Edward Everett Horton " wide Open" He played the Mad Hatter in Alice in wonderland. I wish I could spend about a month in the early 30's, as maybe a 25 year old. Thanks for posting.
Sooooooooooooooooo Claudette Colbert is wearing nothing but a swim cap and possibly wet and cold while that dude keeping her clothes from her is wearing a jacket and a hat? That doesn't seem right.....
I saw that scene with Claudette Colbert skinny-dipping in that movie 🍿 in a UA-cam channel-Edward Everett Horton was in that movie described before he made it big in lonely ladies in 1931 ! Not bad video! 👍👍👍💥👩👀🙌
The dialogue would have been altered in all of these and made less suggestive. Claudette Colbert says she enjoys swimming without a suit! Compare this exchange in "I Cover the Waterfront" with a similar scene in "It's A Wonderful Life," made 13 years later. The detectives' nonverbal suggestions of Horton's effeminacy would have been removed. In the cartoon, we wouldn't have had the shot of the woman drying her back and Flip would not have wanted to see her. Possible they would have removed the knitting needle in the eye gag too.
All of them actually WERE censored only a year later, and stayed censored until the 1990s. That's the point of this collection. 90% of all movies from before this time are gone now, burned by Nazis and American bluenoses, rotted while stored badly, disposed of as worthless because they could not be re-released, turned into stock shots for later movies, the usual. The US is just so free now, we can look at a 1930s bare pair of shoulders, or learn what 1930s women's underwear looked like.
She does indeed. However “Cleopatra” (1934) was released in October 1934, which means it’s technically not a pre-Code. It somehow slipped by Breen and the PCA and the film was awarded the Production Code Certificate of Approval number 80.
A great time when movies were scandalous, 😎, before the hypercritical conservatives moralists, decided to wage war against open minded liberals, but not as bad as what going on today, however different, the pedaling swings…
@@stevetheduck1425 indeed, it’s probably and ego thing, but authoritarians, the longer they’re in power, the more paranoid they become, the more brutal they get, like a doom man, senescing the end is near, hopefully !
Edward Everett Horton " wide Open" He played the Mad Hatter in Alice in wonderland. I wish I could spend about a month in the early 30's, as maybe a 25 year old. Thanks for posting.
I knew the voice sounded familiar. Thanks for mentioning it.
EEH was one of the greats. All his parts were so spot on and was on of my favorites.
My dream to go there as well!
@@jedgar63 I got it, too.....Fractured Fairytales from the Bullwinkle and Rocky Show.
Edward Everett Horton narrated Fractured Fairy Tales on Bullwinkle I think 🤔
@@mikejett7126
Hans Conried maybe?
Love these great clips of non code entertainment
Every kid should see them
Beautiful claudette colbert R I P beautiful soul.
Had to look very hard in 'New Moon' to convince myself that that wasn't Ben Turpin in the cossack smock. He played a silent role in similar dress.
Great to see some Kay Francis in the Clips. Not to mention Claudette in her birthday suit.
"I suppose you look through keyholes too!"
0:27 Great edit!
Reminds me of a song I heard years ago with lines "so hung up my pyjamas cross the keyhole in the door"
Oscar Brand I think.
Is that Edward Everett Horton in Wide Open (1930) ? The voice sounds like the narrator of Fractured Fairytales from the Bullwinkle show.
Yes, that’s him.
the same
:036 If I could draw like that I,d never leave the house again
Sooooooooooooooooo Claudette Colbert is wearing nothing but a swim cap and possibly wet and cold while that dude keeping her clothes from her is wearing a jacket and a hat? That doesn't seem right.....
Swimming in cold water is how one keeps the senses from running away with one... it's code that she's 'one hot mamma'.
Seems perfectly alright to me.
Love seeing "Flip the Frog" from Ub Iwerks.
I saw that scene with Claudette Colbert skinny-dipping in that movie 🍿 in a UA-cam channel-Edward Everett Horton was in that movie described before he made it big in lonely ladies in 1931 ! Not bad video! 👍👍👍💥👩👀🙌
Kid’s shows these days wouldn’t pass those old “Code” shows.
0:20 Paulette Goddard, 2:40 Basil Rathbone (sherlock holmes/bad guy in robin hood)
That's Claudette Colbert in "I Cover the Waterfront" (1933) at 0:20.
@@michiganjfrog my mistake
Fractured Fairy Tales' narrator voice spotted.
Yes, that's him, the great Edward Everett Horton.
Woman hate to be gawked at, but they get really upset when the guy they want hardly notices them.
Think of a man, then take away logic and accountability.... and you have a woman.
"have an apple"
(I'd like to see your pair)
Your opening graphic says "HOLLWOOD", not "HollYwood.
Good film
In some ways, these are more openly sexual than todays movies. The repARTEE IS Hilarious.
So which scenes would have been censored in any film time period?
The dialogue would have been altered in all of these and made less suggestive. Claudette Colbert says she enjoys swimming without a suit! Compare this exchange in "I Cover the Waterfront" with a similar scene in "It's A Wonderful Life," made 13 years later. The detectives' nonverbal suggestions of Horton's effeminacy would have been removed. In the cartoon, we wouldn't have had the shot of the woman drying her back and Flip would not have wanted to see her. Possible they would have removed the knitting needle in the eye gag too.
All of them actually WERE censored only a year later, and stayed censored until the 1990s. That's the point of this collection.
90% of all movies from before this time are gone now, burned by Nazis and American bluenoses, rotted while stored badly, disposed of as worthless because they could not be re-released, turned into stock shots for later movies, the usual.
The US is just so free now, we can look at a 1930s bare pair of shoulders, or learn what 1930s women's underwear looked like.
Grandma?
noooo!
CLAUDETTE COLBERT REVEALS A LITTLE BIT MORE AS " CLEOPATRA" A COUPLE OF YEARS LATER.
She does indeed. However “Cleopatra” (1934) was released in October 1934, which means it’s technically not a pre-Code. It somehow slipped by Breen and the PCA and the film was awarded the Production Code Certificate of Approval number 80.
@@michiganjfrog 👍👍
And she shows quite a bit of herself in the famous donkey-milk bath scene in "The Sign of the Cross" (1933).
0:27 - 0:39 Flip the Frog is a Peeping Tom.
😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
Not very risqué lmho
Always Ask The Gods.
Not much to talk about here.
A great time when movies were scandalous, 😎, before the hypercritical conservatives moralists, decided to wage war against open minded liberals, but not as bad as what going on today, however different, the pedaling swings…
Freedom of any kind that's not prescribed by those in power is a threat to those in power.
It's not true, but they fear it is, in their ignorance.
@@stevetheduck1425 indeed, it’s probably and ego thing, but authoritarians, the longer they’re in power, the more paranoid they become, the more brutal they get, like a doom man, senescing the end is near, hopefully !
Lil Rascal music doesn't seem right here... Lll
If you are referring to the World Wide Pictures logo, that is the music that accompanied the logo. No music was added to the video.