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ellis island  gangsterism  illegal immigration  lets party under prohibition  marx  

Monkey Business

Monkey Business

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Director: Norman Z. Mcleod
Actors: Groucho Marx, Harpo Marx, Chico Marx, Zeppo Marx, Rockliffe Fellowes
Studio: Image Entertainment
Category: DVD

List Price: $14.99
Buy Used: $12.98
You Save: $2.01 (13%)



Used (7) Collectible (5) from $12.98

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 31 reviews
Sales Rank: 36502

Format: Ac-3, Black & White, Dvd-video, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Region: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
DVD Layers: 1
DVD Sides: 1
Picture Format: Academy Ratio
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 77 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

ISBN: 6305078467
UPC: 014381428421
EAN: 9786305078463
ASIN: 6305078467

Theatrical Release Date: September 19, 1931
Release Date: June 24, 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: SILVER SCREEN EDITION...NO COVER ART..WILL SHIP IN REGUALR DVD CASE..DISCS IN GREAT SHAPE...Same day Shipping on all domestic orders! We ship most small books, single CDs, DVDs, video games 1st class. Our quality control process insures items to be in the condition described or better. All purchases come with our 30 Day Satisfaction-Guarantee!

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Editorial Reviews:

Description
It's comedy on the high seas when the Marx Brothers sneak aboard an ocean liner and get involved in a crazy set of comedy capers not to be missed. A madcap vintage voyage where pure lunacy rides the waves.


Customer Reviews:   Read 26 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Let's play monkey, you're the ape   May 2, 2008
Jacques COULARDEAU (OLLIERGUES France)
That's the new and most recent, 1931, manual for how to immigrate illegally into the US via New York, Ellis Island, and then how to succeed in the gangster dominated society of New York City. Of you are a stowaway, better be four because they will never be able to find you all and one will always be able to make them run in one direction while the three others are either eating, or resting, or playing, or flirting, or whatever. Then of course you have to rotate the one or the two who are running and chasing the officials on the ship. Funny business indeed, monkey business for sure, but who is the monkey, who are the apes? Then the best strategy is to select two competing gangsters, who are here only to enjoy gambling and drinking, on the ship and manage to become their bodyguards. Two for one and the other two for the other one. You add to that a slight love affair of one of the four with the daughter of one of the two gangsters and you have it. It will only take some hullabaloo with the customs officers and the police to go through in a lot of noise, antics and floating or flying papers and stamps. Then use the rivalry of the two gangsters to get the daughter of one kidnapped by the other, then retrieve her from detention and manage to capture the kidnapping one and deliver him to the other and you are the kings of the night, full of money, good food, good champagne, in one word good cheer. We cannot exactly say this is a super-duper plot that deserves a medal, an Oscar or even a paragraph in a cinema encyclopedia. But you have to take into account the rest, that is to say the performance and antics of those four clowning siblings. They will manage to play some piano, some harp and also to play Punch and Judy with the captain and his acolytes. It is nothing but apish foolish clownish play but it is funny in the extreme rhythm and supreme variety hence absolute amazement it breeds, raises and inflates in your brains, plural absolutely needed because after a while you do not know any more on what brain of yours it is playing, left, right, middle, under, top, upper, heart-core or whatever. You are losing your ground and you start diving or sinking in their broth. And your sanity is getting loose. I hope you will not meet Chico or Harpo in a dark street tonight because you may feel a sudden need to run away. They are not really dangerous, they are just frighteningly de-structuring. And don't try to understand their language. From pun to pun, from innuendo to fuzzy innuendo, from play on words to more play on more words, you will be completely corrugated within fifteen minutes by their witty gibberish. Even if this film is definitely not politically correct, it sure is not in anyway hitting under the normal belt of morality. Yet it is a defense and illustration of illegal immigration from Europe, if possible rather what could we call it? Jewish, ethnic, Yiddish, who knows, but white nevertheless. In 1931, in the trough of the depression, still a couple of years before the New Deal, with no alcohol, except of course on transatlantic ships, and in the private celebrations of gangsters, life could only be funny if some apish monkeys cultivated some funny disturbance in the midst of the social capitalistic and teetotallistic mist, if not fog, if not plain good old London pea soup smog, of America.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, University Paris Dauphine, University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne & University Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines



5 out of 5 stars enough to make me work myself up from nothing to a state of extreme poverty   August 21, 2007
Matthew G. Sherwin
10 out of 12 found this review helpful

Monkey Business has got to be one of the funniest Marx Brothers films I've seen yet. The movie moves along at a good pace; and the actors all turn in a fine performance. The actors' timing helps to enhance the quality of the gags and the jokes.

