Strictly Dynamite (1934) Poster

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7/10
Ha cha cha cha
gbill-748779 February 2018
This is a small film with a pretty simple plot, but I found it enjoyable because of its stars, Jimmy Durante and Lupe Velez. Durante is a throwback to the vaudeville era, pre-Hollywood, and he cracks so many one-liners and malapropisms that you'll have to pay close attention to pick them all up. It was too bad the broadcast I watched didn't have close captioning! He's larger than life, (and has a shnozz that's certainly larger than life hehe), and it's fun to see perform his whole shtick, including the ha-cha-cha-cha.

I like to see Lupe Velez in films in part because of the diversity she brings, but also because she's so animated and fun to watch. She plays Durante's girlfriend and sidekick on his radio show. The radio show has a couple of very nice moments, starting with a delightful musical performance by The Mills Brothers at the beginning of the film, which was probably my favorite part (and even though Durante and Velez also both sing tunes). In a later scene, we see how the sound effect of a storm are created in a fairly elaborate set to the side of the performers and orchestra.

The movie is not really about that, though. The gist of the story is that Durante hires a new writer (Norman Foster), who takes the job after some nudging from his wife (Marian Nixon). Foster is an aspiring serious author who doesn't know all that much about comedy, but with the help of an agent (William Gargan) promises to deliver lines which are "strictly dynamite." Things get complicated when Foster begins having an affair with Velez.

Most of the film is pretty tame, but there is some pre-code banter and suggestion, and aside from the adultery, little lines like Durante asking the agent, "do you get 10% of her too?", referring to Nixon. Nixon and Velez are a study in contrasts, and nowhere is this more evident than when Nixon begins trying to start an affair of her own with the agent. She encourages him to kiss her in the taxi a few times, and while she's certainly kissable and he's interested, sparks don't fly for her. Cut to Velez in a cab with Foster, bubbly and laughing, asking the driver to take them to Atlantic City, and then pulling Foster over so they can make out. In her first scene with Foster, she tells him she can do a great Mae West impersonation as she caresses his face, hinting at where her intentions are. In another scene, she wears a pretty wild dress, one with ribbed metallic detail that almost make her look like she has robot arms. I just love seeing things like that in these old films.

There are some annoying bits, such as the acts who try to see Foster in his office once he's hit it big. Even with this filler, the story is brief at 71 minutes, and not all that original. There were enough cute little bits to make it interesting and entertaining though.
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6/10
Pleasant little time passer about early radio
AlsExGal22 April 2012
This movie may star Jimmy Durante, but he isn't front and center most of the time. The film is about a radio star, Moxie (Jimmy Durante), who can't find any good gag men. Enter Nick (Norman Foster), an unemployed writer who really wants to be a poet. His wife Sylvia (Marian Marsh) has caught the eye of agent Georgie (William Gargan). Georgie does Sylvia a favor by convincing Moxie to hire Nick as a gag man, a job that Nick excels at - for awhile. The problem isn't so much that Nick gets a big head, but that Moxie's girlfriend Vera (Lupe Velez) tries to get her claws into him. She can't do this very well with Nick sober, so she gets him drunk with somewhat anticlimactic and ambiguous results that could only happen at the transition from the precode to production code eras, which is when this film was released.

This may sound like it has the makings of a melodrama when in fact it is pretty much played as light comedy. There are some numbers by Durante, a rather humorous number with Velez and Durante together, and the somewhat rare occurrence of Durante playing a rather irascible fellow. He even has two bodyguards to follow Vera around and beat up anyone who flirts with her. Marian Nixon, who did quite a bit of heavy melodrama over at Warner Brothers, doesn't get much screen time here, but when she does she is the loyal and supportive wife even when you wish she wasn't.

This film was made by RKO, not Durante's home studio MGM, and you get the feeling they really didn't know what to do with him or Velez, although of the two she comes off best. Neither laugh out-loud funny nor hand-wringingly tense at any point, it would be a nice film to show people who are recovering from a nervous breakdown and can't take any excitement but still want to be entertained. Not Durante's best but a fun way to pass 70 minutes or so of time.
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6/10
Not Dynamite But Good Fun
Handlinghandel13 June 2005
Jimmy Durante is relatively subdued here. Maybe because his leading lady is Lupe Velez, who was not exactly a quiet or subtle performer herself. (I love her anyway.) This has a great supporting cast -- Tom Kennedy, Eugene Palette, many, many more.

The plot involves unsuccessful poet Norman Foster's being drawn into to the world of show biz. He begins to write gags for comic Durante, who terms them, and anything he likes, as dynamite.

