Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round (1934) Poster

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7/10
Murder on the High Seas
lugonian13 November 2000
TRANSATLANTIC MERRY-GO-ROUND (Reliance, released by United Artists, 1934), directed by Benjamin Stoloff, produced by Edward Small, is pure thirties entertainment featuring numerous radio and screen personalities of the past whose names are almost forgotten today.

The story, told in flashback, is set on an ocean liner involving numerous passengers, including a Jimmy Brett, a jewel thief (Gene Raymond), Sally Marsh, actress (Nancy Carroll), some loan-sharks (Sidney Blackmer, Sam Hardy and William "Stage" Boyd), and a jealous husband (Ralph Morgan) out to spy on his unfaithful wife (Shirley Grey) by becoming a stowaway in a lifeboat. A murder later occurs which causes Inspector McKinney (Robert Elliott) to take time off from his vacation to gather up all the suspects.

In between the scenario, radio comedian Jack Benny as Chad Denby, with Nancy Carroll perform a spoof of MGM's GRAND HOTEL (1932); Mitzi Green singing "Oleo, It's Love" while impersonating actor George Arliss; the three Boswell Sisters singing "Rock and Roll" two decades before that term became standard to 1950s music, as well as "If I Had a Million Dollars"; along with a production number or two, save one biggie, "It Was Sweet of You," done in Busby Berkeley type-fashion, but choreographed by Larry Ceballos and Sammy Lee, including dancing girls, overhead camera shots with the chorus doing geometric figures. On the lighter side of "comedy relief," there's Patsy Kelly as a wisecracking passenger who participates in a shipboard skit; Sid Silvers as Raymond's sidekick posing as a cabin boy who hides the stolen jewels; and Sydney Howard as the passenger drunk who never sobers up for an instant during the duration of the entire story. And if any curious viewer wants to see a Nancy Carroll movie, this is possibly the only one of hers made available. What a shame that she isn't better known today especially since she was one of those top named Paramount stars of the 1930s (who at times resembles Paramount's own Sylvia Sidney). Carroll's career sadly faded after leaving Paramount, appearing in some forgettable programmers before accepting minor assignments in two 1938 releases.

TRANSATLANTIC MERRY-GO-ROUND was distributed on video cassette in 1987, became part of the "Nik-at-Nite Movie" which played after the midnight hours on Nickelodeon prior to 1988, and later returned to cable television for a while on American Movie Classics from February 2, to November 13, 2000, before disappearing from view.

It spite of its shortcomings, TRANSATLANTIC MERRY-GO-ROUND is enjoyable sort of movie quite common during the Depression era. (**1/2)
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6/10
48 hours out, a murder
bkoganbing9 March 2015
Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round starts out with the murder of noted gangster/ gambler Sidney Blackmer. As is usual there are a flock of people with plenty of good reason to do him in on this voyage. But instead the film starts with the murder and then flashes back 48 hours to see how Blackmer interacted with the rest of the passengers and crew.

But we have more than a murder here. Jack Benny plays a Broadway and radio star who is bringing his troupe along which includes Nancy Carroll who has history with Blackmer and her brother Carlyle Moore who forged a check with Blackmer's name and now Blackmer has him working off the debt and a lot more so to speak. But those are just two of the people who have it in for him.

We get to see Benny's troupe perform on the voyage and among the performers are Patsy Kelly, the Boswell Sisters, Frank Parker and Mitzi Green. Green was mostly on Broadway and on radio and so this is a rare chance to see her. During her song she does a devastating impression of George Arliss. The troupe also does a satirical skit of Grand Hotel.

If the murderer didn't announce intentions during the film this would have been a great mystery and rated a notch or two higher. Still it's pretty good entertainment.
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6/10
The First Rock-and-Roll Musical
boblipton13 January 2019
I's a Grand-Hotel-on-Water movie in which crook Gene Raymond falls in love with entertainer Nancy Carroll, and has to save her from the coils of gangster Sidney Blackmer, while dodging card sharks and a detective. Jack Benny is also on hand to front the liner's acts and try to get his troupe out of scrapes.

