Reducing (1931) Poster

(1931)

User Reviews

Review this title
10 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
A Light Touch of Class
wes-connors12 August 2008
Suffering hard times in South Bend, hefty Marie Dressler (as Marie Truffle) moves her poverty-stricken family to New York. There, she moves in with her generous, more well-to-do sister Polly Moran (as Polly Rochay). Ms. Dressler joins Ms. Moran at work in her "Beauty Parlor" and "Reducing" salon, with calamitous results. Dressler is frequently funny, and Moran mostly so; but, the comedy suffers whenever the focus becomes their respective daughters' love story. Dressler and Moran squabble over the younger women's interest in the same man, which becomes an issue about class. Still, Dressler is terrific, especially in the first half. And, capable daughters Anita Page (as Vivian Truffle) and Sally Eilers (as Joyce Rochay) strengthen the weaker parts.

***** Reducing (1/3/31) Charles Reisner ~ Marie Dressler, Polly Moran, Anita Page
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Blood is thicker than social class.
mkilmer15 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Blood is thicker than social class, be it living relations or one one the way.

REDUCING (1931) is the first Marie Dressler-Polly Hunter film my wife and I had seen, and they worked well together in it. There is a lot of squabbling between the two "sister's" throughout, which is, of course, portrayed in an irritating manner, but it leads up to the annoying all's-well-in-the-end.

I mean annoying in a good way. Part of the charm of this film, at least for me, was that every character in the film was annoying to one extent or another. This is comedy! One sister (Dressler) and her family go through a rough patch, and the successful sister (Moran) considers it her blood duty to bail out her blood. The two daughters fall for the same millionaire, but Moran's daughter (Sally Eilers) has a special claim to him, which is all-but-revealed to bring the film to a conclusion. This is the spoiler. They do not say it, but Eiler's has become pregnant. That has to be it, but Hollywood left it unsaid at that point.

We enjoyed the movie a good deal, but I doubt we could watch it again. Too annoying.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
I'll take what I can get of Marie Dressler. She doesn't need any reducing for me!
mark.waltz29 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"You have to go (to New York) by buffalo!" "No, I want to go on this train!"

So says the befuddled and very ample Marie Dressler to stuttering train clerk Roscoe Ates after she tries his patience in letting him knew what city she's going to. Marie Dressler could charm the fat off of a whale, although her character might annoy the heck out of those she encounters while trying to move east after things go wrong for her family. For wealthy sister Polly Moran (who owns a health club), taking her sister and family in is the least she can do, even if her snooty daughter Sally Eilers wants no part of her mother's family. Dressler arrives at Grand Central Station after creating much chaos on the train, disturbing every passenger while trying to get her family settled in the upper berths, then dealing with son Billy Naylor's foot being stuck in a cuspidor. Those around them may not be laughing, but I bet that in depression era 1931, the audience was laughing hysterically at these antics, wanting to take Dressler into their homes as well as their arms. More so than even Shirley Temple, Dressler was the most lovable movie star of the 1930's, and it's sad that her early death prevented any more classic movies in her gallery of unforgettable portraits.

Paired with Polly Moran in a series of lowbrow comedy/dramas in the late 1920's and 1930's, Dressler completely shines over Moran who lacks the warmth and soul of the basset faced Dressler. Moran, sort of Hardy to Dressler's Laurel, doesn't have the way of reacting as she should, and that takes away from the impact of the outlandish situations she finds herself in. Dressler immediately makes a mess out of Moran's healthclub, breaking glass, then sending an electrified Moran into a mud bath while completely dressed. They may be sisters, but somehow there's something not right about that plot point. The slapstick first half turns dramatic in the second half as snooty Eilers finds herself in competition with cousin Anita Page over beau William Collier Jr. This creates a falling out between the two sisters, and it's up to Dressler to go out of her way to mend the fences and get the right young couples together, with Page followed around by her small town beau William Bakewell. This shines every moment that Dressler is on screen, especially in her long scene with the sometimes annoying Roscoe Ates who is actually quite funny here. Dressler was the heart and soul of the depression, a lady for a day, a lady for a night, and a lady for cinema audiences to take into their hearts no matter how ridiculous the scene.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Uneven but Funny
drednm1 May 2005
Marie Dressler stars as a woman from South Bend, IN who comes east to visit her sister (Polly Moran) who runs a fancy beauty salon. Each sister has a beautiful daughter: Dressler has Anita Page; Moran has snooty Sally Eilers. Dressler has has 2 boys and a failed husband (Lucien Littlefield). The cousins begin scrapping over "catch" William Collier, Jr., while another beau (William Bakewell) mopes around. Before long the sisters are quarreling too. Roscoe Ates is the ticket seller. Sitcom comedy/drama but worth a look for the Dressler-Moran pairing as well as the nice deco sets or Moran's home and salon. This film takes an interesting turn at the end.

