The Inspector General (1949 film)
The Inspector General | |
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Directed by | Henry Koster |
Screenplay by | Philip Rapp and Harry Kurnitz |
Based on | Suggested by the play by Nikolai Gogol |
Produced by | Jerry Wald Sylvia Fine (associate producer) |
Starring | Danny Kaye Walter Slezak Barbara Bates Elsa Lanchester |
Cinematography | Elwood Bredell |
Edited by | Rudi Fehr |
Music by | Sylvia Fine (lyrics and music) Johnny Green (musical direction and incidental score) |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $2,873,000[1] |
Box office | $3,910,000[1] $2.2 million (US rentals)[2] |
The Inspector General is a 1949 American Technicolor musical comedy film. It stars Danny Kaye and was directed by Henry Koster. The film also stars Walter Slezak, Barbara Bates, and Elsa Lanchester. Original music and lyrics are by the associate producer Sylvia Fine, who was married to Danny Kaye, with Johnny Green credited for musical direction and incidental score. The film is loosely based on Nikolai Gogol's play The Inspector General. The plot is re-located from the Russian Empire into an unspecified corrupted region of a European country that suddenly finds itself under the supervision of the First French Empire.
Plot
[edit]Georgi, a naive and kind-hearted member of a band of Gypsies is kicked out by their leader Yakov, after revealing to some villagers that the elixir they were peddling was fake. Tired and hungry, he wanders into the small town of Brodny. Whilst trying to eat from a horse's feedbag, he is arrested as a horse thief and sentenced to hang the next day by the town's corrupt police chief.
Brodny is run by a corrupt Mayor, whose underlings are all his equally corrupt relations. They are frightened when they learn that the Inspector General, an emissary appointed by Napoleon Bonaparte to weed out corruption, is in their region and known to come in disguise. They mistake Georgi for the Inspector, and coddle him whilst trying to make him leave as soon as possible. Georgi reunites with Yakov, who poses as his advisor and reveals the suffering the Mayor inflicted on the townsfolk. To buy back a church organ the Mayor bought with the people's tax money and then sold to another town, Yakov convinces Georgi to collect bribes, but privately negotiates with the Mayor for a much larger sum. Meanwhile, the mayor's wife falls for Georgi, hoping he will whisk her away from her inattentive husband, though Georgi has fallen in love with Leza, the mayor's kitchen maid who inspires him to be a good person and rescue the town.
At a party in his honor, Georgi narrowly avoids being exposed by a friend of the real Inspector General. The Mayor and his ilk plot to have Georgi killed, and lure him to a barn for the woodcutter to murder him. Instead, Yakov learns of the plot beforehand, knocks Georgi unconscious, poses Georgi's head through a hole in a table as if he had been decapitated, and the Mayor pays him. Georgi awakens, stops Yakov from fleeing with the money for himself, and flees with Leza instead.
The real Inspector General arrives, and Georgi is arrested when he returns with Leza and the church organ. Yakov picks the Inspector's pocket for his credentials, briefly saving Georgi's life, but Georgi refuses to have the real Inspector executed and admits his true identity. Moved by his honesty, the Inspector gives Georgi the Mayor's chain of office and names him the new Mayor of Brodny, while telling the prior mayor "We'll put something else around your neck." Yakov becomes the new chief of police, Leza and Georgi become a couple, and the town celebrates Georgi's official appointment.
Cast
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Score
[edit]Johnny Green won a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Score for his work on the film.[3] Kaye's wife Sylvia Fine wrote the original songs "The Inspector General" and "Happy Times," both sung by Kaye in the film.[4] "Happy Times" was, in fact, the working title of the film.[5]
Reception
[edit]Box Office
[edit]According to Warner Bros records the film earned $2,154,000 domestically and $1,756,000 foreign.[1]
Copyright status
[edit]The Inspector General is one of a number of major Hollywood productions from the 1940s and 1950s that have lapsed into the public domain in the United States.[6] The last copyright holder was United Artists Television (later Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and finally Turner Entertainment) and later absorbed by TimeWarner now WarnerMedia & Warner Bros.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Warner Bros financial information in The William Schaefer Ledger. See "Appendix 1". Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. 15 (sup1): 30. 1995. doi:10.1080/01439689508604551.
- ^ "The Top Box Office Hits of 1950". Variety. January 3, 1951.
- ^ Fristoe, Roger. "The Inspector General". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved January 3, 2017.
- ^ "Sylvia Fine: The Woman Behind the Curtain". Danny Kaye and Sylvia Fine: Two Kids from Brooklyn (Library of Congress Exhibition.). February 14, 2013. Retrieved January 3, 2017.
- ^ "The Inspector General: Notes". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved January 3, 2017.
- ^ Hicks, Chris (18 June 2004). "Chris Hicks: Kaye movies are hard to find on DVD". Deseret News. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
External links
[edit]- The Inspector General at IMDb
- The Inspector General at AllMovie
- The Inspector General at the TCM Movie Database
- The Inspector General at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- The Inspector General is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive
- 1949 films
- 1949 musical comedy films
- American musical comedy films
- Films based on The Government Inspector
- Films directed by Henry Koster
- Warner Bros. films
- Films scored by Johnny Green
- Films with screenplays by Harry Kurnitz
- Films with screenplays by Ben Hecht
- 1940s English-language films
- 1940s American films
- English-language musical comedy films