It's a pleasant enough movie, but at 90 minutes, it seems to go on a bit long, what with occasional breaks for singing and sketches by Benny's troupe. It's an early, ambitious movie for producer Edward Small for United Artists, and seems to have done well with its combination of up-and-coming talent and paycheck-on-the-way down veterans. The music by Richard Whiting is not particularly distinguished, but it does hold the record for introducing the phrase "Rock and Roll" to the movies, as the title of a song performed by the Boswell Sisters.
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A Whole Amusement Park
tedg28 January 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I want to talk you into seeing this. It is an amazing artifact of the evolution of cinema.

Movies have gone through at least two periods where the equilibrium was punctuated. One was early in the game where various possibilities for the basic form shot it out. Out of that came the notion that movies would be the daughter of stage plays with grander sweep.

Then the development of talkies threw everything into the blender again and there was a grand, grand competition of notions, resulting more or less in what we have today. This one film is the best illustration of the battleground.

You may not be able to find it, so I'll have to describe it a bit.

It is a murder mystery. In fact we see the murder at the very beginning, then flash back 48 hours and see all the various suspects, and there are many. Extremely complicated motives for the murder are developed among this crowd. This thread ends with the detective and all the suspects in one room. He starts the standard process of going around the room and telling each suspect how and why they did the deed. And then this is cut short, abruptly. It is such an apt thing, too because each of the pieces of this movie step on the others, a conflict within.

It is also a "show within a show" of the Judy and Mickey variety. The setup is that this ocean liner is experimenting with having a huge stage show. Some of the people we follow are performers in the show. Benny is the producer of the show, which incidentally has a radio twist. One of the variants of the movie show-within was a movie-radio show. (The very best example of this is "Phantom Empire of the next year.)

So here you have Benny literally broadcasting a radio show from the ship. He tells us at the beginning of the broadcast that it will be a radio version of "Grand Hotel." And then the ship's cast acts out a parody, a rather funny one. But it won't be lost on the movie audience that it has been folded into the ship's audience -- that's because the whole movie is roughly cast against the model of "Grand Hotel."

"Grand Hotel" in a way was its own solution to many competing stories and also many different forms of cinema duking it out. Here that is both expanded and referenced: many of the characters are conning the suckers. A bracelet is stolen. One con man cons another. Women have bad affairs.

And then there's the regular "show within," the stage show. A good quarter of the movie is us watching production numbers. One of these is a huge Busby Berkeley-inspired bit with very, very impressive overhead "blossom" effects. The best I've seen. This particular number is strange. It features a painter in devil costume who uses his brush as a magic wand (and sometimes sends the dancers through a painting) to change costumes, or sets. Or to make some of them disappear.

What's odd about this is that the effects require camera trickery, so we switch back and forth from being a movie audience and the ship's audience. the stage literally shifts back and forth.

Wait! That's not all. Woven through the whole thing is a romantic comedy, what would be seen as comedic in those days in this context. Our handsome rogue-thief turns good as he falls in love with the star of the show. She herself is spoiled goods, the ex-moll of the gangster/conster/blackmailer who is murdered.

Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
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7/10
If only this film had a likeable protagonist...
AlsExGal9 June 2019
... then it would be an even better film than it is. It is all about how the lives of several passengers intertwine on a transatlantic journey. Sally Marsh (Nancy Carroll) has gotten her old friend Chad Denby (Jack Benny) to hire her on to his entertainment troupe for the voyage so that she can get her brother Ned out of town in a hurry. Underworld kingpin Lee Lother (Sidney Blackmer) , his henchmen, and his girl are on the ship, and Lother has past ties to both Sally and Ned. Actually, Lother's best girl is actually married and thinks she has pulled a fast one on her husband with this cruise, when in fact he knows what is going on and is on the same ship with murderous intentions.

So the protagonist who weaves all of these people together? Grifter Jimmy Brett, played by top billed Gene Raymond. The problem is, Jimmy is a louse, and yet the film seems to be saying we should be rooting for him. But how could I? He makes his partner in crime (Sid Sliver) work his way across the Atlantic so Jimmy can stay in first class, he is willing to steal from anybody anywhere anytime, and just because he is getting romantic with Sally, a genuinely nice gal, I'm supposed to cut him a break? Well, I'll let you see how this all works out.

Don't expect cheapskate Jack Benny of 1940 and later. At this point he is still working on his radio persona after only two years of transitioning from film to radio and doing the occasional film. Also Patsy Kelly, part of Benny's entertainment troupe, is practically background noise she is so restrained compared to her usually noisy assertive character.

