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- A Day at the Races
-
-
- (June 21, 1937)
-
- In A Day at the Races Groucho Marx washes his hands in a
- basin, discovers that he has his wrist watch on. He removes it,
- puts it on a table, notices a bystander eyeing it. He puts it
- back in the basin, says: "I'd rather have it rusty than
- missing."
-
- Jokes like this, peculiar to the Marx Brothers, are somehow
- as funny on the screen as they are unfunny in print. A Day at
- the Races, which took a year to make, is happily distinguished
- from previous Marx pictures in that it contains more of them.
- A wild, complex, totally implausible fable about a run-down
- sanatorium, its impudent porter (Chico), an imported
- horse-doctor-physician (Groucho) and the steeplechase in which
- a speechless jockey (Harpo) gets the money to pay off the
- sanatorium's debts through his brilliant ride on a horse who
- hates the gambler who is trying to buy the sanatorium for use
- as a casino -- it all adds up to nothing at all except
- superlative entertainment. A gag sequence omitted but
- photographed for advertising purposes was one in which
- Horse-Doctor Groucho plied his trade on a horse that fitted
- perfectly into the Marx family.
-
-