Night Life in Chicago

1948
5.7| 0h9m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 27 November 1948 Released
Producted By: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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This short Traveltalk visit to Chicago looks at some hotels known for their evening entertainment and for the rich and famous people who come to their dining rooms. Featured are the Walnut Room of the Bismarck Hotel, the Ambassador Hotel's Pump Room, and the boardwalk at the Edgewater Beach Hotel.

Genre

Documentary

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Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

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Night Life in Chicago Audience Reviews

Perry Kate Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
SnoReptilePlenty Memorable, crazy movie
Afouotos Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.
Derry Herrera Not sure how, but this is easily one of the best movies all summer. Multiple levels of funny, never takes itself seriously, super colorful, and creative.
Michael_Elliott Night Life in Chicago (1948)*** (out of 4)TravelTalk short from MGM takes a look at what goes on in Chicago during the nighttime, at least that's what the title says. This here really plays more like a hotel promo because we're basically looking at a lot of hotels and what they offer. There are some very interesting scenes including a dinner where Charles Dawes, former Vice-President, is sitting at a table with the then mayor of Chicago. We get to see a couple show room dance floors, which wasn't too interesting but this builds up to a dancing horse, which I must admit, was pretty entertaining to me. There's another sequence where we see the Chicago Theatre and it's showing Joan Crawford's Possessed. I've seen dozens of these shorts and to me this here was one of the better entries in the series.
Clay Loomis James A. Fitzpatrick must have made over a hundred of these documentary shorts. This is about the 10th or 11th I've seen. They run the gamut, from the mildly boring, to the incredibly boring. This is one of most boring I've seen. In Night Life in Chicago we are taken on a trip through various Chicago hotels and their popular floor shows. We are introduced to many of the fascinating people who frequent these shows, like Charles Dawes, who was vice President of the USA sometime in the 1920's. I don't think anybody remembered him when this short came out in 1948, and he's certainly no less memorable today (eye roll).And here we are in another show room (let's call it The Money Waster), and here are some women in garish costumes thrashing around on stage to the dulcet tones of Chip Dickweed and his Band of the Undead. Now on to the Pump Room, where more women in garish costumes bang into each other on stage to the music of some other, nameless local band. And if that is not entertaining enough for you, here's 90 seconds of film showing Pump Room waiters serving food and pouring water. Fascinating. Then we get to see a horse hop around in step with Pop Goes The Weasle. If I ever wanted to visit Chicago, this short has convinced me not to go.When you went to the movies back in the 1940's, you got a cartoon, a short or two, like this one, a movie, then a full second feature (and if my Dad is to be believed, this all cost you only a nickle, and they gave you six cents change). Nobody went to the movies to see these shorts, but they filled time. When these shorts are shown on TCM, you might wonder why everyone didn't show up late to theaters in the '40's. I'll tell you why; it's because it was 110 degrees outside and theaters were the only places that had the new, modern, air conditioning.
Neil Doyle A colorful Technicolor short emphasizing Chicago's night life consists mostly of interior scenes at various clubs featuring floor shows in the city's famous loop area.A colorful cape dance is one diversion; the Chez Paree chorines strut their stuff in another; we get a glimpse of a couple of posh hotel restaurants; and finally, a novelty act including a dancing horse, who will only do his act as long as music is playing to give him the tempo.One of the livelier TravelTalks from James A. Fitzpatrick, it includes a glimpse of a movie marquee featuring Joan Crawford, Van Heflin and Raymond Massey in "Possessed." Not bad.