Out Where the Stars Begin (1938) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
12 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Talented Eveyn Thawl In Rare Film Appearance
ccthemovieman-15 February 2007
Evelyn Thawl as "Sally Carter" was pretty and wholesome-looking and a good dancer as she demonstrates here in this 20-minute short came with the "Angels Have Dirty Faces" DVD. It's always nice to see the beautiful Technicolor back in those rare times when it was filmed in the 1930s.

"Sally" is trying to break into the movie business as a dancer. She makes a quick friend in the makeup artist (no name given but played by Jeffrey Lynn) who persuades director "Mr. Nitovich" (Fritz Field) to give her shot. The film also belongs to Field as he gives an over- the-top satire performance of a dramatic European film director making his debut in American films. It's a good thing this is short film because "Nitovich," which his abrasive yelling, soon wears out his welcome.

Anyway, Thawl performs a ballet and a tap dance number, Lynn sings a song and we see cameo shots of a few stars such as Pat O'Brien and Ann Sheridan.

Overall, it's quite corny and dated and, frankly, not something I would more than twice. A sad note: from what I could find, Miss Thawl, who performed mostly on Broadway, lived a very short life....but I have no details of what happened to her.
13 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
"Tell us what you think of Hollywood!"
classicsoncall9 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Breaking into Hollywood should be this easy! Sally Carter (Evelyn Thawl) sneaks into the Superb Pictures studio lot with the help of a make-up artist (Jeffrey Lynn), smuggling her in as part of a tour group. She quickly breaks stride with the rest and winds up as a dancer under the supervision of manic director Nitvitch. You can only take his schtick for so long, but the picture only lasts nineteen minutes, so hang in there. Watch for cameos by legitimate, but not Superb Studio actors, as they make their way through the main gate - Wayne Morris, Dick Foran, Ann Sheridan and Pat O'Brien. The ironic touch in the picture occurs right after Miss Carter has makeup applied along with a blonde wig to look totally unlike her real self, as her makeup artist sings "You're Lovely As You Are".
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Basically, an excuse to hype all the most recent Warner Brothers films...
planktonrules5 March 2017
This Vitaphone short is a combination of self-promotion for Warner Brothers as well as promoting the myth about being discovered in Hollywood. It begins with four of the studio's stars doing quick walk-ons (actually drive-ons)...Dick Foran, Wayne Morris, Ann Sheridan and Pat O'Brian. Then you see folks going on a studio tour and they show various clips of the recent studio productions. The story begins because one of the folks on the tour is a young woman who just KNOWS she's got what it takes to be a star. So, inexplicably, a make-up man champions her cause with a temperamental director...even though no one in the film has seen her sing, dance or act! I am sure this sort of thing happened all the time in Hollywood (NO IT DIDN'T!!!). And, by the end of the picture, she's been discovered and is more popular than Taco Tuesdays.

So is it any good? Well, the star cameos at the beginning aren't that interesting (none of them do anything particularly interesting) and the clips are merely self-promotion. As to the story, it's one giant cliché...an enjoyable cliché but very clichéd nevertheless. My only complaints are too many dull dance numbers and the cameos SHOULD have been much more interesting. So, looking back, it's not that great a film...more a time-passer than anything else.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Nice Musical Short
Michael_Elliott5 September 2010
Out Where the Stars Begin (1938)

*** (out of 4)

Sally Carter (Evelyn Thawl) arrives in Hollywood hoping to get on the Warner lot for their latest Musical that is about to start shooting. The wannabe actress enters the lot via a tour and soon finds herself on the sound stage and given her one shot to impress with her voice. This certainly isn't the greatest short ever made but it's a pleasant one with some nice performances plus a great look at the Warner back lot. Dick Foran, Wayne Morris, Ann Sheridan and Pat O'Brien all appear early on as their cars pull up to the studio gates. The rest of the film has Thawl doing a little dance and a couple music numbers and for the most part I found them all to be entertaining. I thought she handled herself quite well here and turned in a good performance. Another big key to enjoying this film is that it was shot in 3-strip Technicolor and looks quite good. Just check out that dark green car that O'Brien is riding in.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Just givin' my bosses a plug; I got an audition coming up. Woo hoo!
lee_eisenberg20 December 2009
"Out Where the Stars Begin" seems like a typical glamorization of Hollywood. It reminds me a little bit of Tex Avery's cartoon "Daffy Duck in Hollywood", in which Daffy interferes with the production of a movie. Exactly the sort of flick that "Mystery Science Theater 3000" could have shown. My favorite character was Nitvitch, the overstuffed director (a parody of "Casablanca" director Michael Curtiz). He's the kind of grouch who we'd all love to be at least once.

Otherwise, the whole thing is really hokey, especially the singing guide. What would be really neat would be a cross between this movie and...oh, I don't know..."Snakes on a Plane"! Or "Idiocracy".

