The Medicine Man (1930) Poster

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4/10
Not the best medicine
hte-trasme30 April 2010
Jack Benny, future star one of the most successful radio and television comedy series of all time, starred in this early-talkie for the low-budget small studio Tiffany at a time nobody was really sure what Benny's place in the world of the movies was.

At the time he was best-known as an emcee (and had played that role in the variety-show film "The Hollywood Revue of 1929" the previous year), so in this fictional movie he is given a part that is part emcee and part romantic lead as he plays the "Doctor" running a traveling patent medicine show. He plays the part well, but his emceeing duties are relegated to one somewhat extraneous scene in the middle of the film that is not terribly well-written and ruined anyway by a truly horribly realized laughter sound effect, and otherwise his talents are squandered in such a bland role as he is asked to play.

This film doesn't have too much to recommend it; the plot is a standard-issue about a girl who falls in love with the Benny character instead of the man her father wants her to marry. The acting on the part of the other actors is rather stiff and forced, with the exception of E. Alyn Warren, who plays his one-dimension father character to the hilt.

This father is a broad caricature of an evil, overbearing overlord, and he beats his daughter and son violently in a couple of very uncomfortable-to-watch scenes. When a movie introduces horrible domestic abuse and suggestions of rape (from the father's proposed husband) as a plot element, doesn't ever really deal with them, then expects the film to remain light, frothy, and fun it just isn't going to work.

A couple of attempts at comic relief with a strange woman following Beny's character from town to town and a member of the show who gives rise to the shocking discovery that sometimes people cheat at three-card monte come off as stilted and long rather than funny.

Presumably since this was both an early talkie and made at a smaller studio that might have been slower to adapt to the technology, the sound is often recorded very oddly and poorly, with people randomly getting louder or quieter and always sounding indoors, and crowd noises turning on and off sharply.

This is interesting as a historical curio documenting the traveling medicine show that was a fixture of small-town show business at the time and for its chance to see a young Jack Benny, but apart from these it's a pretty stiff film that doesn't really seem to know what it wants to be, and isn't a very good example of anything.
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4/10
Can't Be Seen In Another Part
bkoganbing10 July 2011
When watching The Medicine Man with Jack Benny one has to keep in mind that at this stage of his career Benny had not yet hit on the lovable tightwad character in which his comedy was built around. He was just another old vaudeville performer trying to make it in Hollywood at a point when studios were signing them up because of some kind of stage training. Benny's career in film was never all that significant, his primary venue was radio and later television where the tightwad image was so ingrained in your mind, it was what you expected and knew how he would react in a given situation.

That is not The Medicine Man. In this film Benny is a barker for a medicine show, not a respectable profession. But for Betty Bronson and young Billy Butts, brother and sister, he represents a way to get out from a really horrible life with a cruel and repressive father.

Jack does not really cut it as a romantic figure. But that might have not been his fault. The inevitable complaint from performers is about typecasting in a particular role. What was a complaint for most was something Benny absolutely relied on later for his comedy to work. It worked so well that even looking back at films before his hit radio show, he just can't be seen in another part.

But he'd have preferred it that way.
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4/10
The Pleasure of His Company
lugonian13 May 2018
THE MEDICINE MAN (Tiffany Studios, 1930), directed by Scott Pembroke, is not a story about a doctor and his rare medicine discovery for some rare disease. It's actually a minor little melodrama dealing about a carnival man whose profession is never giving suckers an even break by selling tonic bottles for one dollar. While such a story might have starred such silent film comedians as W.C. Fields, Harry Langdon or Lloyd Hamilton getting a fresh start in the new medium of talking movies, THE MEDICINE MAN, in fact, gives the acting honor over to a relatively newcomer by the name of Jack Benny, the same Jack Benny of vaudeville, radio and later television. Having made his movie debut as master of ceremonies in the all-star musical, THE HOLLYWOOD REVUE OF 1929 (MGM, 1929), followed by a backstage musical, CHASING RAINBOWS (MGM, 1930), starring Bessie Love, Benny gets his first leading role not for a major studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, but one for a poverty-row one (Tiffany Studios). Though most famous for comedy, Benny, usually a straight man surrounded by comical gags, basically plays it straight in an offbeat production such as this.

The story unfolds in a small town grocery store where Mamie Goltz (Betty Bronson) and her younger brother, Buddy (Billy Butts) work for their widower father (E. Alyn Warren) helping with the stock. Also working for Goltz is a young man named Gus (Vadim Vraneff). Goltz, however, happens to be an abusive foreign-born father who whips his children whenever things don't go his way. Entering the scene is Doctor John H. Harvey (Jack Benny), a medicine man in a sideshow parading down the street in his automobile to a crowd of cheering country folks, including Mamie, with whom John, the titled medicine man, takes an interest. He later comes into the store to offer her tickets to attend his side show that night. Though Goltz does give Mamie and Buddy permission to go, after finding a record broken earlier by Buddy, as punishment, he sends them both upstairs to bed. Though they manage to sneak away the backdoor entrance to attend the show, Miss Wilson (Dorothea Wolbert) and Hattie (Caroline Rankin), a couple of snoops, notices them in attendance and do their duty by notifying their father. Miss Wilson tells on Mamie again later on when she catches her and Harvey along together kissing. After Mamie is brutally whipped by Goltz, and not wanting his daughter to have anything more to do with the medicine man, he allows to have Peter (Adolph Milner), a fellow middle-age widower with children, a man whom Mamie detests, to marry her against her will.

