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Three Little Words
[1950] (REGION 1) (NTSC)

Starring: Fred Astaire, Red Skelton, Vera-Ellen, Arlene Dahl, Keenan Wynn
Director: Richard Thorpe Tex Avery
Format: Closed-captioned Colour DVD-Video Original recording remastered Subtitled NTSC
Released: 25 Apr 2006
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

A congenial musical with Fred Astaire as Bert Kalmar and Red Skelton as Harry Ruby - By: C. O. DeRiemer, 27 Sep 2007
Three Little Words is like a mother's cooking. It may not be haute cuisine, but it's tasty & it's nice sitting around the table with friends & family. The movie, in my opinion, has no great highs & no great lows; it's a genial, comfortable musical with a strong performance by Fred Astaire as Bert Kalmar & a low-key one from Red Skelton as Harry Ruby.

The two met in 1918 & formed a song-writing partnership that lasted until Kalmar's death in 1947. Kalmar wrote the words; Ruby wrote the music. They were successful as Tin Pan Alley writers, on Broadway & in Hollywood. Perhaps what makes the movie so easy going is that in real life the two never had any major conflicts. They liked each other & worked well together. Hollywood, of course, thought some tension was needed to make the movie interesting so some minor issues have been added. These are so soft-pedaled that we hardly notice them as important. And there is always a wife or two to help smooth things over. What we're left with is Astaire & Skelton, Vera-Ellen playing Kalmar's wife & Arlene Dahl playing Ruby's wife, & an ongoing number of Kalmar-Ruby songs sung & danced to. The two stand-outs for me are the Astaire & Vera-Ellen pairings in Where Did You Get That Girl, a fast, funny vaudeville routine, & Thinking of You, a romantic, elegant waltz which ends with a latin beat. Among the songs featured are such Kalmar-Ruby standards as Who's Sorry Now?, I Wanna Be Loved By You, Three Little Words & one of their best, Nevertheless.

Maybe I'm right, maybe I'm wrong,
maybe I'm weak, maybe I'm strong,
but nevertheless I'm in love with you.

Maybe I'll win, maybe I'll lose,
and maybe I'm in for crying the blues,
but nevertheless I'm in love with you.

Somehow, I know at a glance, the terrible chances I'm taking.
Fine at the start, then left with a heart that is breaking.

Maybe I'll live a life of regret,
and maybe I'll give much more than I get,
but nevertheless, I'm in love with you.

We ought to remember, although it's just briefly touched on in the movie, that Kalmar & Ruby provided the songs for three of the Marx Brothers great, early movies, Animal Crackers, Duck Soup & Horsefeathers. Try not thinking of Groucho when you hear this one:

"Hooray for Captain Spaulding!
The African Explorer!"
"Did someone calll me shnorrer?"
"Hooray, hooray, hooray!"

Fred Astaire not only provides the creative focus with his dancing, but he gives a strong performance as a confidant guy always thinking of ways to do more. He may overshadow Red Skelton's Ruby but I think that was the nature of their partnership. Skelton plays Ruby as a lovable, slightly naive big lug. He does a nice job of it. Vera-Ellen, as always with her movies, had her singing dubbed, in this case by Anita Ellis. A legend seems to have grown about how awful a singer she was. As far as I know there is only one recording that contains Vera-Ellen singing her own songs. This is the CD of A Connecticut Yankee, the 1943 Broadway revival where Vera-Ellen played the comic second female lead. She does a fine job. She has no vibrato, sings flat out & comes perilously close to missing a note now & then, but her personality shines though; she's funny, sexy & endearing.

The DVD of Three Little Words looks & sounds great. Among the extras is a short feature about the two song-writing partners.