Animal Crackers (1930) | |
Plot Synopsis (continued)
Captain Spaulding meets with the pompous philanthropist and art connoisseur Roscoe W. Chandler, and they both repeatedly introduce themselves - a mockery of introductions in general:
The absurdist, side-tracked conversation switches to Chandler's interest in art. Spaulding - with an illogical suggestion, proposes where Chandler might build an Opera House:
After more repetitive introductions and verbal brow-beating, Chandler is forced to continue the conversation - and he brings up finances: "In the last analysis, it is a question of money. The nickel today is not what it used to be ten years ago." This affords Spaulding another opportunity to run verbal rings around his opposing character. He delivers a memorable, nonsensical monologue on his own unique economic theory of thrift. He responds to Chandler's remark about the worth of the nickel by proposing how a 'seven-cent nickel' could solve the country's economic woes:
Chandler finds himself thinking that Spaulding has a fantastic idea:
Chandler mistakenly calls Spaulding 'Captain Chandler,' and soon their identities become so confused that Spaulding turns toward the camera and asks for a programme from the audience to help sort it out. Chandler asks about South America and announces that he is sailing for Uruguay. Spaulding delivers a memorable pun:
In the library, Arabella flirtatiously asks Ravelli to hang up John's facsimile canvas in place of the other painting. When he asks: "You want I should steal?," she replies: "Oh, no, no. It's not stealing," Ravelli tells her that he can't do it. He then speaks to the Professor about how they aren't making any money, because all he does is chase women. They are wasting their time and missing out on all the lucrative card games:
Just then, Mrs. Rittenhouse enters as an appropriate victim of their games. The Professor and Ravelli hand their legs to her several times - the beginning of hilarious pantomime gags. He also slaps her thigh so that her leg jerks up reflexively. Disgusted with being asked to play all kinds of games ("blackjack, sock-er"), Mrs. Rittenhouse decides, with Mrs. Whitehead, to sit down on a couch. She finds the Professor beneath her on the sofa. Mrs. Whitehead pushes the Professor's leg back and forth between her lap and Ravelli's lap. When Mrs. Rittenhouse tries to walk away, the Professor runs after her, hugs her, tries to sit in her lap, and then swings and misses with a wild punch, falling over. Ravelli starts a boxer's countdown that is interrupted by the sound of a bell. The bell ends Round One - in this incredible boxing/wrestling match scene. After Round One, Coach Ravelli revives his fighter in the corner, fanning him, tickling his stomach and giving him instructions. A bell rings signaling Round Two. The Professor comes out swinging toward an unsuspecting opponent - he grabs Mrs. Rittenhouse and even punches her repeatedly in the stomach, causing her to rise into the air. The two of them, notorious cardsharks, decide to settle down and team up to engage Mrs. Rittenhouse and Mrs. Whitehead in a lunatic-style bridge game "for small stakes." Hives and the Professor are at odds in putting up a portable card table. When finally seated, Ravelli asks: "How do you want to play...honest?" The Professor pulls out his blackjack, and puts it on the table. Mrs. Rittenhouse reaches out and tells him to put it away, and he accidentally hits his own hand when he attempts to whack her with it. Requesting sympathy for his bruised hand, he holds it out for Mrs. Whitehead to kiss and make well, then ferociously threatens to hit her if she does. Drawing for partners, both cardsharks pick aces of spades in a game with the Professor cheating in every way imaginable. Mrs. Rittenhouse questions this improbability of such a coincidence: "Two aces of spades?" Ravelli answers: "Yeah, he's got thousands of 'em." The Professor is given his choice of seats, so he sits down on Mrs. Whitehead's lap. Ravelli interprets: "He thought it was contact bridge." The Professor shuffles the deck of cards, but he flicks through each half of the deck separately in each hand on the table, so that they are actually unmixed. Mrs. Rittenhouse cuts the cards twice (not really). Then, wetting his left thumb, the Professor deals with his right hand, giving Ravelli a quick peek at each card to see if he wants it. If he is not happy with a card, he tosses it away into the air. If Ravelli rejects a