Foster is smitten with Durante's flirtatious partner Velez. His wife Marian Nixon is patient -- sort of. Things get resolved and there's plenty of fun along the way.
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7/10
Aside from Valez, it's a pretty good film.
planktonrules12 September 2020
Moxie Strait (Jimmy Durante) is a successful radio comedian with two problems. First, his jokes are getting stale and he needs a new gag writer. Second, his girlfriend, Vera (Lupe Valez), is awful. She insists on being in his show and she's not funny. She also is a tramp and isn't very loyal to Moxie...even though she's supposed to be his girl.

Moxie's agent, George (William Gargan) is out to find someone who can write for Moxie...and Moxie insists he wants someone classy. So, when he learns that the intellectual, Nick (Norman Foster) has written a script for Moxie and wants to sell it to him, he jumps at the chance. Soon, Moxie is getting more laughs than ever and Nick is in demand as a writer. But there is a problem...the more successful Nick is the more of an idiot he becomes. And, so when Vera makes the moves on him, he forgets that he's married to sweet Sylvia (Marian Nixon) and begins chasing after this talentless woman. Soon, however, this catches up to him and Nick finds himself without a job and without a wife! Is there any chance for any of these folks?

I enjoyed this movie, though never have understood the appeal of Lupe Valez. She plays an obnoxious, loud and talentless woman...so, essentially, she seems to be playing herself in this movie. I know it sounds harsh, but I have trouble thinking of a less appealing leading lady and her being in demand in 1934 astounds me. Plus, how could Nick possibly chase her character when he has Sylvia?! This is a weakness in the film...a film which is a real mixed bag.

On the negative side, it's really easy to dislike Nick...especially when he begins cheating on his lovely wife. It's a real hard sell when you create a situaiton like this. On the positive, Durante is at his best here and Gargan, Nixon and Tom Kennedy are all very good here....and the script has some excellent elements. It is enjoyable...but as I said, a mixed bag! But a few good laughs and a nice performance by the Mills Brothers make this one worth your time.
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7/10
Early on J Durante vehicle
ksf-220 April 2012
Nick (Norman Foster) has just moved to the big city, and suddenly he's looking for a new job. He hears Moxie (Durante) and Vera (Lupe Velez) performing on a radio show, and ends up writing jokes for the show. Also stars Marian Nixon as Sylvia. Nick is a simple working stiff, the straight man to the star Durante; Durante spends most of the film mixing up his words and doing physical gags. Fun film, if a little strained in some parts. Awesome supporting cast includes Franklin Pangborn as Bailey, Eugene Pallett as Sourwood, and Sterling Holloway as Fleming. It's the supporting cast that helps keep this thing moving along. Just about everyone sings a song in this one -- of course, Durante sings a couple, Lupe sings, and even the Mills Brothers. All that singing fits right in, and doesn't interfere with the story as it did in so many films. A scene by 13 year old Jack Searle was just annoying, which was probably the goal. Directed by Elliot Nugent, who would also go on to direct a whole bunch of Bob Hope films.
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3/10
Not Even Average
view_and_review10 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
"Strictly Dynamite" was a typical movie that lacked any semblance of originality.

Man struggles to make it. Woman helps man get his start. Man rises. Man brushes off woman. Man falls. They reunite.

It's happened in "The Crooner" (1932), "The Big Timer" (1932), and "Palooka" (1934) which also starred Jimmy Durante and Lupe Velez. In fact, Lupe played the exact same type of character--a lascivious woman who hopped from one man to another.

In "Strictly Dynamite" Nick Montgomery (Norman Foster) was the man. Sylvia Montgomery (Marian Nixon), his wife, was the woman. Sylvia helped Nick get a gig writing jokes for the very successful Moxie Straight (Jimmy Durante). The gig went well, he made a lot of money, then he started ditching his wife for Moxie's girl Vera (Lupe Velez). The movie made it seem like Nick was an innocent bystander in the whole matter, as though Vera was so strong and powerful he couldn't help but see her, kiss her, and be intimate with her even in front of his own wife. And just like the character Lupe played in "Palooka" (1934), she didn't care about Nick's work. All she cared about was herself and her own desires and clearly no man could resist her.

This was a lousy movie about someone who couldn't handle success. It followed a predictable pattern that's not all that interesting.

