The Big Store (1941)
How MGM killed the Marx Brothers, Part III...
19 November 1999
Well, folks, this is the final nail in the coffin. This film marks the final collaboration between the World's Greatest Comedy Team and MGM studios - and it's a pretty sad epitaph. It's not the Marxes' fault - 'twas MGM that slew the boys (they also successfully neutered Laurel & Hardy, the b*******!). They relegated one writer to this and their two previous films, rather than a team of scribes and refused to let them try their material out live. Plus, it's clear the studio really didn't have a firm grasp on their characters: in this film, "At the Circus," and "Go West," they allow Groucho, Harpo, and Chico to become victimized. This would be unheard of during the Paramount years. Even when misfortune falls on the three in "A Night at the Opera" and "A Day At the Races," they come back even stronger, making their foes wish they'd never been born. The Marx Brothers aren't supposed to take s**t from anybody! Well, there's still a few good moments (the opening sequence of Groucho and Harpo trying to impress Margaret Dumont in their run-down detective office) but many of the scenes are pale retreads of great bits from earlier films (plus, it has the most repellent musical number ever featured in a Marx movie - "The Tenement Symphony"... yow! What a big, brown floater that is!). But, hey, even marginal Marx Brothers is better than most anything else I can imagine. If you've never experienced the Fab Four-then-Three before, don't start here - try "Duck Soup," "Horse Feathers," or "Monkey Business."
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