Flying Down to Rio

Flying Down to Rio 3p2p5i

1933 "Too big for the world... So they staged it in the clouds... Too beautiful for words... So they set it to music!"
Flying Down to Rio
Flying Down to Rio

Flying Down to Rio 3p2p5i

6.6 | 1h29m | NR | en | Comedy

A dance band leader finds love and success in Brazil.

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6.6 | 1h29m | NR | en | More Info
Released: December. 22,1933 | Released Producted By: RKO Radio Pictures , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
info

A dance band leader finds love and success in Brazil.

Genre

Romance

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Cast

Blanche Friderici

Director

Carroll Clark

Producted By

RKO Radio Pictures

Flying Down to Rio Videos and Images 1a501u

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  • Top Credited Cast
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  • Crew
Carroll Clark
Carroll Clark

Art Direction

Van Nest Polglase
Van Nest Polglase

Art Direction

J. Roy Hunt
J. Roy Hunt

Director of Photography

Walter Plunkett
Walter Plunkett

Costume Design

Dave Gould
Dave Gould

Choreographer

Jack Kitchin
Jack Kitchin

Editor

Lou Brock
Lou Brock

Associate Producer

Merian C. Cooper
Merian C. Cooper

Executive Producer

Max Steiner
Max Steiner

Music Director

Vincent Youmans
Vincent Youmans

Original Music Composer

Philip Faulkner Jr.
Philip Faulkner Jr.

