The Road To Rio Movie Review
The Road To Rio Review
"The Road To Rio" Overview

Rating: NR
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Norman Z. McLeodProducer : Daniel Dare
Screenwiter : Edmund Beloin,Jack Rose
Starring : Bob Hope,Bing Crosby,Dorothy Lamour,Gale Sondergaard,Frank Faylen,Joseph Vitale
In The Road To Rio, Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, and Dorothy Lamour appear in their
fifth "Road" picture with The Road To Rio closing out the 1940s and the
dependable series, after which there were only a few minor flare-ups in the
next 15 years (The Road To Bali in 1952 and the final The Road To Hong Kong in
1962).
The Road To Rio stands apart from the other "Road" films as having the most
eclectic mix of film, radio, and recording celebrities and references. Where
other "Road" films concern themselves with cinematic deconstruction (The Road
To Utopia, The Road To Bali) and others are mired in B-movie plot development
(The Road To Singapore, The Road To Zanzibar), this "Road" proceeds more like a
variety show within a flimsy extended sketch comedy framework.
In The Road To Rio, Bob and Bing make a run for it after burning down a circus
and causing hell on earth. On the run, they hide out on an ocean liner and they
both fall hard for the luminous, sexy Lucia Maria de Andrade (Dorothy Lamour).
But while the boys are following her around like lap dogs they find out that
Lucia is under the evil spell of her sinister aunt (Gale Sondergaard -- who
else?). To curry favor with Lucia, our duo sidestep each other to help her and
end up, as always, in too deep. But as long as there are woman on board they
don't care.
The plot itself is insignificant -- in fact the narrative is along the lines of
such previous Hope spy spoofs as They Got Me Covered, My Favorite Blonde, and
My Favorite Brunette. What is significant is the comic set pieces and the
performing guest stars (the Andrews sisters, the Wiere brothers, Jerry Colonna
-- hell, even Tor Johnson makes an appearance). The film is also rife in show
biz references to the likes of Frank Sinatra, Inner Sanctum, Kool Cigarettes,
Bogart and Bacall, Betty Grable, Crosby's racehorses, and the Warner brothers.
It's a veritable privy of pop -- most of which will be completely
unintelligible to folks whose knowledge of pop history begins with Foreigner
and Sugar Ray.
The director of The Road To Rio is Norman Z. McLeod and it is both fascinating
and jaw-dropping to see how McLeod rips off his own earlier Marx brothers romp
Monkey Business, this time with Hot Lips (Hope) and Skats (Crosby) as stowaways
on an ocean liner bound for Rio. Like the Marx brothers, half the film concerns
Hot Lips and Skats trying to avoid the crew members of the ship. McLeod even
has the audacity to re-create the entire barbershop scene from Monkey Business,
transformed into a Hope and Crosby turn.
Out of all the "Road" films The Road to Rio boasts the best cast of villains.
Frank Faylen and Joseph Vitale are effectively sinister heavies and the Spider
Woman herself, Gale Sondergaard (right on the cusp of being blacklisted), is on
hand as the cold and slinky villainess.
The Rio To Rio is a pleasant and breezy treat from an era that loved
celebrities much more than they hated them. So don't take a long, wet leap,
give your frown the Full Fuller, cackle at Hope and Crosby, grin like the Wiere
brothers and you'll discover the world is not such a sink hole after all.
Aka Road to Rio.
With a girl from Ipanema.
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Review by Paul Brenner
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