The Duke Is Tops
The Duke Is Tops
| 15 July 1938 (USA)
The Duke Is Tops Trailers

A theatrical producer puts aside his own success to boost the career of a talented singer.

Reviews
BelSports

This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.

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Tyreece Hulme

One of the best movies of the year! Incredible from the beginning to the end.

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Yash Wade

Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.

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Cissy Évelyne

It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.

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evening1

I liked this for its glimpse into end-of-vaudeville-era black culture.The script is pretty lame and the plot non-existent but the chance to look in on an old-time medicine show was fascinating. (The back-and-forth with the audience rocked!)Surprisingly, I found Lena Horne to be one of the weaker parts of the film. Her voice is mellifluous but her acting and dialog seemed wooden. Ralph Cooper -- who, I learned on Wikipedia, went on to found Amateur Night at Harlem's Apollo Theater -- comes across as far more the natural show person. How 'bout his exuberant conducting of that glitzy club band?Some of the tap-dancing sequences and musical ensembles, particularly Cats and the Fiddle, were thrilling to behold. There's a lot of good stuff in this old chestnut..

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Michael_Elliott

Duke Is Tops, The (1938) ** (out of 4) Decent race movie has producer Duke Davis (Ralph Cooper) breaking it off with partner Ethel Andrews (Lena Horne) so that her career will have a chance to take off. He hits the hard times before eventually getting what might be a break by bringing Andrews back to form. If you're familiar with race films then you know they don't feature the style, budgets or talents of those films being released in Hollywood. You also shouldn't go into a Musical like this expecting something like you'd see from MGM. With that out of the way, this is pretty much what you'd expect as we get a straight-forward story without any twists or turns and a predictable ending that you'll see coming from a mile away. There's really nothing overly special here but people will want to check out Horne who made her film debut here. I don't think anyone could watch this and see the talent that would come in future films but at the same time this was her first stab at acting. The screenplay really doesn't do her any justice but she does have that wonderful voice that she gets to show off several times. The songs themselves aren't going to be found on Horne's greatest hits package but they aren't too bad. I thought Cooper was pretty good as well, although, again, the screenplay does his character no justice. While the part wasn't the best written I thought Cooper kept things moving and made his character fun to watch. There's not too much imagination in terms of direction but I'm sure a lot of this could be blamed on the screenplay and the fact that there wouldn't have been much time to shoot this thing. The low budget is very apparent with several dance/musical sequences, which just come off looking very cheap. The numbers aren't overly bad, it's just that they aren't impressive either. Fans of race movies or those wanting to see the 21-year-old Horne might want to check this out but others should stay clear.

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cfl-1

An unusual film for an audience outside the USA. Lena Horne looks fabulous and so does Ralph Cooper. There is not added background of tap steps as in other musicals so you do not hear the beat of the taps which is great realism. Music is muted to hear what dancing steps there are. Acting is a little stilted and the casts speak slowly so that you think the movie is older than it is. Costumes are daring for the time in the dance routines at the end. Often feels like you are part of an audience at a stage show. What furniture you see is very modern which adds to the movies feeling of other worldliness. A must for all film buffs.

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Gary Imhoff

The Duke Is Tops is a black version of the white show business and Broadway movies popular in the 1930's. It has the struggling broke producer, the young performer who becomes a star overnight, and the medicine show to Broadway (or in this case fashionable Harlem nightclub) plot. It is best known as the debut movie of a beautiful, 21-year-old Lena Horne, but its real star is Ralph Cooper, who gets a brief opportunity to show his singing and bandleading abilities, as well as to dance a few steps. Much of the acting is stiff and the film's editing is crude, but it has all the pleasures of an early black musical -- specialty singers, eccentric dancers, and pretty chorus girls in skimpy bikinis -- as well as a more substantial script than many other black movies of its day (or of today, for that matter).

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