|
Hellzapoppin' (1941)
In Henry C. Potter's referential, inventive, mind-bending,
zany and anarchistic comedy - a haphazard film adaptation of the
1938 Broadway musical revue that mocked traditional narratives and
plot conventions:
- the mind-boggling opening sequence - a film within
a film: limousines arrived at the Universal Theatre, and projectionist
Louie (Shemp Howard) was loading film reels in the projection booth
- a group of chorus girls were singing on stage and walking forward
on a staircase during a song-and-dance number when they suddenly
slid downwards as the stage tilted and collapsed - and they appeared
to be descending into the flames of hell behind the title card
- the title card's warning: "...any similarity
between HELLZAPOPPIN' and a motion picture is purely coincidental"
- the scene switched to a view of Dante's Inferno, where
devilish, tormenting figures were heating up and sharpening their
pitchforks in preparation to roast pretty girls on rotating BBQ spits;
they were also 'canning' both males and females into metal drum barrels
labeled
"Canned Guy" and "Canned Gal"; during the crazed
mayhem and chaos, a taxi-cab arrived carrying the show's producers
- vaudevillians Chic Johnson (Himself) and Ole Olsen (Himself) ("That's
the first taxi driver that ever went straight where I told him to!")
- the two often "broke the fourth wall" as
they addressed the projectionist: "Hey Louie, rewind this film,
will ya?"; Louie objected:
"What's the matter with you guys? Don't you know you can't talk
to me and the audience?"; Ole and Chic disagreed: "Well,
we're doin' it, aren't we? (giggling) Yes, folks. This is Hellzapoppin'!";
Louie added: "This is screwy, the actors talkin' to me up here" -
and he began to rewind the film
- eventually, it was revealed as the camera pulled back
that the two were on a Hollywood sound stage during the filming of
the screen adaptation of the musical, by Miracle Pictures
Show's Producers:
Chic Johnson (Himself) and Ole Olsen (Himself)
|
|
|
- in a completely natural and fluid sequence, Ole
and Chic walked through a series of movie sets, as their costumes
changed in each one; in an icy Eskimo set, they came upon the "Rosebud" sled
from Citizen Kane (1941) and remarked: "I thought they
burned that"
- there were many visual gags such as the careless projectionist's
manipulation of the picture -- splitting the film frame, breaking
up the frame horizontally, dislocating the film frame in its sprockets,
freezing the frame, and the upside down projection of the frame;
or his inappropriate changing of the scenery -- Ole and Chic found
themselves in a shoot-'em-up cowboys and Indians western (they yelled
at the projectionist: "Louie, Louie, look. You put on the wrong
picture...Louie, will you take those phony Hollywood Indians off
the screen?...Now put on our picture, come on, come on")
|
|
|
Film Frame Broken Horizontally
|
Eskimo Set with "Rosebud" Sled
|
Shoot 'Em-Up Western Set
|
- the film's inserted, predictable plot: a love triangle
between musician and play manager Jeff Hunter (Robert Paige), his
wealthy love interest - the lead actress Kitty Rand (Jane Frazee),
and her dull fiancee Woody Taylor (Lewis Howard)
- the five-minute, gravity-defying, high-energy dance
performance by Whitey's Lindy Hoppers (billed as the Harlem Congaroo
Dancers)
- the Busby Berkeley-inspired choreographed swimming
sequences
- the many absurdist examples of non-sensical humor
(some with special effects), including half-invisible men (one from
the waist down, and one from the waist up), a fireworks gun that
shot out a man with a parachute ("Wrong gun!"), a bear
on a scooter and a pogo stick, a mysteries-magazine reader who used
car headlights and the footlights and spotlights of the "Broadway
Bound" stage show as a light source, sticky flypaper on the
feet of a male dancer, and fake ducks laying eggs
- the film's ending dialogue, when the frustrated director
(Richard Lane) became disgusted by the script and shouted at screenwriter
Harry Selby (Elisha Cook, Jr.), who was drinking a glass of water:
- "Talking bears! Talking dogs! People who disappear! Slapstick
comedy! What kind of a script is that?"
- "Well, I didn't tell you, but I saw Hellzapoppin' in
New York and I thought it was very funny."
- "Well, here's what I think of it." (gunshots)
- "Well, you can't hurt me that way. I always wear a bullet-proof
vest around the studios." (water poured from bullet holes in his
chest)
|
Opening Sequence
Title Card Warning
Dante's Inferno: Girl's Rotating On BBQ Spits
Screenwriter With Bullet Holes in Chest
|