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  • I like The Kid From Spain very much, it's certainly one of Eddie Cantor's best films. But I'm still trying to figure out why in the world Sam Goldwyn borrowed Robert Young from MGM and cast him as a Mexican. Why didn't he use someone like Gilbert Roland?

    Still it's Cantor's show and it begins with Eddie the schnook getting expelled from college after his pal Young puts him in the girl's dormitory where he's discovered by the Dean of Women. To his credit Young owns up to the prank and gets expelled along with Cantor. The two of them decide to go south of the border, but on the way Eddie is forced to drive a gang of bank-robbers across the border.

    When American cop Robert Emmett O'Connor goes south after the robbers, the fast thinking Young introduces Cantor as a great bullfighter fresh over from Spain. Now Cantor's got to go through with it or else.

    It's pretty thin stuff, but it's enjoyable and the climax with Cantor in the Corrida fighting a bull is something else. See how he overcomes the bovine challenge. Some of that business was used by Lou Costello in Mexican Hayride.

    Cantor and Young pair off with Lyda Roberti and Ruth Hall and Ms. Roberti joins Eddie in singing Look What You've Done. The other song Cantor does is unfortunately in black-face and it's What A Perfect Combination. Both songs were recorded by him and sold reasonably well to Depression audiences. The score was written Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby songwriters best known for their Marx Brothers material.

    I do say though Robert Young was not a convincing Latino. He was painful to watch and I'm sure he felt more ridiculous than anyone else in the film. It's The Kid From Spain's great weakness.

    Other than that, The Kid From Spain is an enjoyable film and those who want to know about the comedic art of Eddie Cantor can't do better than this film to learn.
  • I like Eddie Cantor movies. This is an early talkie and one of his best. It has two superb dance sequences from Busby Berkeley.

    I'd have rated it an 8 but for the number done in black-face. Yes, I know that was fairly standard at the time. It grates today, though. The whole thing is fun. It's improbable but that can be the key to the charm of a Cantor movie.

    Nevertheless, the highlight for me was his leading lady. I'd heard the name Lyda Roberti. Probably I've seen her before, too. But I was knocked out by her delightful comic performance. Here was a pretty woman, svelte and attractive, who was a topnotch comic. She presaged such greats as Joan Davis and Judy Canova.

    I see she died young. What a loss to Hollywood then and to those of us who treasure vintage movies now! Lyda, you were sublime!
  • Set in a girls' dormitory that looks more like a palace, it is astonishingly sexy, even by pre-code standards (you won't believe some of the innuendo they got away with); it is also one of the only two big production numbers that Busby Berkeley staged for this movie. Choreographically they're standard stuff compared to what he would do later in his career, but you can still spot glimpses of his genius. As for the rest of the movie, a very slight plot provides the framework for some funny moments (Mexican border standoff, "can you shoot me if I stand over here?", and what may be the first use of slow motion for comic purposes on the screen). **1/2 out of 4.
  • Utterly hilarious Pre Code musical with two massive and riotous Busby Berkeley dance sequences, this Eddie cantor farce was a huge success in Depressed 1932. Filmed and released in the musical lull years 1931 and 1932 when a musical was supposed to be box office poison, this bull snorter is genuinely toe tapping and rib tickling. Imagine seeing this in a 3000 seater full of unhappy people needing a laugh! THE KID FROM SPAIN must have blown the roofs off with thunderclaps of laughter from one side of the country to the other. It is on record as the highest rentals /film hire between 1932 and 1939 with $2.6m returned to the distributor. This means it must have sold over $6m in tickets...in the most economically bad time of the decade and at a time when ticket prices were in cents. Imagine today if seventy million Americans went to one film in its first release! We're talking TITANIC level ticket sales. Well THE KID FROM SPAIN did exactly that. The two dance sequences are truly spectacular and very funny...the finale WHAT A PEFECT COMBINATION is about risqué as it gets in reverse rude lyrics given he is singing about "I'm the lock and you're the key". Warners Bros clearly handed Busby their studio key after this UA success and booked a box office berth, ready to shuffle off to their 42nd Street box office honeymoon. This KID is worth adopting for your home.
  • If you loved Cantor's earlier precodes - "Whoopee" and "Palmy Days" - you'll like this one too. In my opinion it's not quite as good as his two prior film efforts, but there are still enough laughs and good musical numbers to make it worth your while. Cantor costars with a very young Robert Young as two college seniors who are expelled on the eve of their graduation. Young goes to Mexico to find the girl he loves, Eddie goes there as a result of being forced to drive a getaway car for a gang of bank robbers and thus being wanted. The two reunite across the border and the fun begins. There are two major complications in the plot - Eddie starts hitting people anytime he hears a whistle, and while in Mexico Eddie has taken on the identity of a great bullfighter in order to avoid arrest for the bank robbery of which he was an unwilling participant.

