Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Idiots Delight (film)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6.8
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
6.8
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Clarence Brown

Budget
  
1.519 million USD

Duration
  

Language
  
English Esperanto

6.7/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy, Drama, Musical

Music director
  
Herbert Stothart

Country
  
United States

Idiots Delight (film) movie poster

Release date
  
January 27, 1939 (1939-01-27)

Writer
  
Robert E. Sherwood (play), Robert E. Sherwood (screenplay)

Cast
  
Norma Shearer
(Irene Fellara),
Clark Gable
(Harry Van),
Edward Arnold
(Achille Weber),
Charles Coburn
(Dr. Hugo Waldersee),
Joseph Schildkraut
(Capt. Kirvline),
Burgess Meredith
(Quillary)

Similar movies
  
Frozen
,
Pitch Perfect 2
,
Birdman
,
Blackhat
,
Aladdin
,
Youth

Tagline
  
The Biggest Thrill They Ever Gave You! Norma and Clark together in the romance of a "ham" song-and-dance man and a "red-headed liar from Omaha."

Idiot s delight 1939 official trailer clarke gable norma shearer movie hd


Idiot's Delight is a 1939 MGM comedy-drama with a screenplay adapted by Robert E. Sherwood from his 1936 Pulitzer-Prize-winning play of the same name. The movie showcases Clark Gable, in the same year that he played Rhett Butler in Gone With the Wind, and Norma Shearer in the declining phase of her career. Although not a musical, it is notable as the only film where Gable sings and dances, performing "Puttin' on the Ritz" by Irving Berlin.

Contents

Idiots Delight (film) movie scenes

does not go as far as the original in sounding the knell of destruction, [it takes a] lighter and more romantic course in dealing with the menaces of bombings.

Idiots Delight (film) movie scenes

After the trouble to which the producers [...] went to make this palatable for the totalitarian states, it seems all the more futile that despite the hazy geographical location and the scrupulous use of Esperanto, it has been banned in those nations, anyway.

Idiots Delight (film) movie scenes

Clark gable and norma shearer sing abide with me in idiot s delight brown 1939


Exposition

Idiots Delight (film) movie scenes

Harry Van (Clark Gable), an American World War I veteran, tries to reenter show biz and ends up in a faltering mentalist show with an inept, aging alcoholic, Madame Zuleika (Laura Hope Crews, who also appeared in Gone with the Wind as Aunt Pittypat). While giving performances in Omaha, he is courted by Irene (Norma Shearer), a trapeze artist, who claims to come from Russia and hopes both to replace Harry's drunken partner in the show and be his lover. They have a romantic night, but he is suspicious of Irene's overstated flights of fancy. Harry, keeping Zuleika, and Irene's troupe board trains going in the opposite directions the next day.

Action

Twenty years later, after a number of jobs, Harry is the impresario and co-performer with Les Blondes, a dance group of six women on a trip through Europe. While taking a train from Romania to Switzerland, they get stranded at an Alpine hotel in an unnamed, belligerent country when borders get suddenly closed as war becomes imminent. The passengers watch through the hotel lounge's large windows as dozens of bombers take off from an air field at the bottom of the picturesque valley and fly away in formation.

Among the passengers lingering in the lounge, Harry meets Irene, a glamorous platinum blonde with an exaggerated Russian accent, who is traveling as the mistress of a rich armaments entrepreneur, Achille Weber (Edward Arnold). Although she claims never to have been to Omaha, Harry's casual innuendos show he is convinced that she is the acrobat he knew there and believes that she recognizes him too. An agitated pacifist (Burgess Meredith) rants to his fellow travelers about Weber's guns, which he says are behind the war that just started, and describes for them how the planes they saw disappear over the spectacular snowy mountains will be killing thousands of people in other countries. The pacifist is hauled away and shot by the border police commanded by the impeccably-mannered and friendly Captain Kirvline (Joseph Schildkraut), who associates with the travelers while they wait at the hotel.

In their hotel suite, an upset Irene explodes and tells Weber "the truth [she has] always wanted to tell." She blames him for the likely deaths of untold numbers of people in the war, whose victims – in her vivid accusations – might include the newlywed English couple, the Cherrys (Peter Willes, Pat Paterson), they met at the hotel, all killed with the weapons that Weber sells.

The Swiss border opens again the next day, and the people at the hotel are able to continue on their journeys. They learn they had better be off as soon as possible, because foreign countries are likely to retaliate today for yesterday's air raid and bomb the air field near the hotel, which could get hit by mistake. As everyone rushes to leave, Irene finds out that Weber has decided to dump her when he refuses to vouch for her flimsy League of Nations passport to Capt. Kirvline, who tells Irene she must stay at the hotel.

Having escorted his Les Blondes to the Swiss border, Harry returns to stay with Irene. She admits she is the woman he met in Omaha twenty years ago and still loves him. Harry talks about her future of performing with him and the blondes. They hear approaching planes and are told to run to the shelter, but Irene declares she does not want to die in a cellar. As Harry tries to take her there anyway, a bomb partly destroys the hotel and blocks their escape from the lounge.

