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Thousands Cheer
Click here to buy Thousands Cheer by MGM (Video & DVD). Thousands Cheer
by MGM (Video & DVD)
Sales Rank: 17291
Price: $19.98
0.0 out of 5 stars
Get More Info On Thousands Cheer! Buy Thousands Cheer Now!

The second half of this 1943 Technicolor musical is an excuse for MGM's contract talent to perform songs and sketches in a big show at an Army base. Unfortunately, more than an hour passes before the show arrives, stranding the viewer with a thin service comedy about an opera singer (Kathryn Grayson) tagging along to a military camp in hopes of reuniting her estranged parents, whose names are Bill and Hillary (no comments, please). Romance comes in the form of private Gene Kelly, a former trapeze artist who misses the glory of his former life. Grayson warbles, and Kelly has one nifty solo dance (with a mop and broom), but the all-star revue is the movie's main attraction. The song selection is generally poor ("I Dug a Ditch in Wichita" is performed twice), with Lena Horne's sultry take on "Honeysuckle Rose" an exception. She's backed by Benny Carter and His Orchestra. Specialty player Virginia O'Brien delights with one of her deadpan numbers, Eleanor Powell tap dances, and Judy Garland delivers with a boogie-woogie lilt on "Jumpin' Down at Carnegie Hall." Comedy sketches with Red Skelton and Frank Morgan are stubbornly unfunny. Then there's José Iturbi, the Spanish-born conductor, making his film debut at the beginning of his run as MGM's supposedly cute highbrow. Director George Sidney would team up two years later with Iturbi, Kelly, and Grayson in <I>Anchors Aweigh</I>, a much more enjoyable musical confection. <I>--Robert Horton</I>


Viewer Reviews
Of all the Technicolor shows created "for the boys" in WW II, this is the most insipid. Aside from Kelly's mop/broom dance and Lena Horne, this is a real yawner. Rooney (who must be the last survivor) does some memorable impressions, and the latin dance number is fun. The rest is useless plot, third-rate actors, and lifeless productions.

If you want to see the gold standard of this genre, try The Gang's All Here. Be sure you look for the 1943 musical, not the 1941 film noir of the same name.

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Thousands Cheer
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