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The Great Gabbo

Play trailer Poster for The Great Gabbo Released Sep 12, 1929 1h 35m Musical Play Trailer Watchlist
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71% Tomatometer 7 Reviews 48% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
The Great Gabbo (Erich von Stroheim) is a mentally unstable ventriloquist who brutally demeans his assistant, Mary (Betty Compson), blaming her for the duo's lack of success. Fed up with his abuse, she quits, only to find herself performing as a dancer in a major stage show featuring Gabbo two years later. Though she is now married to a fellow dancer, Frank (Don Douglas), Gabbo makes a play for her. But when she rejects him, his madness returns, and he begins to speak only through his puppet.
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The Great Gabbo

Critics Reviews

View All (7) Critics Reviews
Sarah Boslaugh TheArtsStl James Cruze is efficient in his direction of The Great Gabbo, which is no small feat considering the difficulties of shooting with the early sound cameras. Jul 20, 2021 Full Review Michael E. Grost Classic Film and Television Some bizarre musical numbers in the granddaddy of all "strange ventriloquist" chillers. Oct 1, 2014 Full Review Dennis Schwartz Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews An early talkie that gets your attention because it's so perverse. Rated: B- Oct 6, 2010 Full Review Fernando F. Croce CinePassion A laboratory experiment that isolates the Stroheim persona for all it's worth Feb 7, 2010 Full Review Emanuel Levy EmanuelLevy.Com Rated: 4/5 Aug 19, 2005 Full Review Ken Hanke Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC) Interminable, unbelieavably show early talkie of interest only for Stroheim. Rated: 2/5 Sep 11, 2003 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Steve D Dark and odd but not remotely good. Rated 0.5 out of 5 stars 12/26/23 Full Review Audience Member The greatest 01 hour: and 35 minutes ever!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/11/23 Full Review Audience Member A delightful little film which particularly focuses on being mindful of treating those you love. Gabbo and Otto the puppet are absolutely wonderful as characters, on and off stage. And the musical numbers in the performance make for interesting padding between the story. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/15/23 Full Review Audience Member Based on "The Rival Dummy" by Ben Hecht, The Great Gaboo was released as an "all-dialog singing, dancing and dramatic spectacle" with huge musical numbers that stand in stark contrast to the plot and often stop the film's pace cold. There was even a scene shot in color, "The Ga Ga Bird", which is missing from nearly all prints of the movie today. The musical sequences are so big — "Web of Love" was used for years in other films and dance sequences was re-used with different music in 1932's The Girl from Calgary — that you may forget that this is kind of a horror movie. Predating Dead of Night, The Twilight Zone episodes "The Dummy" and "Caesar and Me," Magic, Devil Doll and even The Simpsons episode "Krusty Gets Kancelled," this is the tale of an artist — ventriloquist Gabbo (Erich von Stroheim, who in addition to being an actor — known as "the man you love to hate" — was also one of the first auteur directors, beloved by Surrealists and a man banned from Hollywood — he was unwilling to compromise his art for commercial cinema, while also being obsessed with the finest of details and more than willing to spend as much money as possible on his films despite scenes that were too shocking to ever be shown; yeah this is a run-on sentence but he's a personal hero) — who only speaks through his dummy Otto*. Gabbo is amazing — he can make Otto talk and sing while he smokes, drinks and eats, which wows audiences — but he's a complete maniac who can only relate to the outside world through the dummy. His girlfriend and assistant Mary (Betty Compson) leaves him after years of suffering through his tics and complete hatred of the world. Two years pass and Gabbo has become a star while Mary has moved on to a relationship with a dancer. The Gabbo she meets now is a complete man, one who relates to her with thought and romance. He confesses that without her, he realized his failings and worked to improve himself. She tells him that she is now married and they cannot be together, saying goodbye to Otto and not him. His life ruined, he explodes, punching the doll in the face before holding it, taking Otto to the stage where he ruins the show and loses his career. Director James Cruze acted in, directed and or produced over 100 films in the silent era. Not much is known about his life before Hollywood as he told a different story to every interviewer. However, he sadly never was able to make the move from silents to talkies and after moving to work in Poverty Row studios like Republic, he killed himself in 1942. I can't imagine how audiences reacted to this. It really is a horror film, with a deranged protagonist who can't relate to humanity that wants to desperately retain the two people who keep him sane — a woman in love with another man and his partner who is not even real. And then the music numbers! I love this movie for every odd thing it throws at me. *Otto was hand-carved by Frank Marshall, the same artist who made Edgar Bergen's dummies. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Audience Member Campy and fun to watch from a historical perspective, as it is one of the first talkies. Gabbo is a ventriliquist that treats his dummy like a real person and can only express affection through him. Decent acting and storyline intermingled with laughably bad and over the top musical numbers. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 01/18/23 Full Review Audience Member Just terrible. Some lame lame musical numbers, but what can you expect from one of the first sound movies. Had to be difficult... Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 01/29/23 Full Review Read all reviews
The Great Gabbo

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Cast & Crew

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Movie Info

Synopsis The Great Gabbo (Erich von Stroheim) is a mentally unstable ventriloquist who brutally demeans his assistant, Mary (Betty Compson), blaming her for the duo's lack of success. Fed up with his abuse, she quits, only to find herself performing as a dancer in a major stage show featuring Gabbo two years later. Though she is now married to a fellow dancer, Frank (Don Douglas), Gabbo makes a play for her. But when she rejects him, his madness returns, and he begins to speak only through his puppet.
Director
Erich von Stroheim, James Cruze
Producer
Nat Cordish, James Cruze, Henry Meyer
Screenwriter
Ben Hecht, Hugh Herbert
Distributor
Sinister Cinema, Grapevine Video, LS Video
Production Co
James Cruze Productions
Genre
Musical
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Sep 12, 1929, Original
Release Date (Streaming)
Aug 18, 2016
Runtime
1h 35m
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