Domestic

  • The ending shown to the domestic (U.S., Canadian) audience replaced the hymn from the play with Harry and Irene talking about their plans for the future in hopes to divert their minds from the bombs exploding outside the lobby windows. Harry rehearses with her the secret code Irene watched him use with his "mind-reader" partner in Omaha. As the bombing stops and the Alpine valley turns serene once more, Irene excitedly describes their future act together while Harry begins to play the damaged piano. The film's ending:

    does not go as far as the original in sounding the knell of destruction, [it takes a] lighter and more romantic course in dealing with the menaces of bombings.

  • International

  • In the ending intended for international audiences, Harry plays the piano as together they sing a hymn ("Abide With Me") from Harry's youth in hopes of distracting their minds from the bombs exploding outside the hotel windows. They embrace after the Alpine valley turns serene once more. The studio's marketing goal with the more solemn bombing sequence failed:

    After the trouble to which the producers [...] went to make this palatable for the totalitarian states, it seems all the more futile that despite the hazy geographical location and the scrupulous use of Esperanto, it has been banned in those nations, anyway.

  • Marketing concerns

    In an effort to make the play, staged entirely in the hotel lounge, less wordy and more attractive to watch on the screen, Sherwood wrote the script for MGM with 167 scenes on 42 sets. When Warner Bros. was previously considering to make a movie of Sherwood's play, the studio checked with Joseph Breen, a film censor, who predicted it "would be banned widely abroad and might cause reprisals against the American company distributing it. The play is fundamentally anti-war propaganda, and contains numerous diatribes against militarism, fascism, and the munitions ring." MGM tried to address similar concerns when it purchased the rights to the play, while the Italian Ambassador to the U.S. threatened all of MGM's production would be banned in Italy, but with Italy's Consul in Los Angeles eventually hired as adviser, Rome agreed to cooperate on the production. Although the script was apparently approved by Fascist leader Benito Mussolini himself, Italy still banned the film after it was finished.

    Country

    Unlike in the play, which takes place in Italy, the country is not identified in the film, and the local characters do not speak any national language but Esperanto, albeit with something of an Italian accent. The inscriptions are also in Esperanto, including, e.g., the sign Aŭtobuso.

    Title phrase

    The title phrase, idiot's delight (meaning "solitaire" in U.S. English), was reduced to insignificance in the film, perhaps to avoid the potential for religious controversy:

    Mr. Sherwood selected his title with a view to epitomizing his free notions of the motivation, in presumably high places, of armed conflict. His editorial instinct is highly emblazoned in the expression, in two words, of the only feasible basis that can exist for the precipitation of international slaughter.

    In the play, the phrase was part of Irene's response to the armaments industrialist Weber after she berates him for his contribution to the war, to which he says:

    WEBER: I am but the humble instrument of His divine will.

    IRENE: We don't do half enough justice to Him. Poor, lonely old soul. Sitting up in heaven, with nothing to do, but play solitaire. Poor, dear God. Playing Idiot’s Delight.

    In the film, though, merely the short phrase idiot's delight is mumbled by Capt. Kirvline (his name changed from the Italian-sounding Locicero in the play) when Harry asks him about the reason for the war.

    Hymn

    In the play, the curtain goes down on Harry and Irene as they sing "Onward, Christian Soldiers" while bombs are exploding outside, leaving it open whether they survive or not, but both versions of the film's ending show the couple to be safe and happy after the air raid. The international film version featured the hymn, Abide with Me. The domestic version replaced the impelling "Onward, Christian Soldiers" with its battle-like imagery, employed in the play, with a more demure supplication.

    Hairstyle

    Norma Shearer's elaborate hairstyle in this film was copied from the hairstyle worn by Lynn Fontanne when she played the same character in the Broadway production of the stage play.

    Cast

    Main Cast

  • Norma Shearer as Irene
  • Clark Gable as Harry Van
  • Edward Arnold as Achille Weber
  • Charles Coburn as Dr. Waldersee
  • Joseph Schildkraut as Captain Kirvline
  • Burgess Meredith as Quillery
  • Laura Hope Crews as Madame Zuleika
  • Richard "Skeets" Gallagher as Donald Navadel (credited as Skeets Gallagher)
  • Peter Willes as Mr. Cherry
  • Pat Paterson as Mrs. Cherry
  • William Edmunds as Dumptsy
  • Fritz Feld as Pittatek
  • Harry Van's Les Blondes

  • Virginia Grey as Shirley
  • Virginia Dale as Francine
  • Paula Stone as Beulah
  • Bernadene Hayes as Edna
  • Joan Marsh as Elaine
  • Lorraine Krueger as BeBe
  • Box office

    According to MGM records the film recorded a loss of $374,000 - the only film Clark Gable made at MGM to lose money apart from Parnell and Too Hot to Handle.

    References

    Idiot's Delight (film) Wikipedia
    Idiots Delight (film) IMDbIdiots Delight (film) themoviedb.org