While THE MEDICINE MAN includes certain scenes that comes as a reminder of an old-fashioned silent melodrama, namely D.W. Griffith's BROKEN BLOSSOMS (1919) in regards of child abuse, its theme in present might have already seemed out of date even by 1930. E. Alyn Warren as an accented peaking father, is definitely no threat to Donald Crisp's brutal performance in BROKEN BLOSSOMS, though he is one father who brings fear to his children to not send him a Father's Day card, plus bitter anger to the hired hand whenever his anger gets the better of him. Granted, for a Jack Benny movie, THE MEDICINE MAN is not a comedy, which would be a disappointment to his fans. At the same time, his most avid followers would see how he performs himself in a dramatic story out of curiosity mainly because he's in it. Though some of the Jack Benny style can be found here, especially during his side show performances, most of the humor goes to Tom Dugan and George E. Stone as Benny's associates. Aside from humorously keeping a gold-digger, Hilda (Eva Novak) away from Harvey, they do a comedy take by cheating customers of their change after selling medicine bottles. His similar style of cheating suckers of their money was done better and most famously by Bud Abbott of Abbott and Costello comedy team a decade later. Dugan also gets to cheat his sucker in card games where he always comes out a ahead, maybe. Dugan and Stone briefly do a comical song that stirs few chuckles from its audience before Benny steps in with his sales pitch of his tonic bottles.

Sadly, circulating 66 minute prints contain poor visuals and occasional jump cuts indicating some minor missing material, especially during the carnival sequence. Virtually forgotten and unknown even to film scholars, regardless of some availability, including video cassette and some broadcasts on public television during the late night hours in the 1990s, THE MEDICINE MAN gets by on its own merits, especially when Jack Benny films are concerned. (** elixers)
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An Odd Curio Of Its Era
Snow Leopard18 November 2005
This is an odd curio of the early sound era in movie history, an attempt to mix melodrama and comedy that might have worked better on the stage than it does as a movie. Most of the interest in watching it now comes from Betty Bronson's sympathetic performance as the heroine, and from seeing Jack Benny in what seems to have been his first starring role in a feature-length movie.

The story has Bronson and a younger brother as the children of a tyrannical and abusive shopkeeper. They meet up with a traveling medicine show led by Benny's character, who then becomes involved in their family problems, while at the same time trying to keep an eye on some of his shifty associates who have a knack for getting in trouble with the law. The setup has enough of interest to make for a good story, but it doesn't ever feel as if things come together.

Some of the intended humor doesn't quite come off, and some of the behavior of the shopkeeper father is unsettling. He's a genuinely nasty character that you don't expect to see in movies of the era, and while the character serves to call attention to child abuse issues, it doesn't mesh with the parts of the movie that are supposed to be much lighter. It's hard for the comedy to work when the young heroine and her brother face such an unpleasant situation, and yet the lighter material also takes attention away from the seriousness of the issues involved. To some degree, this may just be a sign of its era, for in the early sound era it is not uncommon to see movies with awkward pacing and material that does not always fit together.

Bronson is the bright spot of the movie, although this kind of scenario does not really allow her to use her talents to the best advantage. She makes her character engaging and believable, and this gives you a reason to maintain interest in the rest of the movie. It's interesting to watch Benny, especially in comparison with his better-known performances later in his career. Here, you can see signs of the talents that eventually would make him such a wonderful entertainer, and at the same time you can see that this kind of movie is not where his strength lies.
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2/10
Poor example of early talkie
DRomm6 December 2003
The Medicine Man is a poor example of an early talkie. Slow and dumb, with a rustic cast of German-American characters DW Griffith would gag on. Jack Benny's presence makes it historically interesting, but that's about it. Benny gets off the only good line, "The New York critics have proclaimed this show the greatest amalgamation of merry making mirth provokers since Shakespeare was barred from Avon." And he mispronounces "Avon." The plot is more-or-less the same as The Music Man but without any of the music, acting or dialog. For Benny completists only.
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5/10
Unlikely Tale of Love
Space_Mafune12 November 2004
Young Mamie Goltz (played by Betty Bronson) and her brother Buddy (Billy Butts) dream of getting away from the influence of their overly abusive and cruel father. When a medicine show comes to town and one Dr. John Harvey (Jack Benny) shows romantic interest in Mamie, she hopes even though she knows it unlikely that somehow her dream will be fulfilled.

