I'm Much Obliged (1936) Poster

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5/10
Pretty Good Musical Short Featuring Nobody Famous
alonzoiii-118 September 2008
Newspaper columnist "Mr. Inquisitive" phones various people in an unnamed city and asks them what they would like to be doing. It turns out that they would like to sing (and dance), and do so. Mr Inquisitive then sings back to them "I'm Much Obliged".

This obscure short features two typically obnoxious leads (who can't muster a funny joke between them). Fortunately, though, the musical acts, while not top rank, are good second tier people who keep the short interesting, if you have any liking for the music of the 30s.

Vera Van is a torch singer with a nice alto voice (think Alice Faye with maybe 50% of the talent), who gets in a nice gloom despair and misery number, plus a jazzier tune later on.

Rosita & Fontana do an elegant Latin dance to an elegant Latin number. Nothing terribly interesting, but far better than the comedy from the leads.

Lester Cole (accompanied by a manly male chorus) sings Western tunes in an operetta style. Since the tunes themselves are pretty good, this works OK, though anyone looking for Western Swing will be surprised to find a "hayseed" Nelson Eddy.

The Heat Waves are a little tap dancing/jive singing group. They do rather well with Jimmie Lunceford's Rhythm Is our Business, and the little specialty number they have later on. This a fun group (backed by a decent band) that I wish I knew more about.

This is worth 20 minutes.
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5/10
So are we
bkoganbing30 September 2014
I still call the John Wayne-Robert Mitchum classic western El Dorado the 'much obliged' movie. So it was with some curiosity that I watched this Warner Brothers short subject I'm Much Obliged. In El Dorado everyone is constantly saying how they're 'much obliged'. The only things that star George Dobbs is obliged for is a punch in the nose delivered by Lester Cole.

Dobbs plays the columnist who writes the Mr. Inquisitor column whose tagline is 'much obliged. He calls around to various entertainers looking for news for his Walter Winchell like column and he gets to hear a bit of everybody's act. The best is singer Vera Van who delivers a rendition of that smoky torch You Let Me Down which Lee Wiley made popular in the Thirties.

I'm Much Obliged is a pleasant 20 minute musical interlude.
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4/10
Feeling obliged.
morrison-dylan-fan19 May 2019
Getting back home from a night out,I decided to catch a short and sweet movie before bed. Having picked up this title mid-last year,I felt obliged to finally go for a viewing.

View on the film:

Dancing for just over 20 minutes, director Roy Mack & editor Bert Frank bring a breezy playfulness to the Musical set-pieces with editing trick shots making the various slick dance acts kick out to the screen. Threading a wafer thin plot, the screenplay by Cyrus Wood just about makes the movie sway on charm thanks to the 30's newspaper chatter of Mr. Inquisitive in making the acts feel obliged.
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5/10
Song And Dance
atlasmb7 November 2020
Though it is short on both running time and thematic continuity, this is a rather entertaining film. It is a compilation of performances by singers and dancers, some of whom are rather talented. In fact, other than the first song performance, I enjoyed all the acts.

In particular, watch for the tap dancing routine; the lead dancer is terrific. On the other hand, the dancers that surround Vera Van as she sings "Merrily Bound for Nowhere" are a sloppy assemblage, which is typical of troupes of the day.
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5/10
For What?
boblipton19 August 2019
George Dobbs writes for a newspaper; his column appears below recipes for Paradise Whip (don't get excited; it involves marshmallow, bananas and nothing salacious). His shtick is to call up people, ask them what they plan to do. They perform a musical number, he says "I'm much obliged", has an annoyed conversation with the guy at the next desk, and calls up the next act.

In other words, it's another of the variety-show shorts that most of the studios turned out to fill up movie programs. Sometimes they are varied enough to be entertaining. Sometimes the linking material is good. Sometimes the shorts involve talent that are important, or typify a movement in popular entertainment at the time.

This one does none of those. It's a few competent, forgettable acts, linked by uninspired badinage from Roy Mack's Vitagraph shorts unit.
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5/10
need more magical sense
SnoopyStyle16 March 2024
The Mr. Inquisitive column in The Morning Daily newspaper has the tagline "I'm Much Obliged". That's his catch-phrase. His office mate is a grumpy old man writing The Auntie Pru's Recipe column. He calls various telephone numbers and asks what they would like to do. Inevitably, they all do a song and dance.

I don't know how the phone calls work. I don't think we're supposed to, but it does bug me. It occurs to me that this should be a magical phone. He can call any random number and the other side would do a song and dance. This needs to do an exposition on that premise. Aside from that, this is a bit of harmless non-sense.
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6/10
In a Tour De Force never approached by Nostradamus . . .
oscaralbert12 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
. . . Warner Bros.' always prophetic filmmakers take a stab at tracing the De-Evolution of Civilization kicked off by "Call-Me-Al" Gore inventing the Internets, quickly followed by "Smart" Phones, Streaming, and eventually Original Programming from our Kitchen Toasters, with this 1930s theatrical short, I'M MUCH OBLIGED. The quality of the "musical" entertainment I'M MUCH OBLIGED features is third-rate at best, and the disjointed framing story only makes matters worse. After spending 20 minutes with I'M MUCH OBLIGED, it's quite easy to extrapolate our 21st Century boxes with 1,000-plus channels--and NOTHING worth watching! This short uses split screens to anticipate quick transitions (that is, "channel surfing") from one lame offering to the next. If Today's doctors run across I'M MUCH OBLIGED, they'll be whipping out their prescription pads to treat its short attention span. Doubtless contemporary theater audiences--used to such quality Warner screen fare as HEROES FOR SALE and PUBLIC ENEMY--were totally mystified by Eye, Ear, and Nose junk of the I'M MUCH OBLIGED ilk. Little did they know that they were previewing the world of their great grand children.
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4/10
A time-passer.
planktonrules20 January 2013
The Vitaphone division of Warner Brothers was devoted to making short films--most often musical films. And, they tended to showcase acts that were not yet big--many on their way up and many who would probably rise no higher. The format of "I'm Much Obliged" is a bit different from most, though it is essentially a musical showcase.

The film begins with a newspaper columnist, 'Mr. Inquisitive' (George Dobbs) randomly calling people and asking them what they wanted best to do. Not surprisingly, all the people ended up singing!! But because people are talking about their fantasies, the numbers are set on the range or in South America or other places--all which look like they are in a sound stage (particularly the South American dance scene). It's all reasonably pleasant but undistinguished--the sort of thing many younger folks today would find pretty dull, though technically, for the time, they are pretty good. Overall, mildly entertaining but little to make it a must-see, that's for sure.
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10/10
A Time Before Audiences Became Pathetically Jaded
klasikvhs16 March 2024
My headline says it all. But I fell in love with George Dobbs merely because he looked fantastic in his clothes. The 20's, 30's & 40's were the superior decades for men's fashion. Plus his voice had a familiar, sincere Bolger-esque quality.

But my romantic entanglements don't end with he... i also fell deeply in love with The Heat Waves right from the start. Rhythm is Our Business is one of my fave tunes & their cover is memorable. Then when they came back for a costumed & orchestra accompanied tap number!?... Well, I was sunk, gate. Now I find myself searching the world wide web for these men's names and have come up completely too short. So, I'll make it a mission to try and remedy that.
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