    There are two big Berkeley numbers in the film, the first one being at the very beginning and bearing a great deal of similarity to "By a Waterfall" in Berkeley's film "Footlight Parade" of the following year.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I have liked Eddie Cantor films for some time even though now in the twenty-first century he's practically forgotten. That's because even in the bad ones, his character and personality is very likable and sweet. Plus, when he is given excellent material, his films are tough to be beat--particularly FORTY LITTLE MOTHERS and Hollywood CANTEEN.

    Cantor was a huge name on stage and was famous for his comedic song and dance numbers. Like Al Jolson, Cantor also often performed in black-face--something that would definitely shock many people today but which was widely accepted and not criticized in the old days. This film, like a few of his others, does feature such a minstrel segment, so if you can't watch it without suffering a fatal heart attack, then this is one to skip. However, if you do, you may be missing out on a rather entertaining little comedy.

    Oddly, though, despite Cantor being a nice comic, the parts of the film that made me laugh the most were unintended by the producers. This is because Busby Berkeley designed and directed several huge production numbers that are so over-the-top that they are, in this day and age, funny to watch. The best of these is the opening number. It supposedly is set in a girl's dorm in college but school was never like this!! Seeing all the "Goldwyn Girls" running about in various states of undress as they performed the most complex and expensive dance number is something you won't soon forget!

    As for the plot, Eddie and his friend Robert Young (who plays, of all things, a Mexican) are on their way to Mexico. However, on the way, Eddie accidentally gets mixed up in a bank robbery and the police think he's part of the gang. So, once in Mexico, he pretends to be the son of a famous bullfighter to avoid being captured. In the end, of course, is the obligatory bull fight and Cantor manages to survive AND get the girl.

    The whole film is full of surprisingly engaging songs from Cantor and as I said above, his character is so likable you will probably find yourself having a good time--even with its various shortcomings (including a rather poorly filmed bull fight).
  • Warning: Spoilers
    1931 and 1932 were lean years for the movie musical, and other than a few Jeanette MacDonald/Maurice Chevalier romantic operettas, some behind the scenes looks at radio and two Eddie Cantor musicals with some fantastic Busby Berkley choreography, the genre was considered box office poison. Berkley would fix that in 1933 by moving over to Warner Brothers and create some of the most magical, memorable movie musicals in movie history, which leaves the Cantor films forgotten by most everybody but his most ardent fans. If you look at "Whoopee!", "Palmy Days" and "The Kid From Spain", you will see the Busby Berkley magic at work and even visualize his Warner Brothers smash hits in your mind. He wasn't working on perfecting his visual style; It already was perfect.

    Take into consideration "Inside a Dormitory", the Goldwyn Girl chorus number which opens "The Kid From Spain"; Similar themes were later utilized in "42nd Street", "Gold Diggers of 1933" and "Footlight Parade", from the scantily clad chorus girls, the overhead shots and like "By a Waterfall" in "Footlight Parade", the most delightfully audacious swimming pool you've ever seen on film. Even Esther Williams would drool over this! "The Kid From Spain" isn't a great film by any means, but Cantor's charm and the Berkley touch make it memorable.

    A totally miscast Robert Young is ridiculously given the role of a Latin lover, Cantor's college roommate who invites Eddie to go south with him after they are both expelled for the girl's dormitory occurrence. By mistake, Cantor is involved in a bank robbery which leads to a hysterical scene of him trying to get across the border and his encounter with the frazzled guard (Paul Porcasi). In Mexico, he claims to be the famous matador Don Sebastian II which leads to rivalry with another matador and an encounter with a very determined bull. Meanwhile, Young and his girlfriend (Ruth Hall, another Caucasian cast as a Mexican) try to be together in spite of her father's promise of her to another man while Cantor finds himself involved with blonde Mexican Lyda Roberti (part Russian/part Polish) who is also coveted by a hot-blooded native. The silliness of the miscastings is easily overlooked considering the lavishness of the production.

