|
|
List Price: $14.98Amazon.com's Price: $12.99 You Save: $1.99 (13%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy Now!
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: DVD
Brand: 20th Century Fox
EAN: 0024543381952
Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, Dolby, Full Screen, NTSC
Label: 20th Century Fox
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: 20th Century Fox
Region Code: 1
Release Date: March 27, 2007
Running Time: 69 minutes
Sales Rank: 52762
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Theatrical Release Date: May 04, 1934
Editorial Review:
Product Description: President Franklin Roosevelt appoints a theatrical producer as the new Secretary of Amusement in order to cheer up an American public still suffering through the Depression. The new secretary soon runs afoul of political lobbyists out to destroy his department.System Requirements:Run Time: 68 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating: PG UPC: 024543381952 Manufacturer No: 2238195
Amazon.com: It can't really be called a 'Shirley Temple movie,' because the original Little Miss Sunshine appears in it for just 10 minutes or so. But you can easily see how Stand Up and Cheer! gave birth to the most dominant star of the mid-1930s: Shirley Temple brings down the house. With just a bit of dialogue and one musical number, 'Baby Take a Bow,' Ms. Temple sets the cuteness meter to 11 and packs considerable hilarity into her already-definable personality. (Old pro James Dunn, who co-starred with Temple in a few subsequent features, plays her father/dance partner here.) The movie itself is something else again, in every sense. Purportedly based on an idea by Will Rogers, it imagines a new cabinet position--Secretary of Amusement--established by the President himself. Said official (Warner Baxter, fresh off a similar role in 42nd Street) must drum up lotsa socko entertainment to pull America out of its Depression doldrums. The near-surreal results include the acrobatic vaudeville team Mitchell & Durant as loopy senators and a sequence involving Stepin Fechit and a talking penguin dressed up as Jimmy Durante. Yes, you read that right. Meanwhile, corporate fatcats conspire to ruin the plan; they want America to remain scared and passive. But you know they don't stand a chance against Shirley Temple--whose 1930s career fulfilled the movie's idea of cheering up a population staggered by hard times. --Robert Horton
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - Shirley and the other numbers are great--but deep down, the plot is shallow...
Shirley Temple gets little more than an enlarged cameo role in Stand Up And Cheer, a mediocre musical from Fox. Shirley outshines many of her adult peers in her musical number; she's absolutely adorable and she acts brilliantly especially considering her age! The plot moves along at a relatively good pace and most of the musical numbers are actually rather well done. The plot, however, is razor thin and frankly I thought it was hokey at its best and dumb at its worst.
The action begins ... Read More
Rating: - Shirley Temple in a Propaganda Film
According to IMDB, Shirley Temple's film career began in 1932. She appeared in many short films and at least some full length (for that time) films, such as "Out All Night (1933)" and "To the Last Man (1933)." As 1934 was unfolding Shirley was well on to her way to becoming a movie icon and a cultural phenomenon of the 1930's. However, before her career was fully launched she appeared in several highly forgettable films, including this propaganda disaster.
This movie apparently took ... Read More
Rating: - No Shirley? SO WHAT!? Who needs Shirley Temple when you have WARNER BAXTER!?
Okay, so there is too little Shirley Temple to go around. But still, this movie would be just fine without Shirley. I didn't buy it because of her, I got because I LOVE WARNER BAXTER! After June Knight, he is my favorite actor. He carries this film with the usual expertise, but I get a little sad seeing him in these ol' musicals when he used to do such great work in silents. As is typical of most musicals of the 30s, the plot is awfully thin in Stand Up and Cheer. If you are going to buy this because ... Read More
Rating: - The Stepin Fetchit Show???
As other reviewers have noted, Shirley Temple appears in only a few scenes. The rest of the movie represents one of the worst productions of this era. The appearance of Fetchit gives us a peek at how bad racial stereotypes were in the 1930s--a foul, slanderous, and contemptuous image that shouldn't be shown to impressionable children.
If you want to see Temple's best, then go out and buy "Poor Little Rich Girl", "Curly Top", or "The Littlest Rebel" and you'll understand why this little ... Read More
Rating: - Shirley is SOOOOOO amazing!!!!!
Oh I know it deserves a half star, but it's worth it for just that bit part of Shirley. It's the best dance sequence I've ever seen in all of her movies, she just overflows with so much cuteness it is unbelievable!!
|
|