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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Strange little curio from the early talkie era
This movie will probably be enjoyable mainly to those of us interested in the early talkie era of films. This movie is an odd combination of a Ziegfeld-like musical revue and a psychological study of a man's descent into madness, and was based on a story by Ben Hecht. It is not your melodrama set to music that you would typically see in 1929.

Gabbo (Erich...
Published on April 5, 2007 by calvinnme

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3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting film with mediocre transfer.
Typical of Alpha video,they release a obscure classic and give it a so-so presentation.

The film looks like it was blown up from a 16mm print since the film appears cropped and the actor's heads are cut off in various scenes.

The Great Gabbo already has a better release on Kino DVD,but before you decide to put down money for the film,understand...
Published on January 17, 2009 by James Simpson


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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Strange little curio from the early talkie era, April 5, 2007
This review is from: Great Gabbo (DVD)
This movie will probably be enjoyable mainly to those of us interested in the early talkie era of films. This movie is an odd combination of a Ziegfeld-like musical revue and a psychological study of a man's descent into madness, and was based on a story by Ben Hecht. It is not your melodrama set to music that you would typically see in 1929.

Gabbo (Erich Von Stroheim) is a ventriloquist, apparently living with his girlfriend Mary (Betty Compson) who also helps him in his act. His mannequin, Otto, seems to take on a life of his own. At first you believe that Gabbo is only imagining Otto is talking, but very shortly you see that Otto is moving and talking from several feet away from Gabbo - but always in Gabbo's presence - regardless of whether other people are around or not, and these other people see Otto move and speak too. Everyone just attributes this to Gabbo's talent and eccentricity, nothing else. Gabbo is constantly berating Mary, complaining that his coffee is too hot or too cold, blaming his lack of success on her, and finally daring her to leave, which she does. Time passes, and Gabbo becomes the star of the Manhattan Revue, a successful Ziegfeld-like Broadway production, and a show in which Mary is also starring as a singer and dancer with her partner and boyfriend, Frank (Donald Douglas). Mary begins to make some friendly gestures towards Gabbo, which Gabbo happily interprets as Mary's desire to reunite with him. However, things are not as they appear in more ways than one, and when Mary tells Gabbo a secret she has been keeping he goes completely mad. Gabbo even punches Otto saying it is his fault that Mary has left him.

The musical part of the film has some lavish musical numbers that appear very typical of Ziegfeld's productions, although the famous showman had nothing to do with this movie. Besides the pre-Busby Berkeley dances in which the people in the chorus descend a staircase and then proceed to dance on the stage in a straight line with the camera either focusing on the dancer's feet or costumes but seldom both, there are some rather inventive numbers. One involves the dancers performing with some giant pinwheels raised in the background. Another one has the performers dressed as spiders that first sing while raised on a giant spider web, then some of them climb down and perform the rest of the act on stage. The odd staging and costumes in the musical numbers just add to the surrealistic mood of Gabbo's growing insanity.

It seems that since Otto's speech and motion are not figments of Gabbo's imagination, that perhaps Otto's personality is the "human side" of Gabbo. Otto is what Gabbo would be like if he was less self-involved. Mary seems to hint at this several times early in the film when she says that the only kind words Gabbo ever said to her came from Otto. At the end of the film, after Mary makes clear to Gabbo she will never return to him and why, Otto never moves or speaks again. It is as though Otto's lifelessness shows that any remaining humanity in Gabbo has burned out for good. Erich Von Stroheim was particularly good as Gabbo. Being both a director and an actor himself in both the silent and talking era might have helped him in this. If you are interested in obscure early talkies, I'm sure you'll like this movie. Just be prepared for the less than stellar audio and video quality. This movie has not been restored, so you have to deal with the typical technical problems of the early talkie era.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting film with mediocre transfer., January 17, 2009
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This review is from: Great Gabbo (DVD)
Typical of Alpha video,they release a obscure classic and give it a so-so presentation.

The film looks like it was blown up from a 16mm print since the film appears cropped and the actor's heads are cut off in various scenes.

The Great Gabbo already has a better release on Kino DVD,but before you decide to put down money for the film,understand how mediocre the film is first.

Erich Von Stroheim as a ventriloquist with an overblown ego,sounds like it could be interesting.

The heart of the story is about how he can only relate to his dummy,Otto,which he thinks is alive.

It almost appears as if Gabbo's soul is within his dummy as the only humanity he displays is often through the dummy.
He alienates all those around him,including his love,and begins to go down a path of insanity.

Unfortunately,the film does not work very well as a character study,hampered by poor direction and the TERRIBLE inclusion of some unintentionally(and dated) musical numbers,which devour a great deal of the running time.

Stroheim is excellent and quite sympathetic in the lead,but this could have been alot better.

As it stands,the film is just a curio piece and that's it.
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