    Not utilized in the opening dormitory number, Cantor gets two songs of his own, the best of which is a blackface number where in disguise he entertains a pre-bullfight crowd with the memorable "What a Perfect Combination!". His entrance with two actual black dancers has him being pushed back to sing, and all of a sudden, Goldwyn girls start popping out of all the tables. I tried to spot Betty Grable and Paulette Goddard among the chorus girls in the two big production numbers but didn't have any luck, but considering how young they were at the time (both not yet 18), it would be somewhat difficult to recognize them although Lucille Ball the following year in "Roman Scandals" was very easy to spot. A perfectly entertaining pre-code musical, this survives its now dated concepts simply by being just totally enjoyable, if just a tad overlong. They don't make em' like this anymore!
  • nrmzdh25 May 2023
    Warning: Spoilers
    ........it's a surprisingly funny (it is over 90 years old) comedy from 1932. It's raunchy, some of the comedy (largely thanks to Cantor) is excellent, and the dance and song routines are toe-tapping for the most part.

    Now, the blackface routine hit me like that wtf moment from Mulholland Drive. With the bad teeth, and retiree tourists under the door, you know? I get that it's probably just reflective of its time, and to be honest I'm glad it's still available, because I think it's important to see how mainstream art back then was systemically racist, too. It's good to have the discussion, you know?

    Anyway, a pretty decent flick, apart from the racist dance routines near the end.

    And it feels like stepping back in time sometimes. Like a time machine. A racist time machine. I recommend the year 420AD.
  • In the 1930s Eddie Cantor made a series of pleasant, sometimes sexy, consistently entertaining, fast paced comedies. This is, in my opinion, one of the better ones. The songs are wonderful, the gags are funny, the 1930's atmosphere is thick, and Eddie himself is so energetic throughout he seems to float.

    It's a wonderful picture. Very recommended for 1930's film buffs and musical comedy enthusiasts.
  • This is one of the two-best regarded Eddie Cantor vehicles, the other being the superior ROMAN SCANDALS (1933). In many ways, it follows the typical formula of star comedians during this era: not only does it mix the laughs with songs, but the setting goes from college to south-of- the-border and involves multiple impersonations (a convict about to be executed{!}, performing a musical routine in blackface and, most pertinent to the central plot, a torero) and the second leads' less- than-smooth romance (he is here played by the non-Latin Robert Young!).

    Having Busby Berkeley as choreographer and being a "Pre-Code" film, this could hardly fail to have elaborately risqué' numbers (reportedly, among the Goldwyn Girls here are Paulette Goddard, Betty Grable and Jane Wyman but I did not recognize them) – right from the opening moments (which were trimmed for subsequent reissues!) but, even if the Bert Kalmar/Harry Ruby score is quite pleasant, these definitely come off as longueurs when not involving Cantor himself. Director McCarey had started out in Laurel & Hardy comedies, and he would subsequently handle many of their rivals/successors – apart from the star of this film, the Marx Bros., W.C. Fields, Mae West, Harold Lloyd and, in more sophisticated terms, Cary Grant.

    Gags (and dialogue exchanges) are plentiful and generally display a very high standard of inventiveness. Among the highlights are: Cantor unwittingly acting as the getaway driver of bank robbers; his brushes with a flustered immigration official and a U.S. cop after the thieving gang; his serenading the heroine (on behalf of Young – incidentally, he is himself pursued throughout by the girl's blonde friend) sporting a gigantic sombrero; and, obviously, his being passed off as a celebrated bullfighter's son (he trains with a docile animal who can be 'controlled' with a gibberish but unwieldly word – however, the villains (including the blonde girl's fiancé J. Carrol Naish) then have it replaced with the most irate of the herd, able even to leap over the spectator barricades{!}, only for the hero to ultimately put it out of action by pure chance). For the record, the film was referenced in the Walt Disney cartoon short MICKEY'S GALA PREMIERE (1933) and can be seen to have influenced – ironically enough – the Laurel & Hardy outings SAPS AT SEA (1940; in Cantor's violent behaviour triggered by noise) and THE BULLFIGHTERS (1945), not to mention the Italian comic Toto' vehicle FIFA E ARENA (1948) and the classic "Looney Tunes" cartoon BULLY FOR BUGS (1953).
  • Being made between the funny and entertaining 'Palmy Days' and the very funny and very entertaining 'Roman Scandals', you'd expect this to be something special but it's not. It's got the silliness, the songs, the Busby Berkeley routines, the Goldwyn girls and Eddie Cantor doing what he always does but it just doesn't gel together.

