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Blue Skies |
Product Guide |
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Home: You are here: VHS : Blue Skies |
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Blue Skies ![]() Rating: Rating: - A great and classic film!This is a beatifully done film. Fred Astaire and Bing Crosby are reunited in it. The costumes are beautiful. The acting isn't the best, but the songs are very good. It's entertaining and colorful, like every good musical shoud be. Rating: - "Puttin On The Ritz" is amazing... but...Bing sings and Fred treads in this sketchily-plotted musical, which pits Astaire and Crosby against one another, rivals for the hand of the blonde, domestically-minded Joan Caulfield. This frothy postwar frolic has a wild Techncolor exuberance, with crazy explosions all over the pastel-lined spectrum (and an odd tilt towards purple). The sad thing, though, is that this isn't a very good movie -- the plot is razor thin, barely a hint of an excuse to stage a bunch of great (and lesser) Irving Berlin tunes. Some numbers fall flat (and Billy DeWolfe's interminable, painfully unfunny drag routine brings the movie to a screeching halt)... Still, Astaire's killer performance on "Puttin' On The Ritz" is the stuff that legends are made of: as he's angelically hoofing his heart out, a curtain parts behind him, revealing a phalanx of distant, miniature Astaires, keeping time with the big guy. A technical and aesthetic triumph! This flick might be worth it for that routine alone, although Bing gets in some choice vocal performances as well. A dud scriptwise, but it still has two of the greatest performers of the 20th Century, both still at their peak. Rating: - Worth watching for one dance number...Fred's Putting On The Ritz absolutely makes the movie. Without it, the movie would be forgettable but that dance routine is my favorite of all Astaire's efforts. Amazing! Rating: - LazyMummified Bing Crosby musical from the mid-forties, when the old groaner would amble off the golf course and walk through another tailor-made vehicle without raising a sweat. Adding to the atmosphere of torpor is the laziness of the composer, Irving Berlin -- he trots out dozens of his old hits, while his new originals are totally forgettable. Fred Astaire was a late addition to the cast, which may explain his having the worst role of his entire career -- that of a seedy also-ran playboy who ends up crippled for life after a drunken fall. If That's Entertainment to you, help yourself. ![]() 1 2
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