Keep an eye out for the Busby Berkeley type dance number in the film, because like Berkeley's filmed dance numbers over at Warner's, the audience couldn't possibly appreciate it unless they were hanging from the ceiling, and this is not the Poseidon Adventure.
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6/10
Shipboard drama with mystery, comedy, romance, and big musical numbers
csteidler6 September 2016
Gene Raymond and Nancy Carroll lead a large cast in this entertaining but sometimes confounding ocean liner mystery. There's a lot going on:

Con man Gene Raymond boards the ship and immediately sets his sights on Nancy Carroll as a likely target; predictably, their relationship grows into something more complicated than he planned. Gangster Sidney Blackmer is also aboard, blackmailing and threatening right and left. Police inspector Robert Elliot is on a holiday but finds himself quickly pressed back into service when a man is murdered two days into the voyage.

Jack Benny plays a radio personality in charge of entertainment on the ship; his little troupe puts on a show that offers an interesting glimpse of Benny early in his radio career (but distracts from the film's plot, such as it is)—a skit, a song or two, and a big dance production, Busby Berkeley style, that looks great.

Another subplot involves cranky old Ralph Morgan and his runaway wife Shirley Grey….everything kinds of ties together by the end, but I have to say that with all of the musical and comic interludes it's a bit hard to follow.

Very enjoyable and certainly not boring—but it kind of left me scratching my head.
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6/10
Passably enjoyable, but variably weak, & forgettable
I_Ailurophile24 July 2023
All due credit to screenwriter Leon Gordon: this picture may be a bit of a hodgepodge as it tosses together murder and drama with comedy, and tinges of a musical, but when it's firing on all cylinders, it's pretty sharp. I don't think it's unreasonable to say that some of Gordon's best wit here is turned toward the humor, as to my pleasure this earns some hearty laughs at a few different points. This isn't to say that the feature is otherwise lacking, though the wide array of characters to whom we're introduced rides a needlepoint of being smart and engaging at some times, and dull and insubstantial at others. In fairness - meaning no disrespect to filmmaker Benjamin Stoloff, but the strength of his direction in this instance is highly variable in my opinion, and maybe that has more to do with the wavering quality of the viewing experience than Gordon's writing. With no particular rhyme, reason, or pattern, some scenes are tight and hold our attention, others just flounder (sometimes it's hard to know what tone is intended for a moment); some are ill-fitting as they present, and others pass by so blithely that one risks checking out from the movie altogether. Suffice to say that 'Transatlantic merry-go-round' is a bit of a mixed bag.

It's not outright bad, mind you, but in no time at all after it begins there develops an irregular ebb and flow in which we as viewers are alternatively locked in, and struggling to actively keep our eyes on a film that isn't especially absorbing or convincing. For example, the musical numbers may be well done in and of themselves, and the last and largest such sequence is indisputably a minor delight with its choreography and camera tricks. Yet at best these feel like an empty concession to the fact that such inclusions were broadly popular in cinema in the 30s, and at worst come across as a bad joke; other inserted diversions are even more questionable as they present. Each of the characters and story threads herein are suitably worthy for exploration, some more so than others, yet they're often treated with a passivity that renders them bland and sterile. The cast is fine, but no one specifically makes an impression; those behind the scenes turned in good work, not least with regards to the sets, costume design, and of all things the editing, though even these aren't really anything to proverbially write home about. Meanwhile, it's not necessarily the fault of this 1934 title that the sound design and image quality are less than pristine - these may just as well be a reflection of the limitations of the production, or of technology of the time, or maybe a smidgen of degradation in prints from so many decades past. Nonetheless, these facets aren't a major point in this carousel's favor, either.

