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  • As a movie, this story staggers all over itself. It's a pretty mundane rags-to-riches-to somewhere in the middle story. The acting isn't real crisp, the plot is choppy at times, and the comedy is just not very funny.

    The movie is redeemed, however, by the presence of many live musical performances of stars from the '30s. Many of these performances are of immense historical proportions in terms of music. Lots of people will want to see this because of the presence of Bela Legosi and Boris Karloff on screen together, but their participation in the movie is very short and rather disappointing.

    If you're looking for an entertaining movie it's probably best to skip this one. If you have some interest in stars of the '30s, it's one you should catch.
  • It's a movie 1: from Universal; 2: directed by Karl Freund; 3: with Boris Karloff & Bela Lugosi. No, you're wrong, it's a comedy starring Edmund Lowe as a street hustler who works his way in as a radio announcer, sports caster, and event broadcaster, with the aid of Gloria Stuart. As his success increases, so does his ego, and as the audience, you're waiting for the inevitable crack-up and wondering if and how he'll manage his redemption.

    It has three major variety segments, with musical acts -- some good, like the Downey Sisters, some great like Ethel Waters -- some comedy acts -- all cornball -- and some contemporary celebrity tie-ins. There are several fine screen comedians in support, like Sterling Holloway and Victor Moore, and Lowe is fine as the larger-than-life operator, but it's a typical decent Universal, budgeted at probably a third of what it would cost at MGM -- and why not, since the best cameraman on the lot was in the director's chair and not lensing it?
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Veteran actor Edmund Lowe had quite a different part in this all- star musical farce surrounding the original idiot box, the radio, something that still exists but in quite a different way than it did 80 years ago. Within the first reel of the film, he goes from suckered auction announcer to street vendor of a cleaner that removes stains simply because it removes the fabric attached to the stain. Finally, he's made a radio announcer for chicken liver magnate victor Moore, and it is around this shell of a plot (which includes him romancing a young Gloria Stuart) that all of these musical acts and comedy sketches are mixed in. Other than that, the story revolves around his bombastic attempts for scandalous journalism (and a pre-cursor of "fake news"), leading to a conclusion on an airplane that has to be seen to be believed.

    Those expecting a big all star studio revue will be greatly disappointed, but if you go in strictly for nostalgia, you may be at least entertained. Moore is simply adorable, while future Winnie the Pooh voice Sterling Holloway is also very funny as a very incompetent sound effects man. Some cameos in the comedy sketches are very brief and unworthy of being billed. Karloff and Lugosi appear in the same sketch, not together, within a minute of each other. Lugosi bellows one line and gets the door shut on him, while Karloff is on screen twice as long as him, not even a whole minute.

    Ethel Waters gets a very jazzy spiritual called, "I ain't gonna sin no more", aided by the Beale Street Boys who also get a few numbers of their own. Waters forecasts her future stint singing at Billy Graham ministries with this song. Ruth Etting gets two songs in as well, pretty much just a cameo appearance which was the bulk of her film career. This is best thought of as a valentine to radio. I happened to enjoy it for what it was, and perhaps if you go in without any expectations, you can find amusement in it and avoid ranking it as the bomb that it has been rated as.
  • This lost film has been found. I was able to get my hands on a bootleg VHS of this flick. I'm a big fan of the Universal horror movies of the 30s. It was a treat to see this comedy that is directed by Karl "Mummy" Freund, starring Gloria "Invisible Man" Stuart, and cameos by Lugosi and Karloff. The story kind of jumps all over the place. And I'm guessing that radio comedy bits weren't done on sets with actors in costumes. Also we hear multiple versions of "I ain't gonna sin no more". Otherwise good fun.
  • Blowhard Philip Gabney becomes a smash radio announcer, until he is canned from the station for a fake broadcast and tries to resume his on air status by attempting a dangerous stunt. Very weak on plot development, but obviously this was done by Universal to promote various radio, vaudeville, and singing stars of the day. Many of the segments from the movie to be done for a radio listening audience seem more suited to a visual mode. Of note, this is the second movie to team Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi, even though they don't appear on screen at the same time and are in for a few seconds. Rating, 3 of 10.
  • utgard1411 July 2017
    Painfully unfunny musical comedy from Universal about an arrogant con man (Edmund Lowe) who becomes an even more arrogant radio star. Movies like this remind you how little Universal had going for it at this time outside of their horror pictures. Lowe is about as charismatic as a second-rate William Powell can be. Gloria Stuart has the unfortunate task of playing his love interest. Victor Moore plays one of his nervous nebbish characters I find so irritating. Jack Benny-looking Hugh O'Connell plays Lowe's sidekick. Ethel Waters, Ruth Etting, and Gene Austin sing forgettable tunes. Slightly noteworthy today only for brief cameo appearances by Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi, Chester Morris, Paul Lukas, and "Sheridan Whiteside" himself, Alexander Woollcott.