    It's not a bad film but it's massively disappointing compared with his previous and subsequent films. What's different is the writing. Roman Scandals benefitted from being written by George Kaufman, one of the main writers for The Marx Brothers and Cantor himself co-wrote'Palmy Days'. W A McGuire (who also worked on the script for Roman Scandals) on his own doesn't quite cut the mustard with this. It comes across as extremely childish but of a quality that would be instantly rejected by any self-respecting children's tv station. If you've never seen an Eddie Cantor film, don't make this one your first or you will never watch another.

    Like with the more edgy and cynical Marx Brothers movies, plots in Eddie Cantor films are meant to be completely stupid but this one is so ridiculous that it's just irritating. It also lacks any warmth or empathy with the characters primarily because the supporting actors are so utterly terrible - all of them - they're awful. I know Leo McCarey's directorial style was very relaxed but he seemed to have slept through this one.

    On a positive note, it does have a lot of Toby Wing - she was the ridiculously pretty chorus girl who appeared uncredited in loads of early 30s musicals. One wonders why she never became a star. The other positive is that this isn't 'Whoopee', Cantor's first film - that is unwatchably awful.
  • Forced into Mexico by crooks, a nervous young man impersonates THE KID FROM SPAIN--an imaginary bullfighter -- to keep from getting arrested.

    Follies star Eddie Cantor prances his way through this naughty pre-Code comedy. Rolling his eyes and clapping his hands, he uses every trick at his disposal to amuse and he succeeds quite nicely. Cantor never slows down, but, like a mischievous little boy, he seems forever looking for new trouble to explore. His climactic scene in the bullfighting arena remains his best remembered movie moment.

    Robert Young seems an odd choice to portray a Mexican college boy, and his problematic courtship of pretty Ruth Hall is totally lacking in excitement, but fortunately it isn't given an inordinate amount of screen time. Polish comic actress Lyda Roberti makes a good foil for Cantor; her amusing face almost matches his own in stealing scenes and her singing & acting are delightfully offbeat.

    The dastardly deeds are handled by two of the era's best bad guys--John Miljan as an evil matador and J. Carrol Naish as his grimy sidekick. In addition, Cantor gets to share comedy sequences with three funny fellows--Paul Porcasi as a harried border guard; beefy Noah Beery as Miss Hall's very stern papa & Stanley Fields as a dumb-as-mud killer.

    Movie mavens will recognize diminutive Edgar ‘Blueboy' Connor as a bull trainer and a young Betty Grable as one of the chorus girls--both uncredited.

    Busby Berkeley directed the movie's musical production numbers, including the opening scene in a girls' dormitory, which seems to serve no other purpose than to expose a good deal of female flesh. The film's conclusion seems a bit abrupt. The villains have not been punished and the Young/Hall romance is still unresolved, but Cantor seems quite happy so why quibble?
  • Wow -- with all the big names in this one, expected it to be better. Liberal use of backdrop scenery, and the general Three Stooges buffoonery keep us from getting too invested in this comedy from 1932. With Busby Berkley directing the dance numbers, like the naughty opening number where the school girls wake up, go for a swim, and get dressed, it was sure to keep the audiences watching. Eddie Cantor and Robert Young toot down to Mexico and get into trouble after getting bounced from college. Supporting cast of Noah Beery, a 16 year old Betty Grable, Paulette Goddard, and a 15 year old Jane Wyman in the chorus, if we can believe the dates on IMDb. Feels like a collection of vaudeville acts stapled together....Cantor sings a couple songs. Noah Beery's Mexican accent comes and goes. Leo McCarey had been directing films for 10 years by this time, most of them silents. The acting in this one is a little over the top, kind of like a Three's Company episode. It's okay.
  • lugonian23 November 2002
    THE KID FROM SPAIN (Samuel Goldwyn/United Artists, 1932), directed by Leo McCarey, with choreography by Busby Berkeley, stars Eddie Cantor in his third annual musical-comedy for Samuel Goldwyn. Borrowing the formula from his initial Goldwyn musical, WHOOPEE (1930), switching from wild west to Mexico so not to give the impression of a remake, Cantor once again plays a nervous wreck who goes berserk (this time at the sound of a whistle), and carries on the same surname of Williams. Could these two characters in question be twins? Maybe, but there's only one Eddie Cantor, and for the record, this is not a sequel, just an original premise with recycled ideas.

