Man on the Flying Trapeze

1935 comedy

Rating: 16/20

Plot: Ambrose Wolfinger (I love these names in W.C. Fields' movies) has a shrew for a wife. To compound things, he lives with his mother-in-law and his no-good, unemployed brother-in-law. At least his daughter is nice to him. After brushing his teeth, he goes to bed, but the couple are awakened when a pair of burglars begin singing in the cellar. This somehow results in Ambrose being arrested. The following day, he really wants to go to a wrestling match, so he tells his boss that he's got to attend his mother-in-law's funeral and gets the afternoon off. If his plans worked, we wouldn't have much of a comedy.

Hey, guess who's in this movie. Go ahead. Take a guess. No, not the Yugoslavan Burt Reynolds. Nope, Don Knotts isn't in this. Buddy Hackett? No, he's not in Man on the Flying Trapeze. Shirley Temple? No, but that's a good guess. Give up? Tor Johnson is in this movie! Tor Freakin' Johnson of Bride of the Monster and Plan 9 from Outer Space fame. Tor Johnson, the beast in The Beast of Yucca Flats. Fields' character in this is more likable. You don't always feel sorry for his characters, but Ambrose works hard and puts up with more than an Eskimo. And as things get more and more complicated, Wolfinger remains indomitable, unflappable. There's nothing really hysterically funny going on here, but the absurdity of the uber-bungling burglars delivering their extended rendition of "On the Banks of the Wabash," Wolfinger's traffic problems, and the mother-in-law's discovery that she has passed away are pretty funny. And I loved Wolfinger's truthful lying upon his return home after the wrestling match. After this movie ends in a satisfying way, there's another tacked-on abrupt ending that falls flat, but it doesn't change the fact that Tor Johnson is in this movie. My main gripe, probably a big one, is Mrs. Wolfinger played by Kathleen Howard. She's really obnoxious, that 1930s kind of obnoxious, and I couldn't stand her. Of course, that was likely the point.

3 comments:

cory said...

Did you know Buddy Hackett was in "It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World"? Just thought you should know.

Shane said...

Everybody's in that movie...Buster Keaton, Buddy Hackett, Don Knotts, Norman Fell. Hell, that's both of the 'Three's Company' landlords right there! You can't have any more 'Three's Company' landlords than that in one film!

cory said...

Have you seen it?