Funniest bit is probably Dressler trying to buy train tickets from the stuttering Ates while the long line of people behind Dressler look on. Ates asks her where she wants to go. She finally says New York. Ates asks, "Do you want to go by Buffalo?" After a perfect comedic pause and a few facial twitches she responds, "No, I want to go by train."

And oh, the little boy (the one who gets his foot caught in a spittoon), Jay Ward, grew up to create Rocky and Bullwinkle.
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Dressler v. Moran pt. 5
view_and_review8 February 2024
When I like an actor or actress I will try to watch as many of their movies as possible. I like Marie Dressler, so I'm trying to see all the films she put out. I watched a couple of her silent films in which she played Tillie and they were wonderful.

In the movie "Reducing" Marie Dressler plays opposite Polly Moran. The two go back to 1927 when they were in the movie "The Callahans and the Murphys" together. "Reducing" was their fifth project together.

Marie Dressler plays Marie Truffle, a woman who is down on her luck, but is extended a helping hand from her sister, Pauline 'Polly' Roche (Polly Moran). Polly sent Marie $200 for her to move her family from South Bend, Indiana to New York City, where Pauline ran a thriving and successful spa. I believe they called it a reducing spa, or reducing business, which was to say she was there to help people lose weight.

Marie and her family moved into Polly's home, which was occupied by her, her daughter Joyce (Sally Ellers), and her help. You could tell right away that the two sisters had a loving yet contentious relationship. Polly was not above subtly, and not so subtly, reminding Marie of the helping hands she's given her. Marie was big enough to swallow her pride for the sake of her family, but the things came to a head when the two sisters argued about their daughters, Vivian Truffle (Anita Page) and Joyce Rochay (Sally Ellers). The two seem to both be the object of the same man, and Joyce had him first, so naturally she saw Vivian as a foreign invader. Vivian, for her part, was largely innocent. She had no eyes on Joyce's man, John Beasley (William Collier Jr.), but Johnny had eyes on her.

This movie didn't speak to me. Besides the comically bittersweet relationship between Marie and Polly, there was the love triangle, so to speak, with Johnny, Joyce, and Vivian-- and I hate love triangles and romantic affairs. What started out as a comedy ended up being quite serious, and although Marie played the hero in this movie, it was having to do with love, infatuation, and desire between two young and naïve women, and one young and naïve playboy, and that just did not interest me.

Free on Odnoklassniki.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Marie Dressler & Polly Moran Team-Up For Top Comedy
Ron Oliver10 December 2000
A Midwestern housewife comes to New York City to help her social-climbing sister run a fancy beauty salon & REDUCING parlor.

Marie Dressler shines in this movie vehicle tailored especially for her. With simple dignity & genuineness - and a crazy sense of humor - she captures the viewer's attention from her very first scene. Whether intimidating a ticket seller, attempting to climb into an upper berth, creating havoc in the salon, or prying an egg out of her little boy's mouth, she amply provides illustration why she was Hollywood's greatest & most beloved star in the early 1930's. There's never been another like her; she was completely unique & irreplaceable.

Receiving equal billing with Dressler is her frequent partner in mirth, the ubiquitous Polly Moran. This short, shrill, buxom comedienne could hold her own with the inimitable Dressler in the field of slapstick. Whether wallowing in a mud bath or trapped in a steam room, Moran is great fun as Marie's foil.