    The story begins in a college where Eddie Williams (Eddie Cantor) is found hiding under the sheets on the bed in a girls' dormitory by the stern Martha Oliver (Theresa Maxwell Conover). Although Eddie assumes the blame, it's his Mexican roommate, Ricardo (Robert Young), responsible for the practical joke. Because of this, both classmates, so close to graduation, are expelled. Ricardo, returning to his native Mexico, invites Eddie to accompany him. On their way to their destination, Ricardo stops at the First National Bank where Eddie waits outside. Parked on the very spot where the getaway car was supposed to be, Eddie encounters new passengers in the back seat, that of the bank robbers who mistake Eddie as their getaway driver. Because Eddie is an eye witness, the bank robbers kidnap Eddie and take him to the Mexican borderline. While in Mexico, Eddie meets again with Ricardo, who, by now, is having romantic problems with Anita Gomez (Ruth Hall), whose father, Alonzo (Noah Beery) prefers she marry Pancho (John Miljan), the greatest bullfighter of all Mexico. Eddie, pursued by Crawford (Robert Emmett O'Connor), an American police inspector, masquerades as Don Sebastian II, matador from Spain visiting Mexico for the upcoming bullfight. Complications ensue when Eddie not only has to fight the bull in the ring to avoid arrest, but to avoid the man-chasing Rosalie (Lyda Roberti) also hot on his trail.

    The highlight bullfighting sequence is something of an inspiration for future movie comedians of Bob Hope, Danny Kaye, Red Skelton or even Jerry Lewis had they handled such a routine. However, future famed TV comedienne Lucille Ball eventually performed such tactics in an equally funny bullfighting sequence in one of the episodes of "The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour" (1958) co-starring Desi Arnaz as her husband, Ricky Ricardo (a similar name to Robert Young's character in THE KID FROM SPAIN, by which he's called both Ricky and Ricardo), with special guest star, Maurice Chevalier. A similar situation here and to the LUCY program is that both Eddie and Lucy mistake the actual bull for a tamed one for the bullfight. And let's overlook the bullfighting climax featuring Lou Costello, the other half of the Abbott and Costello comedy team, in Mexican HAYRIDE (Universal, 1948), with an added bonus with Costello riding the bull bareback.

    Besides good comedy, whether physical or verbal, with some gags and one-liners right out of from the vaudeville days, there's time out for songs by Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby including: "The College Song" (with lyrical lines recited by numerous college co-eds, including a very young Betty Grable); "In the Moonlight" (sung by Eddie Cantor); "Look What You've Done" (sung by Lyda Roberti and Eddie Cantor); Untitled dance number (performed by Grace Poggi); "What a Perfect Combination" (sung by Eddie Cantor and Goldwyn Girls); and "What a Perfect Combination" (reprise/finale, sung by Cantor and Roberti).

    Also in the supporting cast are J. Carroll Naish as Pedro; Stanley Fields as Jose; Sidney Franklin as himself, an American matador who performs a straight-laced bullfighting scene before Cantor takes over and turns it into a burlesque spoof; Walter Walker (The college dean); Paul Porcasi (The border guard); and Edgar Connor as Blueboy, the Negro bull handler. Connor's film credits are few, but much well noted for his sizable role as Al Jolson's sidekick in HALLELUJAH, I'M A BUM (United Artists, 1933).

    THE KID FROM SPAIN has all the ingredients for a successful Cantor comedy, although some of his humor, and one production number in which he performs in black-face, may not impress contemporary audiences. Other than finding Robert Young playing a Mexican, sporting mustache and passable spoken accent, there's one scene where Cantor tells the love starved Roberti to shut her mouth in a manner that's too real to be funny, particularly after watching the sad expression on her face. Film buffs can sit back and try to spot some future film stars amongst the chorus girls, including Betty Grable recognizable in the opening number, the blonde haired Paulette Goddard in the background as Cantor as he looks directly into the camera while vocalizing "In the Moonlight" before strolling with the girls and singing directly to them; and Toby Wing, the "Young and Healthy" girl from 42nd STREET (Warner Brothers, 1933), visible in the first two song numbers. One cannot help but notice the girls seen in the college opening to be the same ones in the Nexican sequence, this time in Mexican attire sporting shoe polish in their black hair.