    The jokes and sketches are all lame. I didn't laugh once. I'm talking "is your refrigerator running" level of humor here. Directed by famed cinematographer Karl Freund but you would never know it as there's no visual style to this at all. Words I was sick of after watching this: stooge, liver, and all variations of gab.
  • I watched this film for two reasons. The first was Ruth Etting. A favorite of mine since I heard her great Columbia LP at a faculty member's home at college. Disappointing here as she sings one awful song and a bit of a reprise and then goodbye. Bummer. The other reason was to see Douglas Fowley a good friend of my Dad's when they were young men. (I think Fowley was at my folk's wedding in 1933 a year before this film. Seeing him as a young man before he adopted his trademark pencil mustache made me see my Dad at that age. Otherwise, Gloria Stuart was lovely, Ethel Waters was fine singing a dull song and it was Alex Woollcott who surprised me. Who knew he was so soft spoken? I always thought of him bellowing as did Monty Wooley in The Man Who Came to Dinner. On the other hand, Edmund Lowe was repulsive as the fast talking con man. Yuch. Watching this once will be quite enough.
  • I am sure a lot of people saw this film because Bela Lugosi AND Boris Karloff are in it. However, this is NOT reason enough to see it, as neither is in much of the film....and Lugosi only in it for a few seconds!

    "Gift of Gab" is a musical comedy starring Edmund Lowe. It also has a pretty interesting cast, with Gloria Stuart, Ruth Etting (who made few films but was a very popular singer), Paul Lukas, Ethel Waters, Chester Morris, Alexaner Wollcott and Alice White, among others.

    When it comes to plot, "Gift of Gab" has less than 99% of the films I've seen. The fast-talking Philip Gabney (Lowe) is able to get a job at a local radio station. He runs a variety show...and the film shows EVERY ONE OF THESE ACTS....and not much else. Now here's the weird part....some of these 'radio' acts consist of skits in a studio with sets!!! How can the people at home see any of this stuff?! It' makes no sense. Weirdly, this isn't the first film I've seen like this, as one I saw some time ago had Buzby Berkeley types of song and dance numbers...which are impossibly stupid to do for radio folks! I saw another where a guy gives dancing lessons on the radio...where the fans were apparently supposed to copy the dancer's moves!! I think the studios were mixing up radio with television!!!