card, it is dealt to Mrs. Rittenhouse, who doesn't notice while she is busy sorting her hand. Incredibly, the two lady partners end up with strong bridge hands and raise the bidding in spades. So the Professor switches Mrs. Rittenhouse's cards with his own - and she exclaims with surprise: "Why, I haven't a spade in my hand!" Ravelli acquiesces: "All right, we double." In a new round of bidding with the same dealt hand, the Professor bids one. Mrs. Whitehead asks: "One. One what?" Ravelli answers: "That's all right, you'll find out," and then bids two of the same suit. The Professor instructs Mrs. Whitehead to lead the game with an ace of spades, and then trumps it, with Ravelli calling it a "finesse." Ravelli warns his partner twice: "No spades, partner...No spades!!!" Taking him literally, the Professor rips his card into small pieces. Ravelli calls Mrs. Whitehead "the dummy." Because it is not clear which suit is trump, the Professor plays thirteen aces (half of them the ace of spades), winning every hand. Ravelli tells them: "Ace of spades, Ace of spades...He plays a good game." As the ladies leave the game table upset by the blatant cheating, the Professor wobbles off in Mrs. Whitehead's stolen shoes. Arabella has convinced Ravelli and the Professor to sneak into the library, that rainy evening, and install John's painting. Ravelli asks the Professor for a flash-light, but is misunderstood because he mispronounces the word: "Where's the flesh?" The Professor suggests part of his cheek, a dead fish, a flask, a flush of cards, a spray can of Flit, and a flute before realizing that Ravelli has asked for a flash-light. The thunderstorm causes the lights to go out. Captain Spaulding and Mrs. Rittenhouse enter in the dark, sit on the sofa, and hear hammering and pounding. Spaulding tells her what he thinks the noise is: "...you got roaches...and the biggest one has got asthma." After the two sneaks leave, the lights go on again. They first exit out one side of the library, but because there is pouring rain there, they choose the other side where there's "California" sunshine. In front of a large audience of guests in the film's most legendary and memorable scene, Captain Spaulding recounts a hilarious account of his adventurous African safari:
Out of her old-fashioned concern for propriety (after Spaulding's remark about 'developing' native girls), Mrs. Rittenhouse discreetly but abruptly concludes the lecture. Chandler calls out:
The Professor obliges by bringing over three chairs for Captain Spaulding. Spaulding instructs Ravelli to entertain the guests with piano playing (Chico's specialty):
Ravelli monotonously repeats part of "Sugartime" as if it were a dull piano exercise or broken record, because he has forgotten how it ends.
During another piece, the Professor clangs two horseshoes together and they rhythmically beat out part of the Anvil Chorus. Spaulding proposes to give a gift of a hope-chest to Mrs. Rittenhouse "at a very low figure." She gushes:
As the guests adjourn and file into the library, a stealthy Hives is seen leaving with John's facsimile painting under his coat. He has replaced it with Mrs. Whitehead's phony copy. During the gala unveiling of the priceless Beaugard oil painting (actually the second fake that the butler has put in its place), Chandler determines that the canvas is an inferior fake ("a rank imitation"). Spaulding volunteers to help and declares: "Leave it to me. I'll throw some light on this subject," and the lights immediately go out during a power failure. When they come on, even the fake has disappeared from above the mantle. Nerve-wracked and anxious, Hives (an ex-convict) tells Mrs. Whitehead and Grace his worries that the police will be summoned and that he will become a prime suspect:
To his wide-eyed dismay, he also discovers that his copy of the painting has also been stolen. Hives immediately suspects the Professor and decides to render him unconscious (with a few drops of a knock-out ether solution on a handkerchief). In the garden with John, Arabella is pleased that they had their fake installed in place of the Beaugard - and that it was stolen by thieves: "Supposin' the thieves had gotten away with the Beaugard...What would Mother do? Why, it's worth $100,000 dollars. How could she have replaced it?" They find it an appropriate occasion to sing a love song to each other, "Why Am I So Romantic With You?" And Harpo plays a requisite harp solo before yawning and falling asleep. |