    THE KID FROM SPAIN, which formerly aired on commercial television in the 1960s and 1970s, was later transported to cable networks in the 1980s as CBN (now The Family Channel), The Nostalgia Channel, Turner Network Television (1991), American Movie Classics (1993-94) and finally Turner Classic Movies where it premiered September 2, 2007. Formerly available on video cassette, it's the sort of movie that will remain in memory for anyone who's seen and enjoyed this 96 minute laugh feast with impressive Busby Berkeley production numbers. (***)
  • I loved Cantor in this film. In fact, it was my first Eddie Cantor film. His crazy eyes and fast quips kept my attention throughout! Although, this movie is really old and seems only one step above a silent film (judging by all their facial dramatics), it shines as a funny pre-groucho marx sarcastic fun fest. Poor innocent Eddie Cantor, knee-deep in trouble as usual escapes from a girl's dormitory, he is found hiding in and gets caught up with bank robbers. Running with his friend to cross the border to Mexico, Cantor tells the border's cops that he too, is Mexican. Cantor outwits the bad guys by pretending to be a bull-fighter. Trying to escape, he encounters many hilarious characters along the way and actually has to perform in a bull-fight - hilarity ensues. Cantor is always known for his quick thinking and fast talking, so some of his best lines are thrown around in this movie. Also, there are the 1932 Goldwyn Girls including Jane Wyman, a platinum blonde Paulette Goddard, Toby Wing and a sixteen year-old named Betty Grable (not credited). This film is a real must-see!
  • I was surprised to see this film streaming on Netflix, as I have had a really hard time seeing any of Eddie Cantor's films. There may be some rights issued involved, but I suspect that Eddie's blackface routines, which are included in all of his Goldwyn films, are the reason these are suppressed. All of these Goldwyn films have first-rate production values, melodic songs, and great co-stars Eddie can play off of. Lyda Roberti, who died far too young, is adorable and funny as the female co-star here. I was somewhat surprised to see a very young Robert Young playing a Latin-type here. Every Cantor film has a comic set-piece, and the bullfight scene here had me in convulsions of laughter. I have excellent DVDs of "Whoopee!" and "Kid Millions", and now I can see this. Let's hope that more films from this great funnyman can become viewable for the many fans.
  • So inventive was choreographer Busby Berkeley that film studios gave him carte blanc when handling his dancing numbers. In his sixth Hollywood film, his second with comedian/singer Eddie Cantor, in the November 1932 movie "The Kid From Spain," Berkeley amps up his dancing routines by introducing for the first time in his career a water backdrop. The film's opening shows a bevy of college co-eds waking up from their slumbers to begin their school day, giving Berkeley the opportunity to show off the 'Goldwyn Girls' in an elaborate upstairs pool, performing their synchronized kaleidoscope patterns in the water.

    From the beginning of his Hollywood career in 1930's "Whoopee!" Berkeley was given a certain amount of independence to create his elaborate dance routines. The directors, such as Leo McCarey in "The Kid From Spain," handed him a truncated script and penned in where his musical numbers would appear. Working alongside musical composers Harry Ruby and Bert Kalmar in "The Kid From Spain," Berkeley set out to design his dance formations to fit the narrative. After the Goldwyn Girls, named after producer Samuel Goldwyn, who financed the Cantor film, performed their jaw-dropping swimming routine, they proceeded to dress when they discover Eddie under their bed sheets.

    As in many of his future films, Berkeley was given the opportunity to design additional dance numbers near the end of "The Kid From Spain." The film also highlight the early talents of 28-year-old cinematographer Greg Toland. His camerawork shows an expertise in both framing and focus, soon making him one of the most sought-after cinematographers in town. The combination of Berkeley and Toland's work, along with the popularity of Cantor himself, made "The Kid From Spain" the number one box office movie for 1932.

    The film's plot follows Cantor playing Eddie William, who's kicked out of college for his outrageous behavior right before graduation. He's wrongly accused of being part of a bank robbery gang and flees to Mexico, disguising himself as an experienced matador. The movie includes an exciting one-of-a-kind bullfight, where he's forced to fight a raging killer bull.

    "The Kid From Spain" introduced actress Jane Wyman in her film debut, this as a Goldwyn Girl. The future wife of Ronald Reagan was born and raised in Missouri by foster parents. At 15, she left them for Hollywood for a series of odd jobs where she was briefly part of the Goldwyn's dancing troupe with regulars Betty Grable, Paulette Goddard and Toby Wing. Goldwyn insisted, "every Goldwyn Girl look as though she had just stepped out of a bathtub. There must be a kind of a radiant scrubbed cleanliness about them which rules out all artificiality." It certainly helped the dancers' popularity by appearing in the number one hit for 1932.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Copyright 1 January 1933 by Samuel Goldwyn. Released through United Artists. New York opening at the Palace: 17 November 1932. London opening at roadshow prices: 8 April 1933. U.K. general release: 14 October 1933. Although the running time in most reference books is quoted at 118 minutes, this seems incorrect. The 1998 video copy runs 91 minutes.

    SYNOPSIS: The admirably daffy script has Cantor, an innocent fugitive, wanted for his part in a bank robbery, forced to take refuge in Mexico where the first person he runs across is none other than his old college chum from south of the border, Robert Young, of all people! Young successfully passes Cantor off to his prospective father-in-law, Noah Beery (who doesn't want Young to marry his daughter anyway), as the son of a famous bullfighter.

    NOTES: With a rentals gross of $2.6 million, number one at U.S./Canadian ticket windows for 1932. The picture wasn't quite so popular in England or Australia, in both countries rating fourth for 1933. [(In the U.K. Cavalcade was first, followed by The Good Companions. I think Tell Me Tonight was third). Negative cost: $1,400,000. Film debut of Jane Wyman.

    COMMENT: Such superlative entertainment, it's difficult to review the film without lapsing into endless encomiums. From its very opening shot of young Betty Grable to its delightful fade-out on a Cantor-Roberti reprise of "What a Perfect Combination", The Kid from Spain is fun, fun, fun all the way, without so much as a moment's respite. Superbly photographed, set and costumed, with spectacular dance numbers, catchy songs, brilliantly acted by a stand-out cast, directed by a master of stylish, comic timing...

    I could go on in this vein for pages. Maybe I'll just jot down (in purely random order) some of the high spots:

    (1) Cantor's run-in with the bull. This comic routine has been used so often over the years since 1932, it would have been no surprise to find that Cantor's material had been stolen many times over. But this isn't the case at all. So spectacular are Cantor's brushes here that no other producer could afford to duplicate them. There's some back projection of course, but so tightly edited are some of the shots, you have to run the sequence four or five times to work out how many of the wonderfully comic, daredevil effects were achieved. We love the word used to stop the bull in his tracks. What a classic!

    (2) Cantor's run-in with Paul Porcasi. This has to be one of the funniest border encounters on record. I thought it even more droll than the four Marx Brothers famous encounter with a whole tribe of customs officials in A Night at the Opera.

    (3) Cantor's run-ins with Lyda Roberti, that most talented and beautiful comedienne who starred in eleven films before her career was cut short by a fatal heart attack at the age of only 28.

    (4) Cantor's run-out on Miljan and Naish to sing his blackface routine, "What a Perfect Combination".

    (5) Cantor's run-out on would-be bandit assassin, Stanley Fields.

    (6) Cantor singing "In the Moonlight" and flittering through a characteristic dance with Toby Wing and the Goldwyn Girls.

    (7) Grace Poggi dancing up a storm, the like of which has rarely been equalled in the cinema. (Maybe Anita Ekberg's "Climb Up the Wall" in Zarak runs close).

    (8) Busby Berkeley throwing girls into spinning choreography.

    (9) Robert Emmett O'Connor, quixotically dead-pan, as he looks forward to Sunday.

    (10) Cantor walking "this way" to the firing squad.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    WARNING: a blackface musical number is included. If sensitive to such, best not to view this film, or close your eyes during that portion.

    Eddie Cantor leads another hilarious musicomedy. For those who couldn't find Betty Grable among the Goldwyn Girls, I'm sure the first girl featured was Betty. Looked and sounded just like her! After featuring close-ups of most of the girls, they change into bathing suits and peel off, on by one, into a swimming pool, and form a rotating wheel with a complex spoke structure, as seen from an overhead shot. All of these features are signature Busby Berkeley choreography.