    So is it any good? No. Most of the acts stink, Gabney is hard to like and the film is simply a chore to finish.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    1934's "Gift of Gab" is an example of Universal product advertising radio novelty acts and musical numbers, which no doubt all the studios did; it's just that Universal, further down the ladder and closer to Poverty Row than to MGM, just didn't have the resources to sign top talent. Edmund Lowe is the star, playing Philip 'Gift of Gab' Gabney, obnoxious radio announcer whose confidence tricks eventually backfire on him, an excuse to present various numbers of dubious quality on behalf of station owner Victor Moore. Among the many guest stars playing themselves (Alexander Woolcott, Ethel Waters, Ruth Etting), we have the lovely Gloria Stuart, falling far too easily for the glib Gabney, and a smaller role for adorable Marian "Peanuts" Byron (as a telephone operator), who should have had a bigger career, as her work for Hal Roach would attest. However, the lone reason this film is remembered (and miraculously survived) is one sketch 46 minutes in, as murder victim Paul Lukas makes himself more comfortable on the floor, maid Binnie Barnes screams, and detectives Chester Morris and Roger Pryor search for clues. Hiding in a closet is Bela Lugosi, dressed as a French Apache (which he'd played on Broadway in "The Red Poppy"), asking simply, "what time is it?" Shortly after hearing a description of a mysterious phantom with long hair and a top hat, in through a window climbs The Phantom himself (Boris Karloff), who checks a number in the corpse's little black book, asks for a match, and laughs menacingly as he exits through the same window. Meagre it may be, but the presence of both Lugosi and Karloff, just after the release of their initial teaming in "The Black Cat," provides the only reason to catch the exceedingly rare "Gift of Gab," a curious credit indeed for director Karl Freund, in between "The Mummy" and "Mad Love." Often erroneously mentioned in filmographies for The Three Stooges, the trio that appear, Sid Walker, Jack Harling, and John 'Skins' Miller, bear only a slight physical resemblance to Moe, Larry, and Curly.
  • Well, months after knowing this was on my YouTube "Liked Videos" list, I finally watched this there as this was another early film appearance of Ethel Waters, here singing "I Ain't Gonna Sin No More". This also marked the only movie appearance of the Beale Street Boys. The sing with both Ethel and by themselves on this song and they also appear a few more times throughout the narrative. I enjoyed them very much. Also of note is a mystery sketch which featured two of the movie's studio's (Universal) biggest stars at the time-horror icons Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff who was still billed just by his last name during this period in his career. They appear separately just minutes of each other. This one was also very enjoyable. There are some other music acts like Ruth Etting and other sketches which are hit-and-miss. The story itself is a little amusing but also for the birds as the narrative goes on. I also feel like citing three men in the beginning appearing at a receptionist's desk singing a part of "Tiger Rag" which is my LSU Tigers football team's theme song. Also, this was directed by Karl Freund, normally a cinematographer who would eventually wrap up his career doing that on the classic TV show "I Love Lucy". So on that note, Gift of Gab is worth a look and nothing more.
  • This is a film with an endless procession of one-reelers put together to make a full-length feature and has great actors like: Gloria Stuart, Ethel Waters. Victor Moore, Andy Devine, Paul Lukas and Chester Morris along with Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi. Philip Gabney (Edmond Lowe), a smooth-talking radio announcer, is hired to revive interest in a failing radio show. Karloff played the "Phantom" and Lugosi is a French apache dancer together with a half-dozen stars who appeared in a burlesque murder-mystery conceived by Gabney at the beginning of the film. It seems with all this great talent shown in this picture in 1934, that this film had to produce such meager entertainment. Well, after all, the film only ran for 71 minutes.
  • "Gift of Gab" has the distinction of being in a very small group of films. They are those with titles that perfectly describe the subject of the film. Some might question the interpretation or use of "gift" in this case. But, in times past, that's how most in society would describe the character that Edmund Lowe plays. He definitely has a gift of gab. By well into the 20th century, though, other words would be used to describe the likes of Phillip Gabney. Blowhard, windbag, stuffed shirt, are some of the terns that come right to mind. And, of course, no one would be thinking of such a person as having a "gift."

    But this movie was made in 1934 - a time when people would have been encountering such types occasionally. The period from the invention of the radio in the 1890s through the Roaring Twenties spawned the fast talkers. But by the time this film came out - in the middle of the Great Depression, most had become wary of such characters. On the street they were most associated with con artists. Indeed, the opening scene here shows Gabney as a street huckster and con-man. Still, the likes of Walter Winchell reporting gossip from New York, and those in Hollywood, kept the loud-mouthed braggadocio technique alive a bit longer. And, that's the focus of the plot of this film. Only, when he's on the air, Gabney is all sweetness and nice with his bombast.

