Barber Shop Blues
Barber Shop Blues
| 30 September 1933 (USA)
Barber Shop Blues Trailers

A barber shop owner wins a sweepstake. He remodels his shop and hires Claude Hopkins and his orchestra to play for his customers. Two songs are sung, and the Four Step Brothers tap dance in the closing number.

Reviews
Konterr

Brilliant and touching

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Mischa Redfern

I didn’t really have many expectations going into the movie (good or bad), but I actually really enjoyed it. I really liked the characters and the banter between them.

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Marva

It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,

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Bob

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

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Michael Morrison

As in so many of these musical shorts, there really is no story, but only an outline of a silly premise. And I am truly grateful there were such exercises in demonstrating some truly great black performers who didn't have much chance otherwise to show how truly great they were.Perhaps there is some irony in that the director of so many of these wonderful and in my opinion under-appreciated and too-little-known musical shorts of black performers was Joseph Henabery, who had portrayed Abraham Lincoln in the iconic "The Birth of a Nation."His Lincoln was not so static as some earlier and later portrayals. He gave his character the nobility and humanity modern history tries to tell us was Lincoln.Henabery directed 205 movies, according to his listing here at IMDb, mostly this type of musical short, and many of them with black performers.Here in "Barber Shop Blues," most of the incredibly talented people are pretty well unknown today, except for the astonishing Nicholas Brothers, but that is shame on us, not on them.Claude Hopkins is the orchestra leader of some remarkable musicians, all of whom deserve fame.Orlando Roberson, the singer, has one of the sweetest voices I've ever heard. He was clear and lucid, with articulation and clarity so sadly lacking in so many singers and alleged singers of today. According to his IMDb listing, he made only two film appearances. What a loss to us.What is perhaps even sadder, today these delightful music shorts are used generally just as filler, as padding, to stretch out a schedule.Turner Classic Movies, though, gave us several hours of them on 5 December 2016, and even if Thanksgiving Day is past, we can certainly be thankful for this presentation.Do, please, try to catch "Barber Shop Blues" and do, please, try to watch more of these Henabery-directed musical shorts.

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classicsoncall

An all black cast turns a barber shop set into a night club with lively musical renditions from the Claude Hopkins orchestra. This was a nice little surprise shoehorned in between full length films on the Turner Classic Movie channel the other day. It followed "The Story of Temple Drake", which probably explains why that film is mentioned in the "People Who Liked This Also Liked..." section of this movie's page on IMDb, otherwise there's no other reasonable explanation for it.Orlando Roberson was the featured singer here with a quite melodious voice, and for my money I'd go for The Four Step Brothers any time. Watching them perform individually you have to wonder how they stayed on their feet with those high energy tap routines, while their synchronized swing was exceptionally well choreographed.I wouldn't know how one would catch a wonderful film short like this other than the way I did, quite by accident actually since I'm sometimes prone to switching off after viewing a completed movie. Something like this isn't mentioned in the cable listings so you just have to be lucky I guess. This time I was.

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Michael_Elliott

Barber Shop Blues (1933) *** (out of 4) Nice short from Vitaphone/Warner is best remembered today due it featuring an all-black cast. Thankfully, Warner did turn out quite a few shorts aimed at black audiences and this here is a good example of that. Orlando Roberson does the tune "Trees" and we also get Claude Hopkins & Orchestra doing a few numbers including a very memorable version of "Careless Love." In between the musical acts we get The Four Step Brothers doing a nice little tap number and this here is clearly the highlight of the picture. At just 9-minutes, this is a very good and entertaining short that perfectly shows off what these acts could do if given a shot. I think most people are going to notice the low-budget nature of the film and while many might be impressed with the sets, I thought for the most part they were pretty standard and they certainly didn't look like the same level that we had seen from other Vitaphone pictures. The musical numbers are all fairly impressive even if none of them really jump out at you. I think fans of the music from this era are the ones who are really going to eat this up but overall the short is certainly worth viewing.

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msladysoul

I've been collecting black film shorts for years, and this is one of my favorites. This film shorts stars Claude Hopkins and his Orchestra with Orlando Roberson, and the Four Step Brothers. Great Entertainment, If you can find it, you'll love it. Film Shorts were the only way Black Entertainment could be shown with class, showing fashions, the slang, the dances, the songs, showing the top groups. You'll treasure these when you find it.

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