There is, truly, some cleverness in 'Transatlantic merry-go-round,' most of all in the dialogue and scene writing. I did enjoy myself in some measure while watching. The problem is just that very little of the resulting picture makes a mark, and even as the various pieces come together in the last third it's overall fairly forgettable. Other aspects, like Sydney Howard playing "Dan the Drunk," grow rather stale over ninety minutes; the climactic scene of The Reveal feels too jumbled and clamorous for its own good. Under such circumstances, it's hard to give the movie much of a recommendation. It's passably entertaining for a lazy day, but I think one has their sights set entirely too high if one is going out of their way to watch. Make a note of it, sure, and set it aside for when you want something light and uncomplicated that doesn't inspire or require significant investment. Like a merry-go-round in real-life, that may be the best way to get most out of this film.
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3/10
Despite having Jack Benny in the picture, it's a pretty boring flick....and with few to like.
planktonrules2 August 2021
"Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round" is a Gene Raymond film with Jack Benny on hand for comic relief. Sadly, however, despite Benny as well as Patsy Kelly in the film, it's not humorous at all. In fact, it's a rather dull film filled with weird production numbers and a difficult to like leading man.

The story is set aboard an ocean liner. One of the passengers, Jimmy Brett (Gene Raymond) is a crook....and he spends much of the film trying to get the better of a gang of crooks. During the course of the film, there is also a lot of entertainment emceed by Benny....and most of it is downright silly. After all, no ship would have had such elaborate and over-the-top musical numbers...complete with camera tricks to make things appear...which makes no sense for a live show. Eventually something happens...a man is murdered and late in the movie it becomes a murder mystery...an overly wrought and silly one at that.

None of this is particularly entertaining nor interesting...and apparently Raymond's character is supposed to be a hero, but being a crook is hardly heroic. Overall, a film which looked like a comedy but ended up being a very dull movie. Not much to recommend this one.
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8/10
A fine Benny Film!!
AbeStreet5 September 2003
This little gem of a movie is getting harder and harder to find. It is almost 70 years old. All of the stars in this film may have been well known then but they, except for Jack Benny, are almost all unknown to viewers today.

The story is centered around a well known actress and a thief that fall in love on the cruise. She has connections to a crime boss and is trying to protect her criminal brother from the same crime boss he owes money to. The thief begins by stealing on board the boat and swindles and steals from just about everybody he sees along with his partner who works on ship as a steward. A police detective on vacation begins to figure what the thief is up to and later on attempts to solve the murder of the crime boss. In the end all the loose ends are tied up and the thief and the actress resolve their differences and move forward with their relationship.

The story is good and the support case is great. Jack Benny plays a well know radio personality that is providing the ship board entertainment along with the rest of his cast and staff. He is the quick witted, street smart good guy that has everyone pegged and helps to direct the other passengers in the right direction.

This film has several good musical numbers, typical of the day, and the comedy holds up well by todays standards. If you are able to locate this film or see that it is being aired give it a try. My guess is that you will be glad that you did.
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4/10
Would you believe that two of the cast members later starred in "Rosemary's Baby"?
lee_eisenberg24 July 2020
For the most part, Benjamin Stoloff's "Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round" is a typical 1930s musical. There's nothing particularly special about it.

Except for something that I found out while reading about the cast members. I already knew about Sidney Blackmer (Lee Lothar). But while reading about Patsy Kelly (Patsy), I saw that, yes, she also appeared in Roman Polanski's adaptation of Ira Levin's novel.* Patsy Kelly was also one of the few openly LGBT performers of that era; I wonder how many bigots watched this movie back in the day and didn't know that they were watching a movie starring a lesbian.

Yeah, how many people would even think to mention all those things? Anyway, the movie is what it is. A lot of attractive women, but nothing that I would call art.

*Yet another person who appeared in "Rosemary's Baby" was Emmaline Henry, who played Amanda Bellows on "I Dream of Jeannie". Talk about a weird link between two eras!
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8/10
Great film from the 30's featuring classic songs by Richard A. Whiting
stringplayer9920 February 2013
This is a great film from the golden age of cinema. Jack Benny's Role in this is great. He has great comedic timing with the other cast members as well as some dramatic elements to his character. The best reason that this film is enjoyable today however is the fact that much of the humor in this film is still relevant today. The great screenplay includes jokes and humor that is still funny today. The music composed by Richard A. Whiting is absolutely fantastic. In fact a song that is jokingly credited as the first ever Rock and Roll song is featured in this film by the great Boswell Sisters, called "Rock and Roll." Another humorous thing about this movie is Nancy Carol's striking resemblance to the great actress Claudette Colbert.
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8/10
Thank Goodness for The Bozzys!!!
kidboots20 June 2012
Warning: Spoilers
The Boswell Sisters at the time were one of the top singing groups on the radio. They were used as "box office bait" which meant that their names were featured below the film's title, luring fans into the movie but given only two songs (but what songs!!) - the jazzy "Rock and Roll" and the now classic "If I Had a Million Dollars". Nancy Carroll tried her best but if I recall she didn't even sing in her featured number "It Was Sweet of You", which was the setting for an elaborate acrobatic ballet with some overhead camera work that would make Busby Berkeley jealous.

