, as an annoying debutante, Sheila Ryan -- to the inspired. Greenwood, in her element as a Matron With A Past, and Horton, as a befuddled plutocrat, add a welcome comic boost to the proceedings. Faye was rarely better showcased, with songs including the moving wartime ballads "No Love, No Nothin'" and "A Journey to a Star". The songtress concludes the film with the bombastic "Polka Dot Polka" (which proves the setting for some of Berkeley's most surreal choreography, including a roster of chorus girls dancing with neon hula hoops). Miranda, as a boisterous cabaret star, gleefully mangles the English language, romances any man who crosses her path, and performs both "The Lady In the Tutti-Frutti Hat" and a chorus of Goodman's "Paducah," as well as an insinuating, witty version of "You Discover You're in New York" that lampoons contemporary fads, fashions, and wartime shortages.
In the end, though, The Gang's All Here succeeds better as a collection of wild moments (Greenwood, on seeing Miranda for first time: "I'd better watch out for my bell pulls and lampshades!") and wilder visuals (Miranda amidst a sea of chorines carrying vast strawberries and bananas they arrange into Berkeley's familiar patterns) than as first-rank musical. The plot (playboy soldier falls for singer; is promised to debutante; comes to his senses) is serviceable at best and, in the end, simply stops, as if enough time had been filled, to make way for a swift resolution of the Faye-Ellison romance and the big finale.
The film has, as of August 2006, never been commercially released on video or DVD (although rumors swirl that Fox will eventually release it this year as part of its "Marquee Musicals" series). A LaserDisc was released in 1997 by Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment but was quickly pulled and is now a highly valued collector's item. Privately made copies in all formats are circulated among collectors. The film is occasionally shown on Fox Movie Channel in the U.S.