Also available in the boxed set The Astaire & Rogers Collection, Vol. 1 with Swing Time,
Follow the Fleet, Shall We Dance and The Barkleys of Broadway: $59.92.
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson
Astaire and Rogers' fourth teaming sees no need to improve on a winning formula and once again
charms audiences with the pleasure of watching America's most romantic dancing couple in
farcical courtship mode. The story is a delightful set of coincidences and the music (in
30's parlance) is 'simply divine' - every Irving Berlin tune is a romantic winner.
Synopsis:
Dance star Jerry Travers (Fred Astaire) can't keep his feet still, which causes
him to meet beautiful Dale Tremont (Ginger Rogers), a model that the London gossip has pegged
as a kept
woman. Travers' producer Horace Hardwick (Edward Everett Horton) tries to keep Jerry's mind on
music, but a series of misunderstandings simultaneously keep the lovers apart and throw them
together. Horace's
wife Madge (Helen Broderick) wants Jerry to come to Italy to meet a girl she thinks would be
perfect for him (Dale, of course). Dale gets the wrong idea and thinks that Jerry is really
Horace, and is cheating on his wife.
Top Hat isn't the kind of movie that other studios should try at home. There's no arguing
with near-perfection; the show is as fresh and charming today as when it became one of the biggest
hits of the 1930s. It's easy to imagine walking into a theater in a lousy mood and in just a
hundred mintues coming out smiling.
The classic Astaire Rogers musicals aren't wall-to-wall songs. Top Hat is basically a
romantic comedy that uses its musical numbers for establish character, spark romance and express
the feelings of its singing and dancing duo. We're too entertained by the clever dialogue and cute
plotting to anticipate every number. When a song comes along, it always seems to be just the one we're
waiting for. Sung in a park gazebo, Isn't it a Lovely Day to be Caught in the Rain? allows
reluctant seductee Dale to express her changing feelings toward Jerry's nervy advances. Cheek
to Cheek is the film's centerpiece, and it's perfection. The title tune Top Hat is
the Astaire-and-chorus number where he mimes shooting the other tuxedoed dancers with his cane.
Writers Allan Scott and Dwight Taylor spin Top Hat's lighter-than-light story line just
enough to follow a fated pattern: They meet cute, break up over a misunderstanding, compound the
misunderstanding, and finally straighten everything out at the last moment with hugs and kisses.
Astaire and Rogers' personalities do most of the
work. They're so suited to one another and so complimentary in their attitudes and personality,
that they're specific and universal at the same time. Nobody could be as beautiful or poised; yet
our identification is instantaneous. Every man would like to dance so well that women fall in love
with them on the ballroom floor, and every woman can derive pleasure from imagining herself as
elegant as Rogers, doing flying dance steps in a skirt made completely of boa feathers.
There's no casting against type here. Edward Everett Horton is a fussy fool who fancies himself a
ladies man, which only makes the several gay-inflected jokes all the more clever. Even more peculiarly
'spirited' is Horton's valet Bates (Eric Blore), the film's jester. Bates starts as comedy relief,
and eventually becomes the catalyst for most of Top Hat's comic reversals.
Top Hat is a fantasy of how rich people are supposed to behave, 'taking in the season' here
and there with one crowd or another, traveling from European capitol to capitol in chartered planes
and staying in fancy hotels. It's such a high-toned fantasy that real-life realities never intrude.
Jerry Travers has nothing on his mind except dancing and romance. Dale Tremont is the poor girl
circulating on the continent as a living advertisement for designer Alberto Bedini's (Erik Rhodes)
fancy gowns. Bedini is the laughingstock character, a silly-ass Italian who speaks exclusively in
fractured English.
The fantasy extends to Van Nest Polglase's set of Venice that looks like a full-scale Art Deco
Disneyland. White walls swoop around a curvy canal crossed by staircase-arched bridges. It's
Venice as an operetta stage show, with plenty of dance space and room for only a few tables. It's
an amazing concoction, an immense set for a show that's lighter than a feather.
Warner's DVD of RKO's Top Hat is a handsome presentation. The negatives for all of these
30s musicals were more likely than not printed to death in just a few years, leaving us with fuzzy
16mm prints for television, with audio to match. The transfer here is from reasonable 35mm elements
that, a few scratches aside, look very good; dissolves tend to jump to a higher level of grain but
most scenes are just fine. The audio cleanup is substantial, allowing us to appreciate the taste
and technical abilities of 1935 engineers and mixers.
The commentary is hosted by author Larry Billman and Fred Astaire's daughter Ava Astaire. She
warmly shares second-hand memories from her father while Billman shows that he knows just about
everything there is to know about the film we're watching. Among other surprises,
he points out Lucille Ball in a bit role. There's also an awful lot of reverent plot-talk,
redundantly noting screen action we can see for ourselves.
The featurette On Top: Inside the Success of Top Hat carries no creative credits beyond
mention of an "in association with Summerland" outside vendor, and allows a number of spokespeople
to try and
explain the charm of Astaire and Rogers. The closest they come is quoting Katharine Hepburn: "He
gave her class and she gave him sex." Some of the critics and authors have interesting facts to
relate, but some younger dancers and performers deal mostly in clichés. We're also assured
for the umpteenth time that were it not for Astaire and Rogers, America would never have survived
the Great Depression. Maybe they're right.
Watch the Birdie is an early comedy short billboarding the then radio star Bob Hope. It's all
dialogue-driven, naturally. Page Miss Glory is a grotesque cartoon about a bellboy in a hick
hotel who dreams of the big time. Both were presumably chosen as time-capsule samples of what might
have accompanied Top Hat in the theaters.
A trailer is also included. Subs for the feature are in English, French and Spanish.
On a scale of Excellent, Good, Fair, and Poor,
Top Hat rates:
Movie: Excellent
Video: Very Good
Sound: Very Good
Supplements: Commentary by Fred Astaire's daughter, Ava Astaire McKenzie, and
film dance historian Larry Billman; featurette On Top: Inside the Success of Top Hat;
Comedy short Watch the Birdie with Bob Hope; cartoon Page Miss Glory; Trailer
Packaging: Keep case
Reviewed: August 6, 2005
DVD Savant Text © Copyright 2007 Glenn Erickson
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