Anita Page & Lucien Littlefield have some good moments as Dressler's daughter & husband; but with Dressler & Moran on the loose, they're up against severe screen competition.

Movie mavens will recognize the unbilled Roscoe Ates as the stuttering railway ticket agent who has the misfortune to find Marie in his line.

It is important to note that the large glass swastika in the salon, which Marie inadvertently smashes, has nothing whatsoever to do with the Nazis. Rather it was an ancient symbol, even used by some Native American tribes, and was not infrequently seen as a trendy design or decoration.
19 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Shows how families dealt with the depression...
AlsExGal27 August 2010
... was no more togetherness and roses than it is today, especially when one part of the family was prosperous (Polly Moran as Polly Rochay) and the other part was struggling (Marie Dressler as Marie Truffle). This great old precode comedy has a warmth to it too, which is most evident in the final few scenes on Thanksgiving.

Marie Truffle has three children and an unemployed husband, so she accepts her sister Polly's invitation to take the train to where she lives and stay with her awhile until they get back on their feet. Polly even offers Marie a job in her beauty salon. Through a series of well-intended mistakes, Marie makes a wreck of the parlor. Through a series of snide remarks, Polly makes sure Marie and her family take note of every bite of food they have at her expense. On top of that, the two grown female cousins, Joyce Roche (Sally Eilers) and Vivian Truffle (Anita Page), aren't getting along either. Vivian decides to take Joyce down a peg or two by dating Joyce's boyfriend, just to make her jealous. The two sisters take up for their respective daughters, and pretty soon it's a full blown comical family feud.

MGM was never that proficient at comedy, and where they try to force the laughs here the movie falters, but whenever it's Polly Moran and Marie Dressler together, the comedy is something so pure that not even MGM could mess it up. These two always did a great job of playing women who obviously love each other no matter how fierce the disagreement that's taking place on the surface. Highly recommended.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
fun old time black & white comedy
ksf-24 August 2008
Fun flick. Stuttering ticket-seller at the train station. Gotta love Marie Dressler - I think she was in almost EVERY black and white movie made before 1935, and she was great! Marie Truffle (Dressler) goes to visit cousin Polly (Polly Moran) in NYC to "help" her with her store. You can tell talkies had just started, since director Charles Reisner uses title cards here and there. Dressler would work with Reisner on seven different films in just three years. This one also has some slapstick comedy routines that could have been snitched from a three stooges show (in the beauty salon...) but the film has a quick pace and is fun to watch. It's a "country mouse goes to the big city" movie, and lots of bickering between Polly and Marie, but they forgive each other quickly every time. Dressler would make THIRTEEN films with Polly Moran, and three films with Roscoe Ates. Sadly, Marie would only make a couple more films after this one, including her most famous "Dinner at Eight" with all the big names in it. She died in her 60's in 1934.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
I agree with drednm--it's uneven but funny
planktonrules5 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Polly Moran owns a very successful beauty salon/day spa in New York. When her sister (Marie Dressler) and family come on hard times in Indiana, Polly invites them all to come live with her in her posh apartment. However, over time, familiarity naturally breeds contempt and the sisters are at each other's throats. It's obvious that Dressler and her brood must move out and it looks like the sisters will never speak again.

This is one of several Polly Moran-Marie Dressler films MGM made in the early 30s. These comedies were pretty cute and worked well because the characters (particularly Dressler) were very likable and "normal"--not the usual pretty and glamorous Hollywood-types. However, I definitely agree with another reviewer (drednm) that the film is uneven but still funny. The reason I say this is because at times the comedy is a bit forced--such as the railroad berth or spittoon scenes. They just went on and on and the humor got a bit stale. However, despite the early portions of the film being poor at times, stick with this film--as it gets better and better as the film goes. In particular, towards the end the movie really picks up the pace--probably because the movie abandons comedy and tries quite successfully to be a heart-warming drama. A very good film--mostly due to Marie Dressler's usual wonderful acting.

