Honey opens the movie by singing âMusic Makes Meâ in a stunning see-through dress that somehow made it past censors (the wrath of the Hays Office would finally hit Hollywood full-force in 1934). Then Fred and Ginger engage in their only dance during the film â" and not for long â" in âThe Cariocaâ number. They are fun, as is the song, but the musical number itself lumbers along with three different singers and way too much group dancing. Fred gets a brief solo number in the later half of the film, and an Astaire solo would become a staple of his films.
I read one book on RKO that claimed audiences were clamoring for more Astaire and Rogers after this film. Thatâs not true, considering their brief time together. Itâs more likely ! that the often cash-strapped RKO was willing to give them a ch! ance bec ause of his talent, their chemistry together and that they were cheap! In fact, Astaire was once considered for the lead before it became a Dolores Del Rio vehicle, and Rogers nearly wasnât cast at all. But the pairing worked. Although she wasnât a star, she had been working her way up, and her wisecracking demeanor ended up giving her an advantage. She wasnât just a blonde trying to make it. She had street smarts, intelligence and eventually the elegance to balance it out into a complete package â" a perfect foil for the debonair Astaire. She brought movie experience and he brought musical and Broadway experience.
Anyway, back to the movie and that crazy finale. Itâs a jaw-dropper â" involving chorus girls and airplanes â" thatâs totally unrealistic, completely crazy and marvelous to watch. Whoever came up with that one must have been drunk. Regardless, itâs a fitting capper to the film, keeping in line with the filmâs love of airplanes and incorpora! ting the exotic locale.
Airplanes, by the way, held a special fascination during the 1920s that culminated with the frenzy surrounding Charles Lindberghâs history solo crossing of the Atlantic in 1927 â" right when sound was being introduced into films. This temporarily grounded films while filmmakers scrambled to improve the technology that would address such issues as limited mic placement options that kept films stagy. Lindberghâs popularity was still high six years later, and adding planes to sound film would intrigue audiences.
Also, in the wake of Lindberghâs success was his promotion of air travel. Executive producer Cooper was on the board of Pan Am, which began its first service from Miami to South America in 1932, which is why the film is set in Miami and Rio.
I also like how the film tries to have visual fun, from the crazy cutaways between scenes to the alter egos of Roger and Belinha plotting to get them together to the changing back! grounds during the âOrchids in the Moonlightâ number (whic! h origin ally had a color tint to it) to the band in a balloon basket floating over a dance floor. The filmmakers also heavily use back-projection shots, which work well by helping to bring the viewer to South America.
âFlying Down to Rioâ was one of the films ushering in a second wave of musicals led by Busby Berkley at Warner Brothers. RKO promoted this film heavily, hiring Thornton Freeland to direct â" he already had directed a few successful musicals like âWhoopee.â
It did pay off for RKO â" in unexpected ways. It may be fun, but itâs odd that the film ended with a shot of Astaire and Rogers, not the stars. Itâs an unplanned hint at the delights that they would produce throughout the 1930s.
Great classic films, best all time movies
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