Nancy was at a low ebb as 1934 dawned - her marriage to Bolton Mallory was over, the play she hoped would give her success on Broadway, "Undesirable Lady" lasted 24 performances and to rub salt into the wound, her ex-husband, Jack Kirkland's dramatization of "Tobacco Road" opened on Broadway to become one of the longest running plays in theatrical history (3,182 performances). But musicals were back in fashion and producer Edward Small had faith that Nancy could re-create her earlier singing and dancing success. It's just a pity that he didn't give her any singing (or much dancing) to do.

The showboat atmosphere of the S.S. Progress, with radio broadcasts by Chad Denby (Jack Benny) and his Atlantic Follies starring Sally Marsh (Carroll) always makes sure there are hundreds of passengers. Within a few minutes shots are fired, there is presumably a murder and the plot involves the 48 hours leading up to that point.

Made by the ultra small company Reliance (although released by United Artists) this movie had a bit of everything - murder, comedy, romance and music. It tried for the same excitement as "Wonder Bar" and with a "Grand Hotel" on the South Seas plot. In fact the funniest scene in the movie has some of the cast doing a spoof of "Grand Hotel" for a radio broadcast and Carroll's imitation of Greta Garbo is spot on!!!

Sally is instantly charmed by debonair jewel thief Jimmy Brett (Gene Raymond) as they board the boat. She has been given a job on the boat by the smitten Denby to get her away from the slimy clutches of Lothar (Sidney Blackmer) a Broadway card sharp, who, unbeknownst to them, is on the boat. Among the other passengers are Anya (Shirley Grey) who is madly in love with Lothar, her husband Herbert (Ralph Morgan) who although farewelling her at the dock, has secretly booked a passage to follow her and the notorious criminal Joe Saunders (William "Stage" Boyd) who has escaped from jail and has stowed away in a life boat. It wouldn't be complete without a vacationing policeman (Robert Elliott).

The film falls a bit flat because two of the most interesting cast members don't make their re-appearance until the film is almost over (Boyd at 69 minutes, Morgan at 72 minutes) but the plot is tied up most satisfactorily. What a difference three years make in the life of a child star!! A few days before I had watched "Dude Ranch" and Mitzi Green stole the show as the youngest member of a travelling troupe of ham actors. That was in 1931, in 1934 she was quite grown up but still being asked to do impressions of George Arliss!! She also had a terrific singing voice but wasn't asked to do much in this movie. No wonder she went to Broadway where she introduced "Where or When". "My Funny Valentine" and "The Lady is a Tramp" in Rogers and Hart's "Babes in Arms" - she didn't need the movies anymore.
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9/10
Not Benny At His Best!
JohnHowardReid22 August 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Despite his over-the-top billing in Astor's re-issue posters, Jack Benny's role is small and incidental. This is just as well actually, because Benny is not in good form and is obviously having difficulty adjusting his style to the movie medium. In fact, Benny's unsure performance is the reason Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round figures in my list of the "Almost Best", disregarding the fact that it is one of my all-time favorite movies. I'm also not partial to movies that go backwards. As far as I'm concerned, it's an over-used and unwelcome device simply because that it's exactly what it is – a device! Sydney Howard is also a minor irritant. I think most viewers would agree that he out-stays his welcome. Over-glum Carlyle Moore doesn't take my fancy either. An actor with a bit more charisma and a larger range of facial expressions was needed for this role. On the other hand, there are so many things I like in this expansively-produced movie, it would be impossible to list them all or even attempt any sort of order. At random then: The Boswell Sisters, Mitzi Green, Jimmy Grier's Orchestra, Sid Silvers, the Ceballos-Lee take on Busby Berkeley, Nancy Carroll, Gene Raymond, Sidney Blackmer, Sam Hardy, and last but not least, Robert Elliott, way down the cast list but spinning sunshine in a major role. Ben Stoloff was not a major director, but he sure handles this assignment with admirable assurance.
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