The biggest flaw here is our story never seems credible. It's hard to believe Harvey, who our story establishes has an history of using and casting aside girls should so easily fall for Mamie and change his ways just to be with her and to help her although I guess it's not outside the realm of the plausible. Also this film often tries most unsuccessfully to be funny. It never is.
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5/10
Boy meets girl in a bad way
brafalski12 February 2005
I just finished watching the Medicine man starring Jack Benny. The movie was hokey and had very poor sound quality. It also had silent film gestures. But, you have to keep in mind this movie was made shortly after talkies came on the scene. It was fun to watch as part of film history. Jack Benny is 36 years old and chasing after an 18 year old. That alone makes it worth watching. Another lecher is after the same girl and there is even a guy who only wants to see her happy. The movie was a little sad and I don't know if it was really ever funny. I'll always better remember the later Jack Benny from the 50s where he was portrayed as being cheap and and from an episode of the Lucy Show he starred on.
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7/10
This very early Jack Benny movie is nothing like you'd expect from this comedian.
planktonrules30 July 2011
At the onset, this film has two huge strikes against it. First, it's a very early talkie and most films from this time suffered from very poor sound quality. And, compared to the average film of the time, it's even worse. Second, it's in the public domain—so there's no incentive for anyone to do anything to try to fix this sound problem. So, if you do try to watch it, be prepared. But, if you do it's a pretty good film.

The movie begins with a young lady and her brother living with a VERY abusive father. In fact, it's a bit shocking to see such a brutal depiction of child abuse. However, things look a bit brighter when a medicine show arrives in town, as the boss (Benny) is quite charming and might just be the young lady's ticket away from the horrid father. Tune in to see exactly what happens next.

While Jack Benny will always be remembered as a comedian, I am not really sure if I'd call this a comedy. This is not a bad thing, as the film worked pretty well as a light drama—plus in many of Benny's early films the humor is very forced. Here, however, the film is story-driven and this worked pretty well overall. So, if you are looking for a comedy—look a bit further. But if you are looking for a good movie—without laughs, then look no further.
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8/10
Similarities between The Medicine Man (1930, Jack Benny, Tom Dugan) and The Music Man (1962 Robert Preston, Shirley Jones and Ron Howard)
kenpfred11 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
It's amazing how much the story line of The Medicine Man resembles that of The Music Man. In both a shyster comes to a small town and tries to bilk them out of their money, but falls in love with a girl from the town and changes his ways. The Medicine Man had little music and it was usually played over the talk, but The Music Man took the story and converted it into one one the best musicals ever made. The Medicine Man had a little more comedy in it, with Tom Dugan ( my wife's great uncle) playing someone who could cheat you out of your money without you even knowing it ( like when he was giving change the people who bought the elixir) , a skit that was copied 10 years after by Laurel & Hardy. By the way Tom also played Bronski in To Be or not To Be (1941, also with Jack Benny, and Carol Lombard). His line "Heil Myself " was copied by Mel Brooks in 1962.
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6/10
I enjoyed it
tre113 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The storyline was enjoyable. The sound quality at times was poor, especially with music playing over the top of voices. Visually the quality of the movie was worse at the start. But overall, given it is an early talkie, and film wasn't crisp like today, it was pretty good. You need to pay attention while watching to hear/see all that is going on.

The characters were perhaps a little "thin", but it's not a long movie to allow them to be developed more.

I would assume there would be some "shock" value in the movie for the time period - eg kissing in public, and the father beating his children (though we don't actually see that, just hear it).

Given the movie is nearly 90 years old now, we are critiquing it from a different perspective to someone seeing it at the time. And perhaps if I had been watching in 1930 I would have given it more stars.

It has funny parts to it (especially the last scene). It's definitely worth watching, especially from an historical perspective.
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Benny's Low-Key Debut
dougdoepke1 November 2020
Benny's recognizable even at this early age, however there's none of his trademark understated humor. Looks like he was intended here as a leading man; if so, he underplays perhaps to a fault. In short, the low-key no doubt worked perfectly for the comedian but not for the actor. Good thing his career converted. Then too, movie-wise, whatever spark there is comes from leading lady Bronson whose sweetness shines even as the abused daughter of brutal father Goltz who leather-straps his kids for most any misbehavior. No, this is not a comedy as the Benny name would imply. Instead he runs a traveling medicine show that comes to Bronson's small town where their mutual attraction soon develops. But what's her tyrannical father going to do since he's already picked out an over-age finance for her. That's the plot crux. Still, there're several points to note.

The character Gus, Vadim Uranoff, is a highly unusual one both in looks and behavior. As a handyman he lurks in the background agonizing over Goltz' cruelty, a strangely craggy figure too timid to interfere. Also, note that despite their suspect reputation, Benny's medicine show is made relatively law-abiding, except for the two con men who operate apart from Benny. That way the hero's shown to be morally upright despite a suspect livelihood, and thus someone qualified to identify with. Note too the surprise climax, a case where law appears to conflict with morality though the shooter is not made clear. Still, it's a surprise and a clear case of pre-Code ambiguity that would soon be disallowed by Code censors. Anyway, for fans of comedian Benny, the flick may be disappointing. Nonetheless, there are unusual compensations.
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