The action begins on a steamship headed to America from Europe. There are four stowaways on board--guess who! Yep--The Marx Brothers! Of course the captain and his crew discover them and the laughs ensue as the crew chases the brothers all over the ship, predictably without ever actually catching and cornering them although there are a few close calls.

In addition, there are gangster wars so intense they continue even during the voyage. Eventually Chico and Harpo work as bodyguards for Big Joe Helton (Rockliffe Fellowes); and Groucho and Zeppo work for Helton's enemy Alky Briggs (Harry Woods). The boundaries soon blur, however, with Zeppo and Helton's daughter Mary (Ruth Hall) falling in love while Groucho flirts with Briggs' wife Lucille (Thelma Todd).

It may well seem that I've given away the whole plot but rest assured that there's plenty more left unsaid here. Questions arise: How will the gangster war play out? Will the four brothers stay clean despite their recruitment by gangsters? What about Zeppo and Mary Helton, Joe Helton's daughter--will they remain a couple with all the trouble that keeps happening? No spoilers here, folks; you'll just have to watch the movie to find out.

The brilliant cinematography uses great camera angles in the numerous steamship scenes to make them even funnier; and look for some excellent choreography in the party scenes in the second half of the picture and the barn scenes later on as well. Great!

Overall, Monkey Business is a must-have for fans of The Marx Brothers. The four brothers work hard and it shows; I laughed harder than ever especially with Groucho's antics and his zesty one liners! I highly recommend Monkey Business for people who enjoy classic screwball comedies from the 1930s as well.

Enjoy!



5 out of 5 stars Marxes on the Rampage   January 11, 2006
Scott Rivers (Los Angeles, CA USA)
27 out of 30 found this review helpful

The Marx Brothers' first Hollywood production survives as a masterpiece of cinematic anarchy. "Monkey Business" (1931) takes no prisoners - it's fast, furious and doesn't give a damn about convention. There are enough sight gags and nonsequiturs for a half-dozen comedies. Thelma Todd is a lively addition to the Marxian ensemble and compensates for the absence of Margaret Dumont. Memorable Groucho dialogue: "Don't forget that the stockholder of yesteryear is the stowaway of today."


5 out of 5 stars "Love flies out the door when money comes innuendo."   September 28, 2005
Bomojaz (South Central PA, USA)
6 out of 6 found this review helpful

The first Marx Brothers movie filmed directly for the screen, it's their first great picture. They are a bunch of stowaways on an ocean liner who get mixed up with racketeers along the way. Fast and furiously funny for the most part, though the last 20 minutes, after they get off the ship (after the hilarious scene where they all try to immitate Maurice Chevalier) are a let down. It was their first movie in which rather than being merely wiseacres and insulting punsters they were truly anarchic: Harpo totally disrupts the passport proceedings, stamping everything in sight and then throwing the papers in the air. From this point on they would not be just verbally wild and funny guys, but their humor would take on a Freudian aspect as well. Definitely worth a watch.


5 out of 5 stars ONE OF THEIR BEST MOVIES!!   March 8, 2004
Sharon Green (Orlando, FL. United States)
3 out of 5 found this review helpful

I have recently become a DIE-HARD Marx Brothers fan. I was introduced to them by my wonderful cousin Lewis. THANK YOU LEWIS!!!!!!!!!! The Marx Brothers are FANTASTICALY HILARIOUS!! Monkey Business was the first movie of their's that I saw, and its, so far, the best. Even thought the others I have seen come close behind, there's just something about Monkey Business. Its down-right hilarious. Great lines by Groucho, great scene of Harpo and him playing the harpo, Chico and the piano...This movie deserves a 5 stars.

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