Free on Odnoklassniki.
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7/10
The Schnozzle Does His Stuff
robert-temple-18 February 2017
No, this is not a film about explosions, unless they are of laughter. It is an amusing thirties comedy set in New York, starring 'the Schnozzle' (thirties slang for 'big nose'), as Jimmy Durante was affectionately called by his fans. His extreme Brooklyn accent is made more extreme by his over-pronouncing of it, and he gets all his words wrong and says everything in as ungrammatical and incorrect a manner as inhumanly possible, giving rise to many laughs. He and his fellow actors crack a lot of gags. My favourite for this film is when Durante says, unaware of the contradiction: 'I have a verbal contract, and I'm gonna sign it!' Durante specialised in being what the English would call 'dotty and eccentric', and he was a wonderful comic singer as well. The glamour gal for the film is the Mexican actress Lupe Velez, who was highly successful at the time and became known as 'the Mexican spitfire'. She was not much of an actress, but she conveyed a lot of useful jollity and could do a good vamp, as well as sing. Her life ended tragically when she committed suicide at the age of 36, having been dumped in turn by her lover Gary Cooper and her husband Johnny Weissmuller ('Tarzan') and turned to drink, drugs, and depression. She made another comedy with Durante in this same year, THE GREAT SCHNOZZLE. The story for this film is flimsy, but suffices as a skeletal framework for typical Durante nonsense. A young writer with big ideas about himself and no sense of humour at all (hence a good foil for Durante), played by Norman Foster, is urged by his wife to start writing for radio. Durante plays a famous radio star. It is difficult for people these days to imagine, but radio was BIG back then, before television existed, and it was stuffed full of excellent live drama and comedy shows. Foster cannot even understand gags, much less write them, but he ends up writing them for Durante by stealing them from old joke books and modernising them. This satirizes what was a standard practice amongst the top gag writers such as Mark Hellinger and his proteges, who routinely strip-minded old jokes from PUNCH and other such sources. (I know this for a fact because I knew some old-time gag writers personally, who told me.) This was however such an 'in' joke that only the professional gag writers watching the film themselves would fully have 'got' it. Foster fancies himself as something of an intellectual, and more satire raises its lovely head when he starts talking to the uneducated show people about the French philosopher Henri Bergson's book LAUGHTER: AN ESSAY ON THE MEANING OF THE COMIC (London, 1911), being an English translation of the French original LE RIRE (1900). But this is a double satire, as having read that book, I can assure people that Bergson had just about as much of a sense of humour as Foster in this film, and I wonder if Bergson ever actually laughed at a joke himself in his life. Here is a sample sentence from Bergson's book: 'We have studied the comic element in forms, in attitudes, and in movements generally; now let us look for it in actions and in situations.' You get the picture, and yes, I have the book right beside me. But no, it is not funny. Another interesting thing I noticed about the film is that two dinners take place in Sardi's Restaurant in New York, but its name is never mentioned. I suppose that observation qualifies under the label of 'Trivia'. The story has its ups and its downs and its twists and its turns and it lasts for 71 minutes, and hey ho.
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4/10
Interesting only as a view of radio during its heyday and its cavalcade of character actors.
mark.waltz8 June 2012
Warning: Spoilers
1934 marked the only year that the "schnozola" (Jimmy Durante) and "the Mexican Spitfire" (Lupe Velez) worked together, but they did so in three films for three different studios. Here, they play a married couple whose radio act needs some spice, and hopefully their new intellectual writer (Norman Foster) can provide it. Marian Nixon is his pretty wife, neglected by him, and sure he is playing around with the predatory Velez. Some mediocre songs and moments of comedy pass through, but its the supporting cast (Eugene Palette, Franklin Pangborn, Sterling Holloway) that provide amusement. Historically speaking, this film offers some interest as what was going on radio when our grandparents were young. One amusing moment has the frustrated Velez being forced to turn around over and over again in an evening gown that will obviously trip her up. The Mills Brothers get to do their thing in perhaps the film's only worthwhile musical sequence.
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One is serious, one wants to be taken seriously
jarrodmcdonald-128 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Assorted character types and controlled chaos make this a lively precode farce from RKO. The script's a bit uneven in spots, but energetic performances from Jimmy Durante and Lupe Velez keep things entertaining. Interestingly, their hyper exaggerated brand of comedy is balanced out by subdued performances from Norman Foster and William Gargan.

The plot's almost irrelevant. Durante is a big time radio celebrity whose musical comedy act is supported by Velez, his attractive partner. Velez has designs on getting more attention, but Durante takes all the best jokes. Granted, most of these jokes have whiskers on them and aren't too funny.

When Durante decides on a whim to fire his joke writer (Franklin Pangborn), an ambitious agent (Gargan) suggests a new guy nobody has ever heard of before-- Foster. What makes this scenario amusing is that Foster fancies himself a serious literary wordsmith. He's a poet and a philosopher, albeit a starving one, who has talent but is unemployed.

Part of what I enjoyed about the film's wacky premise is that it pokes fun at the creative process. Plus we see how artistic goals are often compromised by commercial enterprise. Foster does nicely as a sincere bohemian who sells out. But it's really Durante's picture. Durante gives a razor sharp portrayal of an egomaniacal star, yet still manages to make the lout fairly likable.

There are several uproarious scenes where Durante bosses around his underlings who usually wait for orders at the foot of his bed. Then there is Durante's love-hate relationship with Velez. However, the best moments are when they're wowing the radio audience with their patented shtick.

A few of the characters are tempted by extra-marital flings, lest we forget this is precode Hollywood. But none of what happens on screen is too shocking. It's all rather harmless dynamite.
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