    The next morning, the house mother arrives to wake up the co-eds, including a reluctant Eddie, hiding under his sheet. The mother scolds one of the girls, making her repeat "I'm a naughty girl". Eddie parrots her when revealed. Seems his Mexican friend Ricardo put him up to this prank. However, the Dean doesn't think it's funny, and expels them both.

    Eddie soon finds himself the accidental wheelman for a trio of bank robbers who mistake his car for theirs. They decide to take him to Mexico, despite his lack of a passport. He has quite a time of it with the immigration officer. This includes a segment where the officer is trying to talk to him and to his wife on the phone at the same time, getting everything mixed up. A private investigator shows up and wants to know Eddie's identity. Friend Ricardo tells him Eddie's the great bullfighter Sebastian II, newly arrived from Spain.

    They arrive at the hacienda of Ricardo's girlfriend, Anita. Eddie sings "In the Moonlight", with various of the Goldwyn Girls lounging around. Anita's father, Alonzo(Noah Beery) says Eddie's father was his best friend until he was killed. Eddie and Ricardo are put in jail for fighting with Pancho and friend Pedro over the girls(Anita and her blond friend Rosalie). Eddie is nearly executed by a firing squad by mistake and later escapes. Eddie returns to the Hacienda and thinks he has rescued Anita in an auto escape. Later, he discovers he has Anita's friend Rosalie, who wants some romance in the pale moonlight. Eddie is reluctant at first, but finally gives her a massive kiss and hug. Eddie then sings "Look What You've Done"

    The bank investigator says he will be at the bull fight to see if Eddie is really Sabastian II. Ricardo has arranged for Eddie to fight a bull trained to sit down when hears a magic word. But Pedro and Pancho switch bulls, giving Eddie the mean killer, Diablo. During a break in the action, Eddie sings "What a Perfect Combination", while in blackface. The Goldwyn Girls, in Mexican dress, dance to this tune. Sometimes an overhead projection is used, as the girls form fancy geometric circles.

    Now, for the bull fight: It starts out badly, as the spectators notice he forgot to put on his pants, under his cape. Then, the bull sits on him and he bites the bull's tail to restart the action. Diablo chases Eddie inside and outside of the arena. But, in the end, it's concluded Eddie is the winner. The bank investigator now reveals that Eddie was never a suspect in the robbery. He just wanted to see Eddie fight a bull!

    The musical numbers were composed by Harry Ruby and Bert Kalmar, who would be honored in the musical "Three Little Words", starring Fred Astaire and Red Skelton.

    I strongly suspect that Eddie's films are almost never shown on TV because of the small portion done in blackface, except for one film. He was an avid practitioner of blackface, failing to anticipate the eventual political incorrectness of the art.

    At first, I couldn't decide if Lyda Roberti(as Rosalie) was a poor actress, or if that was simply her style of comedy. Eventually, I concluded the latter. In a prior show, she had played a sexy dizzy blonde with a passion for chasing men, which is what she is here. Her father had been a circus clown, and she had performed in circuses since a child.

    J. Carrol Naish was an Irishman who was usually cast as an ethnic supporting actor, villainous or not, in more than 200 films. For example, he played Sitting Bull in the 1950 musicomedy "Annie Get Your Gun", as well as in the film "Sitting Bull".

    Several reviewers comment on the strange casting of Robert Young as a Mexican. Well, neither his girlfriend , Anita, nor Rosalie looked typical Mexican either. I think the casters wanted someone tall, with an aristocratic bearing, to match Anita's aristocratic status. Goofy Rosalie then seemed an appropriate match for goofy Eddie.

    This film may be purchased as a DVD in a set of 4 Eddie Cantor films.
  • Eddie Cantor musical where a jittery simpleton is forced to cross the border to Mexico and pretend he is a matador. It's nothing special all told. Some of the jokes are funny, yes, but the whole is thin and I'm sure recycled from previous film and radio work.

    What is of some interest, is that Busby Berkeley is here with his crafty engineering. Oh, both of his numbers feel tacky and have nothing to do with anything, which is more proof of zero vision behind this. Yet both numbers impress. Both are in that voluptuous mode he would cultivate in coming years: sexual tease, sparkle and shadowplay, the female body as the fulcrum of a continuously shifting erotic landscape. Eddie in blackface among Busby's radiant troupe feels crude and out of place.

    He would be on to 42nd Street and history the next year.