Nine O'Clock Folks (1931) Poster

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5/10
Yessirree!
boblipton26 April 2019
A group of rustic old-timers and countrified acts perform in a theater before the town's curfew forces everyone home under the supervision of Master of Ceremonies Roy Fant.

These are some old-fashioned acts, including a fellow who dances in shoes with long, ski-like projections, like Little Tich, a washboard-and-mandolin band (including Eddie Lang!) performing 'Saint Louis Blues' and the inevitable dog act. The performances are good, but it looks like director Roy Mack, who directed most of Warner Brothers' Vitaphone shorts in this period doesn't really think much of this show. Cameraman Edwin DuPar attempts to jazz up the proceedings with the occasional Dutch angle, but this is largely one for the audience to laugh at, rather than laugh along with.
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6/10
"Now we have the largest trio in the World . . . "
cricket3023 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
" . . . FOUR" crows the emcee midway through NINE O'CLOCK FOLKS. This is tantamount to a fishing trawler hooking a blue whale and its captain proclaiming "We just caught the Planet's largest blue gill ever!" Besides such grating palaver, the main point of contention involved with this piece seems to be "pet abuse." However, since the dog in question is a performer, as long as it's fed and not forced to work overtime, no one should have a bone to pick.
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6/10
The Mound City Blue Blowers are the best part of the short.
tramette8919 September 2004
Well, well well. What do we have here? A stupid hillbilly short. So we get to see a bunch of hick acts including a dancing man with big shoes (who's okay), a horrific female vocal trio, and an idiotic emcee. Oh. And the dog. Apparently hillbillies can't tell the difference between a drunkard and a dog. (It's a mystery how they ever got that dog into that little suit and hat!)

But amidst all the silliness and stupidity, a light shines out in the darkness...The Mound City Blue Blowers! Yes! Everybody's favorite comb-and-paper soloist, Red McKenzie, is there with his band. Jack Bland and a young Eddie Condon are on strings, and the three of them really heat things up. Unfortunately, the experience is marred by an awful man on whisk brooms and suitcase. Frank "Josh" Billings, with his blacked-out teeth and hillbilly haircut completely undercuts the greatness of the band, and, even more unfortunately, the camera remains on Billings and his suitcase most of the time, and not on the real musicians.

If you can get past the idiot hillbillies, then it's a good short. I suggest skipping the rest of the short and watching only the part with the Blue Blowers. And I suggest watching that part with your eyes shut.
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4/10
Even country folk needed to entertain themselves.
mark.waltz3 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
If there's one thing you can say for Hollywood is that at times, it was inclusive, and the casting directors and talent scouts must have had a good filing system to divide various acts into "types". For this one reel short, they went into their cornpone file, choosing a variety of acts who describe what city folks and sophisticated people referred to as hicks. There's a girl singing group, a man who looks like he's dancing on ski's, a jug band, a trained dog and its master, and an elderly emcee whose real job it is to sit on eggs because of lazy chickens. This is the type of short that audiences late for the show might have run out on to get last minute popcorn or soft drinks. It's a style of entertainment that didn't necessarily die with vaudeville or burlesque, but in reflection, seems oftely wounded and in need of major surgery.
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1/10
Little Tich did it better, way back in 1900.
F Gwynplaine MacIntyre9 September 2007
When talking pictures came in, a lot of vaudeville performers were able to preserve their acts on film ... notably in the Vitaphone shorts filmed in Brooklyn (NY), which typically ran for ten minutes. Unfortunately, some vaudeville acts didn't deserve ten minutes on their tod, so several of them would be lumped together in a compilation film. 'Nine O'Clock Folks' is one such godawfulness, which has so little talent on offer that it even manages to bung in a vague attempt at a plot line.

We're in some hick village in the Ozarks where the folks need a new steeple, so they put on a show to raise the money. The best turn on the bill here is Wilbur Hall, unbilled in the credits but playing some guy named 'Bert'. He does his eccentric dance on a pair of plank shoes, which he performed previously (and better) in 'King of Jazz' and would later repeat on Spike Jones's TV show. For an even better and funnier dance on similar shoes, look for the film 'Little Tich and His Big Boots' which was made way back in 1900 but has recently been spotted on YouTube.

Three young ladies billed as Faith, Hope and Charity are quite pretty (well, two of them are) but insist on performing a song in that horrible twangy harmony which renders so many country-western songs unbearable for me.

We also get an act cried the Toonerville Trio ... all four of them, and that's the most entertaining part of their act. They perform 'Saint Louis Blues' on some sort of skiffle instruments. A previous IMDb reviewer has called them the 'legendary' Mound City Blue Blowers, but I don't see (or hear) what's so 'legendary' about them. There seems to be some rule about blues musicians: the more obscure and unimportant any bluesman was, the more important some writer will make him out to be.

The closing turn, with a dog dressed in human clothes, is genuinely painful to watch: not because it's allegedly cruel to the dog, but because it's just so stupid and unfunny. It's made even worse because this act is ostensibly being performed for all those hillbillies in the room, but it's staged in a manner so that it would be impossible for most of them to see. Which makes them luckier than me, sitting through this rubbish. My rating for "Nine O'Clock Folks": one point out of ten. If I have to spend ten minutes with hillbillies, I'd rather be with Daisy Mae and a jug of moonshine.
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3/10
Pet cruelty spoils decent dance numbers
mdonath20 February 2002
This short film has a series of pretty good song and dance numbers, introduced by a clever hick comedian. The best dance number is done by a young man with boards attached to the front of his shoes. He's really good.

Unfortunately, the entire piece is completely ruined by a gag animal bit at the end. It's supposed to be a joke about a drunken dog, but instead a modern audience can clearly see some awful pet abuse. I'm by no means an animal activist and am not particularly sensitive to this topic either. So if I found watching a poor little dog get twisted around inside a tight suit painful, you'd better believe pet lovers would be up in arms about it.
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8/10
To say that this film contains "pet cruelty" is absurd.
hoponjaz15 February 2005
I've seen this film. To say that it contains "pet cruelty" is absolutely ridiculous. A man (presumably a dog trainer) is guiding his dog through a routine of tricks. For the most part, the man is relatively gentle with the dog. At other times, he is simply being playful, but definitely not cruel. The segment is actually pretty funny. Overall, the film is very important as a document of the legendary Mound City Blue Blowers. Aside from their unique instrumentation, one of the band's founders, Red McKenzie, played a pivotal role in the promotion of Chicago jazz musicians, particularly those associated with the Austin High School Gang.
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8/10
Sort of like Vaudeville meets the Beverly Hillbillies
planktonrules4 March 2017
The style of this Vitaphone short is a bit different--and it works pretty well. Instead of one act or a couple acts, the short is like a variety show being held in very small Southern town America. The acts are VERY unconventional but mostly unique and enjoyable. The only ones that left me flat was that odd female trio that sang a song about a guy murdering the sheriff...and with almost zero emotion.

As for the rest, they consist of an amazing guy wearing extremely elongated shoes. He tapdances with them but also can stand up on end like they are stilts! It's odd but incredible! Next, there are some other cool bizarro acts such as the cute dog act and the quartet with one of the men playing the brushes on top of a suitcase and another does a horn imitation. Strange...but almost all very enjoyable. And, for a Vitaphone short, the sets and production values were very nice.
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8/10
Amazing tap dance worth the view
billsoccer26 August 2020
Never saw such trick tap dancing - amazing! Too bad the performer is uncredited. The rest, I could skip
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