By the way, although I liked the film I hated the inclusion of Roscoe Ates's small part in the film. His schtick was playing a stutterer and in this day and age, this just seems insensitive and annoying. Thankfully, he was only in the film about three minutes.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
There were never any two sisters funnier in film
SimonJack12 February 2022
"Reducing" is a wonderful comedy and drama with Hollywood's biggest comedy actress during the first few years of sound pictures. Marie Dressler was not only a large woman, but truly a top comedienne of the cinema then. She got a late start in silent films and made only 31 movies, 18 of which were sound pictures. She was one of the first female academy awards winners, taking the Oscar for best actress in the 1930 film, "Min and Bill," a very good comedy and drama.

In her comedies, Dressler combined witty lines with facial expressions that alone would get laughs, and when the script added antics, she could be riotously funny. Some of her antics remind one of Laurel and Hardy, and she might well have been a case study for Lucille Ball in her later career.

In this film, Dressler is paired with long-time silent film actress Polly Moran. This is the first of three comedies they made together, and by far the best one. The two women are sisters. They both have characters with their real first names. Polly Rochay owns an upscale reducing parlor in New York. She has invited Marie Truffle and her hubby and family to come and live with her since they've had hard times in South Bend. Both of the ladies have grownup daughters, and Marie and Elmer have two younger boys.

Marie holds up the ticket line as she argues with the ticket agent, buying train tickets for her family. She takes the cheaper upper berths for sleeping arrangements for her family, and it's a real hoot watching this large woman trying to climb into her top berth. Then, when Polly and her daughter meet them at the train station, the women hug and hug, and Polly starts bawling with joy and huge streaks of mascara run down her cheeks.

But the comedy gets quite funny after Marie and her daughter, Vivian, go to work in Polly's reducing salon. Marie boggles much of the equipment, creates mayhem and almost destroys the place. She nearly electrocutes Polly and then sends her flying into the mud bath. It's a real hoot watching Marie leading a group of very heavy women in calisthenics.

It must have been fun working in films with Dressler. She stumbles, bumps into things, kicks things, and hits her head and arms on furniture and cupboards. One can imagine that all of this wasn't in the script but that when she had a mishap for which a studio would normally reshoot a scene with most actors, they just left it in as part of her comedy performance.

The funniest aspect of this film is the relationship of the two sisters. They start off all aglow, not having seen one another for many years. Before long they are at one another's throats and hurling insults back and forth. Then they are all lovey-dovey again, but not for too long when the epithets start flying again.

This film is partly drama, and that's what brings it to a nice conclusion. Here are some favorite lines and exchanges from this film.

Railroad ticket agent, "Where are you going?" Marie Truffle, "I'm going to visit my sister." Agent, "Well, where does she live?" Marie, "On Riverside Drive." Agent, "Madame, would you be kind enough to tell me what city you wanna go to?" Marie, "Oh, huh, huh, the city. Why isn't that silly of me? Yeah, I wanna go to New York." Agent, "You wanna go by Buffalo." Marie, "No, I don't wanna go by Buffalo. I wanna go by train."

Polly Rochay, "Is that your husband?" Marie, "Yeah, what's wrong with him?" Polly, "Nothing. Only he has such a peculiar expression on his face." Marie, "Where'd you expect him to have it?"

Marie, "You know, my shape isn't what it used to be. As a matter of fact, I don't think I'm very good for a reducing parlor." Polly, "Oh, nonsense! Your shape hasn't anything to do with it at all." Marie, "Hasn't it?" Polly, "Just look at the people who buy hair tonic from bald-headed barbers." Marie, "Hah, hmmm. I hadn't thought of that."

Vivian Truffle, "Well, Tommy isn't smart or sophisticated." Marie, "Aw, a woman doesn't want a husband who's too smart. A man that's a little dumb is a lot more restful."

Marie, "Oh, baby, listen. I don't want you to miss out on the biggest thing in life - real love. Romance!"

Polly, "I don't want the money. Whaddaya think I am, an Indian giver?" Marie, 'You're a whole reservation."

Polly, "Oh, I've been so terribly dumb." Marie, "Well, I don't know what you're talking about, but I agree with you."
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

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


Recently Viewed