Half Way To Heaven (1929) Among Early Paramount Talkie Tries
Carny folk among small-town rubes, from which
love inevitably springs, this time between aerialist Jean Arthur and aspiringCharles "Buddy" Rogers, who'd like to be her wire partner but for
lethally jealous Paul Lukas, his a troublesome habit of dropping would-be suitors from
fifty feet up. There's the plot for this 66 minute dose of early talking
Paramount, better than you'd expect forresourceful direction by George Abbott
(he gets clever angles on trapeze performing) and relaxed job by Rogers, who
was America's Boyfriend thanks to relentless promotion along said simple line. Thesping heat is province
of Lukas here, who looks,
acts at times like countryman Bela Lugosi as he plots demise of Jean Arthur
swains, including Buddy. Latter is unfailingly polite --- after he whoops tar
out of Lukas, he apologizes for "hurting your feelings," a great line
dropped into crowded back and forth that I suspect was ad-libbed by Rogers. If
that was case, America's Boyfriend had a ready wit. Half Way To Heaven is another
long-gone amidst Universal holdings --- watch a dub or don't see it at all ---
but worth a glance if you know a good bootlegger.
1 Comments:
George Abbott, who directed this at age 43-- and died at 107 while working on a revival of Damn Yankees in 1995.
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