100% Service (1931) Poster

(1931)

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7/10
More intelligent observations from genius Gracie.
mark.waltz2 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
A famous vaudeville sketch focuses on the Broken Arms Hotel where the clerk has a wisecrack for every guest inquiry. Gracie Allen is the cigarette girl who does impressions of stars that were so good that you can't even guess who they are. That's after George Burns deals with clerk Chester Clute who doesn't even know the name of the hotel he works in. The Burns and Allen sketches are beyond description, with a uniquely ingenious way of making no sense yet seemingly filled with an unsurpassable bit of uncommon sense. I didn't quite get the ending with the presence of another woman looking to play bridge, but as long as Gracie is on screen, nothing else matters.
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Say hello, Gracie!
I first encountered Burns and Allen through their television series, after they were well past middle age. When I see their early films, I'm astonished at how attractive Gracie Allen was in her younger days. In "100% Service" she wears an elaborate set of gauntlet cuffs that must have been quite stylish in 1931.

"100% Service" gives a story credit to "George N. Burns" (the "N" probably stands for Nathan, George's real name), but there's no real story here ... and we don't need one. This is an hilarious example of vaudeville cross-talk comedy, with George as the befuddled newlywed husband on his honeymoon. His wife is played by some other actress, not Gracie. George stops off at the cigar counter for some stogies, where he meets dim-witted cigar girl Gracie Allen. At first, we suspect that Gracie isn't as dumb as she seems, because she uses her screwball logic to rook a customer out of $4.75 change. But then her same illogical logic impels her to give the change to George, so maybe Gracie is dumb after all.

There are some funny sight gags here, including a Scotsman who tries to check into the hotel with several small children and a midget concealed under his cloak, so that they can all get in for the price of a single-occupancy room.

SPOILER. There's an amazingly "blue" gag at the end of this movie, when George's wife wants him to come up to their room for a game of "honeymoon bridge" ... and then the wife is followed upstairs by TWELVE men, and the last man is leading a live horse! Must be an interesting honeymoon.

Trivia note: in real life, Gracie Allen had one blue eye and one green eye, and she was extremely embarrassed about this. She retired from show business just when Burns & Allen's popular TV show was about to make the transition from black-and-white to colour. Gracie claimed that she was "tired" and didn't want to work any more, but I've always suspected that she didn't want to appear on colour TV for fear of revealing her mismatched eyes.

"100% Service" is a delight from start to finish, marred only by a brief appearance by the annoying character actor Chester Clute, more effeminate than usual. I'll rate this movie 10 out of 10.
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5/10
Pleasant if you like the humor of Burns and Allen,...but I don't
planktonrules16 July 2006
While I will admit that this is a competently made comedy short and it does provide a few laughs, I generally don't like the humor of Burns and Allen--in particular, I find I get annoyed with Gracie's prattling and a little of it goes a long way. Perhaps that might be because I have a family member that generally sounds like Gracie (it's no act) and my brother and I never found it all that funny in real life! But I have talked to other people who also found that the team's comedy didn't age all that well. However, before George meets Gracie, there are a few cute moments in the film as he interacts with the pretty horrid staff at a fancy hotel. And, the production values from Paramount are pretty good, so it's worth at least a quick look if you are curious since it's such a short film.
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