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The Busby Berkeley Collection
  • The Busby Berkeley Collection is a 6-disc compilation of five remastered Warner Bros.ics from one of the greatest motion picture choreographers of all time. Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating: NR Age: 012569678460 UPC: 012569678460 Manufacturer No: 67846

The Busby Berkeley Collection is a 6-disc compilation of five remastered Warner Bros. classics from one of the greatest motion picture choreographers of all time.Set during the depression, this is the granddaddy of backstage musicals in which the understudy finally gets a chance to shine. It may seem a little cliché now, but in 1933 this was hot stuff. All that behind-the-scenes atmosphere feels very genuine, and the script is more acerbic than you might expect.

A sickly Julian Marsh (Warner Baxter) puts his all into what may be his last show, only to face a disaster when leading lady Dorothy Brock (Bebe Daniels) sprains her ankle. Thank heavens for ingenue Peggy Sawyer (Ruby Keeler), who steps in at the last minute. The vivacious soundtrack includes “Shuffle off to Buffalo,” and the still-catchy title tune. Best of all are those extravagant, kaleidoscopic dance numbers by Busby Berkeley, then in his prime. –Rochelle O’Gorman The Busby Berkeley Collection celebrates the work of one of the most visually inventive director-choreographers in the history of film. The centerpiece is of course 42nd Street (1933). This is the quintessential backstage musical in which young Peggy Sawyer (Ruby Keeler) goes from wide-eyed chorus girl to leading lady, urged by Warner Baxter, “You’re going out there a youngster, but you’ve got to come back a star!” A cast that also includes Dick Powell and Ginger Rogers (when she was an RKO contract player and before she teamed up with Fred Astaire) performs “Shuffle Off to Buffalo, ” “You’re Getting to Be a Habit with Me,” and the title tune, in which Keeler tap-dances on a black surface that turns out to be the roof of a car. Berkeley’s numbers are known for their kaleidoscopic patterns, their stark black-and-white contrast, and their sheer sense of spectacle. But more than anything, they’re known for their celebration of women. By the dozens, they dance, play pianos, frolic in waterfalls, and, in some of the most overtly sexual numbers, stand spread-eagled in a line as the camera passes through their legs. In many ways, the title song from Dames sums it up best: “What do you go for / to see a show for? / Tell the truth, you go to see those beautiful dames.”

While Berkeley choreographed and directed the musical sequences in these films, the plot sections were generally directed by others such as Lloyd Bacon. Keeler and Powell were the most frequent headliners, supported by character players such as Joan Blondell, Guy Kibbee, and Ned Sparks, and most of the songs were contributed by Harry Warren and Al Dubin. The stories aren’t much, usually revolving around the putting-together of a musical show as well as the lives and loves of chorus girls. The term “gold diggers,” which is the source of the title of two of the films included in this set, refers unflatteringly to chorus girls in search of wealthy husbands.

Gold Diggers of 1933 opens with a justly famous shot of Ginger Rogers wearing an outfit of coins and singing “We’re in the Money” first in English then in pig Latin. Gold Diggers of 1935 is capped by “The Lullaby of Broadway,” a 14-minute story-within-a-story that seems one of the inspirations for Singin’ in the Rain‘s “Broadway Melody.” Dames (1934) has the aforementioned title tune as well as “I Only Have Eyes for You” (with Powell singing to dozens of Keeler faces). Footlight Parade changes things up a bit by starring James Cagney as a producer desperately cranking out musical numbers. Keeler and Powell emerge from their bit-character roles to headline two of the big productions stacked together at the end, while Cagney replaces Powell in the third, showing off the vaudeville hoofing skills he would use later in 1942′s Yankee Doodle Dandy.

DVD supplements are generous. The sixth disc is the 163-minute Busby Berkely Disc, a former laserdisc program that collects just the musical numbers from nine films without the plot filler. Most of the numbers are already included in the films in this collection, but there are also one number each from Fashions of 1934, Wonder Bar, In Caliente, and Gold Diggers of 1937. Also on the discs are new and old featurettes (one tracks the development of 42nd Street from book to screen to stage), and vintage cartoons and shorts (one promotional short has Berkeley on-screen talking up Dames). Picture quality is about the same as on the Astaire and Rogers Collection, Vol. 1: good for the age of the material, but with noticeable fuzz and print damage. –David Horiuchi

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5 Comments
  • C. Masse
    March 17, 2010
    #1
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    For some reason, I thought this would be in color. I also didn’t realize what a old movie this was. It was ok, not great.

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  • Anonymous
    March 17, 2010
    #2
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    The trouble with the word “classic” is that it becomes applied to films that don’t deserve it. Perhaps that’s a little harsh, but after watching 42nd Street, that’s what came to mind. Now, I can understand how it could gain that name. When it was made in 1933, it was likely a groundbreaker in terms of the movie musical. Busby Berkley is a name known throughout the world for good reason, and the dance sequences in 42nd Street are eyepopping. It’s the rest of the movie that is lacking.

    I didn’t care a whit about any of the characters in the film. I’ll take that back, I cared that the guy got dumped and that the girl that dumped him seemed to be prostituting herself for her work. And that’s one of the better qualities of the film. In 1933, the Hays office had not yet been created and the dark aspects of society, however implied, could still pass muster and be played out on the screen. The film only picks up, though, during the scenes of the Broadway play “Pretty Lady,” when Berkley’s genius finally comes to the fore. The rest is merely leading up to that finale.

    Several famous names appear like Dick Powell, Ruby Keeler, Una Merkel, and Ginger Rogers; and 42nd Street also contains songs like the title tune and “Shuffle Off to Buffalo.” A Broadway adaptation was launched in 1980, based on the movie, rather than vice versa.

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  • Anonymous
    March 17, 2010
    #3
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    … what really redeemed the 42nd st film version for me was the many moments it shook off the constraints of following the play and used the medium of film to its advantage. It’s that difference that you see in films like My Fair Lady between an amazing film construction of a number like “I could have danced all night”, and the stagnant race track number(s). and 42nd st. really explodes in it’s final title sequence. from the breathtaking track through all the girls’ legs, too the expansive and seeming endless NYC sets this number outshone the entirety of the rest of the film in my opinion. There was some very nice cinematography throughout the film, but the story behind the numbers fell flat too many times for me to accord it any higher a rank than it gets. I’d actually like to see this play remade, if only because I think the stage production is strong enough that it could translate better to film, this film isn’t as strong (or revered) as other musicals, so it’d be interesting to see someone like Paul Thomas Anderson take a crack at bringing to life a classic stage musical, if only because it hasn’t really been done yet.

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  • B. Wilkins
    March 17, 2010
    #4
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    I bought this as a xmas gift. It came in time for xmas. I have not seen the collection

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  • Mister C
    March 17, 2010
    #5
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    A really great way to waste a rainy day. No car crashes, blood, gore, etc. just easy to watch flicks from the old days of cinema.

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