Roof Tops of Manhattan (1935) Poster

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7/10
Night Club Acts
boblipton11 September 2002
A superior short from Joe Henabery, featuring several good night club acts, including 'Bazooka' Bob Burns a popular performer of the period: a hillbilly Will Rogers with a homemade trombone he called a 'bazooka'. No nightclub ever featured this array of talent, but as a short variety show a lot of fun.
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5/10
Another not quite ready for full-length film extravaganza!
planktonrules4 March 2017
The Vitaphone division of Warner Brothers was mostly devoted to producing sound shorts--both BEFORE "The Jazz Singer" debuted and through much of the 1930s. The acts in these shorts mostly consisted of night club acts, vaudeville entertainers and a few were soon to be stars being given their chance in these shorts (such as June Allyson). In "Rooftops of Manhattan" you have a nightclub supposedly set atop a huge skyscraper and act after act come and go on the screen...mostly of the nightclub quality. Most of the acts are pleasant enough but not especially memorable or super-talented. And, because of this, you've probably never heard of any of the acts. If you are curious, check the IMDb page for this film.

So is it worth seeing? Well, if you are a nut about Vitaphone, of course. For the average viewer, however, it's very hit or miss. The comedy of Bob Burns and his 'bazooka' (a homemade trombone sort of contraption) is nice and I enjoyed his mother-in-law jokes. The rest...well they were fine...but nothing special.
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6/10
well that takes an unexpected turn
SnoopyStyle7 April 2024
Sky High Roof is a radio show and night club. There are a variety of entertainers performing. The O'Shea family is hanging out on their rooftop in a hot summer night listening to the radio show. Their daughter Ellen is called away by the no-good Nick Lewis. They go to the Riviera Roof Garden night club. They are surprised when her parents suddenly show up.

It's a musical short with lots of singing, dancing, and some comedy. I don't know most of these performers, but that's a good point for this short. It showcases people that I've never seen before. Gil Lamb is probably the only one I know for sure. It's all going so easy and breezy. Out of nowhere, the story takes a turn. I am not sure about that move. I would have prefer staying light and breezy.
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4/10
This "Broadway Brevity" wasn't brief enough...
Doylenf15 October 2008
Twenty-two amateurish minutes of a Vitaphone "Broadway Brevity" short, this is strictly cornball stuff that should have been discarded, just as vaudeville died.

Nothing I can say about the musical interludes except that they fall flat, the dancing is clumsy and the intentionally funny clumsiness of Gil Lamb is barely good for a few chuckles.

It's a sort of "42nd Street" sketch with the rooftops of Manhattan supposedly telling the stories of a disparate group of patrons who enter the club, all with weak back stories that are supposed to give some significance to the "rooftops of Manhattan" theme.

Evidently, there was no Busby Berkeley around to give this a shot in the arm. It's barely watchable and highly forgettable as entertainment.
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4/10
Best for the virtuosic tap segment
evening114 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
As the world careened toward World War II, this manic little film short offered a bit of glitzy distraction.

Performances at the fictional Sky High Roof seem to presage the TV variety show. In addition to hearing multiple songs from a willowy but none-too-compelling vocalist, we observe a dazzling tap-dance duo, a hayseed comedian/bazooka player, a top-hat and stick-toting dance ensemble (inspired by the Rockettes?), and a couple dancing comedians.

It's all inexplicably bookended by a plotlet about a gal who visits the club with a thug. Then the young woman's folks drop by to request songs from the old country (Ireland), a nice little interlude.

This short was also good for what followed it on TCM -- an unrelated appearance by Martin Scorsese, who recalls fear driving him -- twice -- from seeing the end of "Isle of the Dead" (1945), and Eisenstein's "Alexander Nevsky" of 1938 -- "a life-changing experience."
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4/10
This film resulted in the word "Broadway" being copyrighted . . .
pixrox127 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . so no future miscreants could apply it to an abomination such as ROOF TOPS OF MANHATTAN: A BROADWAY BREVITY. If this misfire actually HAD opened as a one-act play on the Great White Way, it surely would have closed after no more than 10 minutes opening night. Before I saw this, the most pointless story I saw on television this week was Fox's report on Judy G. And Billie B. Hanging out at the Pearly Gates when Bishop Desmond entered, causing Judy to query "Tutu, too?" and Billie to reply "Tutu, too." Sometimes T. C. M. Remembers too much.
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8/10
Charming and Amusing
theognis-8082127 December 2021
A short film featuring performers devoted to developing talents with which to entertain an audience, in the days before sincere feelings, political convictions, and psychological ruminations were considered to be sufficient to regale the hoi polloi. A glimpse of somewhat innocent days gone by....
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