    Edmund Lowe was a silent film star who segued successfully into sound pictures. But, where he had risen to leading male roles by the mid-1920s, soon into sound he became relegated to supporting roles. Still, he kept acting until 1960 at age 70. His role here as "Gift of Gab Gabney" is quite good. One takes an almost immediate dislike to the character, and Lowe plays it to the hilt. The plot is a version of poor man becomes rich man, only we never see him really down early. Its only when his fame, wealth and ego go to his head that he becomes a pathetic jerk that just about everyone dislikes. Of course, there has to be redemption and it happens. But the screenplay for all of this is quite choppy and has some big holes.

    The best part of this movie, though, is the collection of musical performers on the radio show that Gabney hosts.

    This is one of only four feature films in which Ruth Etting appears and sings - and perhaps the best that shows that singer who had a wonderful voice. Etting was associated with a scandal and shooting in the late 1930s, and she retired from the public spotlight with her second husband. A highly fictionalized film of her life was made in 1955, titled after one of her theme songs, "Love Me Or Leave Me." Doris Day played Etting.

    This film also has singers Ethel Waters, the Downey Sisters, and Wini Shaw. The next year, 1935, Shaw would introduce the song, "Lullaby of Broadway," in the "Gold Diggers of 1935."

    The comedy in this film is all of the Vaudeville type and mostly flatter than a pancake. But, it probably appealed to some folks yet in the 1930s.

    The main supporting roles are fair, at best. Hugh O'Connell as Patsy, is Gabney's sidekick. He probably has more "comedy" film clips that aren't at all funny, than anyone I can recall from years of watching movies. But, some more prominent names from the cinema had parts in this film - mostly in the skits or sketches that were part of the radio show. Among the supporting cast of well-known actors are Paul Lukas, Binnie Barnes, Victor Moore, Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi and Andy Devine.

    This was in the early days of Hollywood when Universal was struggling to be in the second tier of studios. Lowe was among the best it could do for leading men. That further kept it from competing with the Big Five that had the likes of Gary Cooper, Cary Grant, William Powell, Walter Pidgeon, Frederic March, Clark Gable, Errol Flynn, Fred Astaire, John and Lionel Barrymore, Bing Crosby, James Stewart, and Humphrey Bogart.

    The only reason to watch this film is for the musical segments with Etting, Waters and others singing. And to get somewhat of an idea of what the entertainment culture was like at that time in history.

    Here are the best lines in this film.

    Phillip Gabney, "Why, your troubles are over. When I handle your liver, I'll bring home the bacon."

    Phillip Gabney, "What would you call that?" Telephone Girl, "That's the sound effects man." Gabney, "He doesn't look sound to me." Telephone Girl, "They all get that way."

    Phillip Gabney, "I'll make Trivers Livers live. I'll put Trivers Livers on the plate of everybody within earshot."

    Phillip Gabney, "You wanna get anywhere in this world, Pat, you gotta play every card in the deck... and I'm playin' 'em all."

    Phillip Gabney, "Aw, listen, honey.": Barbara Kelton, "I've listened to you for months. You make my ears ache."
  • Gift of Gab (1934)

    * (out of 4)

    A fast talking con man (Edmund Lowe) becomes a huge radio star and soon it all goes to his head. It appears Universal Studios threw everything but the kitchen sink into this film but it easy to see why the studio has never issued this on home video. Legendary cinematographer Karl Freund directed this film, which co-stars Gloria Stuart with guest performances by Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi, Victor Moore, Hugh O'Connell, Gene Austin, Ruth Etting, Ethel Waters, Paul Lukas and various others. The film is very fast moving but also quite annoying as is the over the top performance by Lowe who we tire of within the opening minutes. The only reason to watch this turkey is due to all the guest appearances but be warned that the stars are only on screen for a few seconds up to a minute. Karloff and Lugosi appear in the same mystery skit but sadly (and dumbly) they don't share any time together.