Sound Recordist

Vernon L. Walker
Vernon L. Walker

Visual Effects

Edward Eliscu
Edward Eliscu

Lyricist

Gus Kahn
Gus Kahn

Lyricist

Cyril Hume
Cyril Hume

Screenplay

H.W. Hanemann
H.W. Hanemann

Screenplay

Erwin S. Gelsey
Erwin S. Gelsey

Screenplay

Lou Brock
Lou Brock

Story

Anne Caldwell
Anne Caldwell

Theatre Play

Flying Down to Rio Audience Reviews 1w505e

Softwing Most undeservingly overhyped movie of all time??
Peereddi I was totally surprised at how great this film.You could feel your paranoia rise as the film went on and as you gradually learned the details of the real situation.
Doomtomylo a film so unique, intoxicating and bizarre that it not only demands another viewing, but is also forgivable as a satirical comedy where the jokes eventually take the back seat.
Edwin The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.
vert001 The greatest miracle about FLYING DOWN TO RIO must be the fact that contemporary audiences were able to notice the brilliance of its fourth and fifth leads, who had relatively little to do in it. This was Fred Astaire's first real film (he'd briefly played himself in a Joan Crawford movie) and as such was crucial to his career. Already a major star on the New York and London stages (and before that in vaudeville), a failure with RIO might have sent him back to the stage permanently, which would have left Astaire nothing but a footnote to history. But FLYING DOWN TO RIO was a major hit with the public, and Fred was about to become a runaway sensation alongside Ginger Rogers, mixed blessing though that may have seemed to both of them.Eleven years younger than Astaire, Rogers was also a veteran of vaudeville and Broadway, but she also sported a fair amount of film experience, generally having played female leads in small pictures and ing roles in major pictures over the previous three years, most notably in the mega-hits 42nd STREET and GOLD DIGGERS OF 1933. She had just been signed to an exclusive contract by RKO and under that contract her first assignment would be to replace Dorothy Jordan in FLYING DOWN TO RIO. A very happy accident, though one would assume that she would soon enough have been teamed with Astaire as RKO really had no one nearly as natural a fit for dancing musicals as was Ginger.Vincent Youmans produced a very nice musical score for the picture, the highlight of which for me is 'Music Makes Me', the kind of bouncy, sexy, comical song that suited Ginger Rogers vocally (sung by her while wearing what must be the most revealing dress of Ginger's career!) while it also provides wonderful accompaniment to a terrific, if brief, tap dance solo from Fred Astaire, the dancing highlight of the film. Most famous, of course, is the lengthy Carioca number, something of a giant mess aesthetically, I'm afraid, and surely the least of all the Astaire/Rogers duets. There is also the final production number featuring scantily clad chorus girls on the wings of airplanes. It's not something you're likely to forget once you've seen it, also a bit of a mixed blessing in my opinion.For the rest, there isn't much. A nice joke concerning cannibals who turn out not to be so, some stirring vocalizing from Etta Motten, a pair of leads who are very pretty and nothing else, a guy who seemed to get lost in the movie and in Hollywood in general, Raul Roulien, who really isn't that bad if you can pay any attention to him. RIO is an obvious pre-Code film though not one of the best ones. It's obviously of interest to those interested in the partnership of Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire, though about the very last place you should look for their inimitable genius. It did what it was supposed to do for RKO: It got them out of bankruptcy, and inspired the pairing that would keep them out of bankruptcy for the rest of the decade. I suppose that not many films have ever been so successful as that.
Dalbert Pringle With its story set first in Miami and then in Rio De Janeiro, this 1933 "Boy-Meets-Girl" Comedy/Romance/Musical was so annoyingly corny and predictable that it was downright sickening for me to watch. Its story was a complete "air-head" insult to the intelligence of any thinking person.On top of a couple of badly-staged musical numbers, which were clearly "Busby Berkeley" type rip-offs, this decidedly dull-witted piece of pure escapist fluff also contained a number of really terrible songs, as well.There was not a single memorable character in the entire story. These boys & girls were all a bunch of one-dimensional paper-dolls, with the women, as usual, wearing way too much make-up and dressed to the nines in the most ridiculous-looking fashions imaginable.I understand that this movie is considered to be a big deal by many film-buffs just because it was the first picture to feature the likes of Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers dancing (this time the Carioca) together.Well, if that's all that this film is notable for, then, from my point of view, it only deserves a 3-star rating. Believe me, there are certainly much better 1930's Musicals out there that are more worth your while.*Note* - I'd say that it was this DVD's bonus features which were far more entertaining to watch than the main attraction.#1 bonus was the 1933 comedy short called "Beer & Pretzels" which co-starred Curly, Larry & Moe, before they became known as The Three Stooges.Also included as a bonus was the "Merrie Melodies" cartoon titled "I Like Mountain Music".
devonb186 The 1933 film, Flying Down to Rio, was just the beginning of the musical era. The musicals that we know today are very different from the first few. The older musicals had a problem fitting the song and dance into the plot and they went on for long periods of time. The dancing in the movie was amazing for me to see. I participated in many forms of dance throughout my adolescent years. Although tap wasn't my favorite type of dance, it made me really appreciate how talented Fred Astaire and his partner were. The only critic of the dance scenes would be the ending when the women were strapped to the planes. I found it hard to believe that this movie, being very realistic, would throw in this scene. I could never imagine this happening in real life and the spectators on the ground would not have been able to see the girls on top of the wings. There was cool camera work in the scene when the pilot and rich women were stranded on the island. To display their consciences, there was a translucent image talking to themselves and I thought that was very creative.
ferbs54 Today, the 1933 Radio Pictures musical "Flying Down to Rio" is perhaps best ed for two things: It is the film featuring the classic, eye-bugging sequence of chorus girls dancing on the wings of airplanes in flight, and it marked the first, epochal teaming of what was to become cinema's most elegant, enduring and beloved song-and-dance team, Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. But a recent rescreening of the film has served to remind me that although F&G play second-banana roles in their initial outing, "Rio" still has lots of other enticements to offer. In it, F&G play accordionist Fred Ayres and lead singer Honey Hale in playboy/bandleader Roger Bond's group, the Yankee Clippers. Roger (played by Gene Raymond) soon falls hard for the charms of a Brazilian lady with the memorable handle Belinha de Rezende, not knowing that she's the fiancée of his pal (Raul Roulien), who's just hired the band to play in Rio. Mexican beauty Dolores del Rio does well in her exotic role of Belinha, and before long, the whole gang is dancing and romancing down in the tropics. "Rio" has been imaginatively directed by Thornton Freeland (I know...who?), and features the most creative transitional scene swipes you've ever witnessed, a very bright and amusing script (my favorite line: "What have these South Americans got below the equator that we haven't?"), incredible sets and excellent special FX. Highlights of this film include Ginger singing the infectiously bouncy "Music Makes Me," Raul singing "Orchids in the Moonlight" to Dolores, Fred's high-speed specialty tap number, and the sight of those chorus girls doing their Rockette-like thing on the wings of those airplanes (some truly special FX here). But it is the epic, 12-minute, central dance number, "The Carioca" (still five minutes shorter than the monumental "Continental" in F&G's follow-up film, "The Gay Divorcée"), featuring Fred and Ginger's first dance together, that really makes this a film for the ages. "The new fast-stepping dancing pair," the trailer proclaimed, but who could have foreseen that this was just the initial salvo in a 10-picture run for the beloved team? "Flying Down to Rio" was a wildly popular escape for Depression-wearied audiences, and serves the exact same fantasy escape function during our modern-day Depression. It may not be the best of the Fred and Gingers, but it sure does start the series off with a bang! Anyone out there know how to say "a hoot and a half" in Portuguese?