That's my take on it.
0 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Golly, "Superb Pictures Corp." sure seems a lot like . . .
cricket3029 January 2015
Warning: Spoilers
. . . Warner Bros. Pictures during OUT WHERE THE STARS BEGIN, a 19-minute live action short. For instance, Superb also signed up Error Flynn to play ROBIN HOOD (only in Superb's version, Richard III is going up against Prince John, rather than Richard the Lion-Hearted--the Superb version sounds more exciting than Warner's already!). Another element of Superb's mystique is that you have to be a Chorine yourself in order to be selected to take a studio tour. (This is because Superb tour groups are prone to disappear without a trace, and everyone in show business knows that chorus line singers are totally dispensable.) Ann Sheridan and Pat O'Brien are among the stars making cameo appearances on the Superb lot, where they behave as polite "Ordinary Joes," instead of their normal Prima Dona selves. The plot of OUT THE STARS emphasizes that ANYONE can be a trespasser one moment, and a top-billed star the next at Superb. That's because everyone is friendly and open-minded at Superb, which is run as a meritocracy--without any casting couch shenanigans. Some may say, "Hooray for Hollywood," but I'll confine my comment to, "Hooray for Superb."
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Backstage satire of studio filmmaking
max von meyerling14 December 2002
Fritz Feld is the best thing in this as the definitive wacky european film director with crazy artistic pretensions which he would reprise many times, lastly in Woody Allen's TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN. Great early technicolor (look for Pat O'Brien's kelly green car.
4 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
warner's shortie
ksf-229 January 2022
A warners shortie, starring evelyn thawl, jeff lynn. It's a parody of hollywood show biz. When the star storms out, sally is in the right place a the right time. Her new friend, the make-up artist, puts her in as the ballerina. Some fun, quick guest spots by all the big studio stars. Some pretty good dancing by thawl, in kind of a mini busby berkeley number. Directed by bob connolly. It's quite a lavish project, for a 19 minute short film. I guess because they highlighted so many stars in such a short time. Connolly died young at 46, but accomplished a lot; nominated for four oscars in dance direction. Thawl only worked on a few projects in the 1930s and 1940s, and died young at 31.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
ooooooh! color!
ptb-820 December 2005
Delicious appetizer comedy short shot in absolutely exquisite Technicolor at Warner Bros to showcase both the studio and new 1938 films. Made to co-incide with their first Technicolor feature THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD, we are also treated to snippets of the Jezebel set, Warner Gangster back-lot, and others by a jive/swing Teenage guide who leads and sings his tour group across the sound-stages. It is the color and a few stars mainly on show that are the focus, and you will be repeat viewing for several days once you discover where it is: part of a clever new Warner Bros Night At The Movies DVD release, this short is to be found with ANGELS WITH DIRTY FACES in the support program as if you are at the local cinema in 1938. It is a great idea and a perfect way to bundle appropriate items from the treasure trove of studio vault wonders freshly re-minted for DVD. The musical stage set the tour group visits is a delight of Deco silver blue and pink...and the hilarious antics of Fritz Feld as manic Euro director Nitvitch is supposed to be a razzing of Michael Curtiz. The swing dance number is a hoot and offers the 2006 viewer one of the first times ever we are able to see - in glorious 1930s color - the sight of a real Hollywood chorus line in silver hot-pants blonde wigs and top hats (looking very like Madonna) - all tap-dancing away to the tune of "She'd rather dance than love'. It's the real thing and it's the first I know of in proper Technicolour..as if a Busby Berkley number was shot that way. Of course it was Bobby Connolly who is the choreographer here...soon to be at Monogram with skate star Belita in her mega big band musical LADY LETS DANCE in 1942. Find this DVD of ANGELS and run through the entire program with your family. Congrats to WB for at last offering insightful marketing for us all to enjoy these delights from the studio vaults. Thanks! The Technicolor 1937 UA release GOLDWYN FOLLIES is a close feature length counterpart (which probably inspired this short at WB) It too is set in a studio making a new musical and features The Ritz Brothers (singing a risqué swing song "Here pussy pussy pussy pussy") along with the hideous and strange Kenny Baker. Now if we can only get someone to release VOGUES OF 1938 which is a fashion musical made in real 3 strip Technicolour (just like these films) as a restored DVD, the world would be a rainbow of 30s delights....along with the Selznick STAR IS BORN and GARDEN OF ALLAH both from 1936. RAMONA anyone? ...while we're at it.
7 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
This film raises several questions, beginning with . . .
tadpole-596-91825629 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
. . . its title. Is there REALLY a difference in meaning between its original moniker--OUT WHERE THE STARS BEGIN--and the shorter label under which it is currently screened: WHERE THE STARS BEGIN? Perhaps more importantly, IF a review mentions the name of this musical short's Real Life star--that is, the wench who gets off the tour bus, and first performs an extended ballet routine as the lead performer, followed by a specialty tap dance, all with no apparent rehearsal or advance knowledge of the complicated choreography--do the Evil Censor Bots automatically suppress, squelch and delete said comment because the details of some mid-1900's scandal are STILL being suppressed for unknown reasons?
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Why Do They Always Use Fritz Feld As The Tempermental Director?
boblipton29 January 2022
Not that I'm complaining, mind you, since he's always a lot of fun. Here he drives Armida off the stage because no matter how much he asks her, she can't dance. Fortunately, make-up artist Jeffrey Lynn has snuck aspiring dancer Evelyn Thawl onto the stage. Ta-da! She's a star, even though she never appeared in another picture.

Oh, well. This is one of those Warner Brothers Technicolor shorts intended to show off the process and the studio, with lots of the company's stock players showing up for cameos, and a group of tourists joining in a dance number.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Just as it's now possible in America to erase any trace . . .
pixrox129 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
. . . of a 2021 theatrically released movie (HEATWAVE) just because all of the cast and crew specialized in making Hallmark Christmas flicks while dabbling in name changes and in the recording industry on the side--simply because all several hundred people in the cast and crew had absolutely NO idea that HEATWAVE was about a serial killer--from EVERY internet site and search engine, it's even easier to delete any information about certain people from the 1900's, such as dancing sensation Evelyn T.--"Sally Carter"--the star of OUT WHERE THE STARS BEGIN. Evelyn does NOT have a Wikipedia page, and no one alive today knows why she mysteriously died in 1945 at the age of 31. Does Fatty A. Have an alibi?
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed