When this was run last year, I wrote: ” In one of their most anarchic films, Horse Feathers (1932), the Marx Brothers take on higher learning—and higher learning loses. Here’s the idea: Groucho has become (through goodness-knows-what process) the president of Huxley College, despite making sport of his predecessor and the entire faculty, even singing a song where he tells them not to bother making suggestions, ‘Whatever it is, I’m against it.’ His son (Zeppo) is a student at said college, and he convinces his father to hire professional football players to bolster the school’s perpetually losing team.” Full review here: http://www.mountainx.com/movies/review/horse_feathers
I love this movie! My first exposure to the Marx Brothers. I never looked back.
My first was The Cocoanuts, but I was so young all I really remember from that encounter was Harpo eating the telephone. Of course, I’m from those prehistoric days when you had to just wait for some TV station to run them.
Mine was a VHS tape I cajoled my mother into buying for me at the age of about nine or ten.
Well, it turns out that Chip Kaufmann and I got our wires crossed and the HFS is running Monkey Business and not Horse Feathers. It’s almost a wash in terms of quality — and there’s a lot to be said for Four Marx Bros. trying to get off a ship by all claiming to be Maurice Chevalier.
My apologies for sending out the wrong copy but Ken’s right…it’s pretty much a wash in terms of quality. The password may not be “swordfish” in MONKEY BUSINESS but “If a nightengale could sing like you, they’d sing much sweeter than they do”.
Probably safer not to invoke the actual song title, lest folks get the wrong idea.