GO WEST, the second film in the Marx Brothers'
grand decline, is salvaged somewhat by the film's memorable opening and
closing scenes -- or so common wisdom would have it. I'll
agree
that they're the best scenes in GO WEST, but they're still a far cry
from the days of college widows and spy stuff. The first
scene, a
variation on the "tutsi-frutsi" routine from A DAY AT THE RACES, has
Groucho attempting to swindle some cash from Chico and Harpo, who in
turn swindle even more money out of Groucho. It is a nice
scene,
makes me smile every time I see it. But it never makes me
laugh. Unlike any other classic Marx Brothers scene, it
doesn't
have a single quotable line (unless you count the "beaver"
double-entendres exchanged between Groucho and Chico, which would
indicate that jokes have to be dirty to get noticed in GO
WEST).
The film's final scene is a slapstick train chase, and a wonderfully
executed slapstick train chase it is. But it could be Bud and
Lou, Dean and Jerry, or the entire Eisenhower cabinet on the train; the
scene is not dependent on the presence of the Marx Brothers.
My
own favorite scene in the film is the safecracking/"Lulubelle!"
business. To have Groucho and Chico get sloshed on mint
juleps is
out of character, but at least they're given funny material to perform
and they do it well. To me, AT THE CIRCUS looks like all
involved
were at least trying to make a film as good as the Thalberg
films. With GO WEST, it doesn't even look like they're trying
any
more.
½
- JL
Symptomatic of the real lack
of good comedy in
this film: the fairly straight production number "Ridin' the
Range", featuring John Carroll and the brothers, is my favorite scene.
Late in GO WEST, with
grave disappointment
weighing heavy on his warm and good heart, Chico says to his brothers
"There goes our last chance to help-a those kids." It marks
the
moment when the Marx Brothers, those madcap anarchists of the 1930s,
officially went the way of the dodo bird and the mighty
diplodocus. The three men cavorting around on a runaway train
in
GO WEST were no longer the Marx Brothers, they were just three amusing
fellows in wacky makeup performing decent comedy material in a bad
movie. But, to their credit, at least they did wind up
help-a-ing
those kids.
- JB
ADD ANOTHER
QUOTE AND MAKE IT A
GALLON
"Lulubelle, it's you! I didn't recognize you standing up!"
FUNGUS WITH
BUTTONS
What Might Have Been: Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby, who were writers on
the classic Marx films HORSE FEATHERS and DUCK SOUP, wrote a script for
GO WEST that went unused. They also wrote a song, "Go West, Young Man",
presumably for this film. It also went unused, though Groucho recorded
it commercially later in life and featured it in his solo vehicle
COPACABANA.