Parlor, Bedroom and Bath (Romeo in Pyjamas) (1931)
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35% of users liked it
(125 ratings)
Based on the stage comedy by Charles W. Bell and Mark Swan (previously filmed in 1920), Parlor, Bedroom and Bath is a curious mixture of all that was good and everything that was bad in Buster Keaton's talkie features. Keaton plays Reginald Irving, a dimwitted bill-poster who finds himself the… More Based on the stage comedy by Charles W. Bell and Mark Swan (previously filmed in 1920), Parlor, Bedroom and Bath is a curious mixture of all that was good and everything that was bad in Buster Keaton's talkie features. Keaton plays Reginald Irving, a dimwitted bill-poster who finds himself the pawn in a scheme cooked up by wealthy Jeffrey Haywood (Reginald Denny). It seems that Jeffrey will not be permitted to marry Virginia Embrey (Sally Eilers) until a suitable husband is found for Virginia's older sister Angelica (Dorothy Christy). Since Angelica has rejected all the available suitors, Jeffrey schemes to offer Reginald as an eligible mate. First, however, he has to transform our dopey hero into a gentleman -- and a great lover. Somehow or other, poor Reginald innocently ends up in a compromising situation involving vampish Polly Hathaway (Charlotte Greenwood) and the very married Nita Leslie (Joan Peers) at a posh no-tell hotel. Keaton is permitted a few choice pantomimic moments in Parlor Bedroom and Bath, notably his scenes with the aggressive Charlotte Greenwood and a spectacular sight gag "borrowed" from his 1920 silent classic One Week. On the whole, however, Keaton is lost in a sea of unfunny dialogue and tired farcical situations -- a not untypical pitfall of his MGM talkies. Long unavailable due to legal complications, Parlor, Bedroom and Bath can be purchased from any of the public-domain video companies proliferating in the U.S. (Incidentally, that baronial "upstate New York" mansion in the film's early scenes was actually Buster Keaton's Beverly Hills home) ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- Directed By
- Edward M. Sedgwick, Edward Sedgwick
- Written By
- E. Richard Schayer, Robert E. Hopkins
- Genres
- Classics, Comedy
- In Theaters
- Jan 1, 1931 Limited
- On DVD
- Dec 21, 2004
- Studio
- MGM
Critic Reviews
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Dennis Schwartz, Ozus' World Movie Reviews
A terrible film.
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Phil Hall, Film Threat
Pinballs unevenly between contrived slamming door farce and a poor approximation of Keaton's silent comedy knockabout.
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Cast
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Buster Keaton
as Reginald Irving
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Charlotte Greenwood
as Polly Hathaway
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Reginald Denny
as Jeffery Haywood
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Dorothy Christy
as Angelica Embrey
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Joan Peers
as Nita Leslie
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Sally Eilers
as Virginia Embrey
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Cliff Edwards
as Bellhop
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Natalie Moorhead
as Leila Crofton
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Edward S. Brophy
as Detective
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Wally Merrill
as Frederick Leslie
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Sidney Bracey
as Butler
- Paul Morgan
- Eugene Pallette
- Wolfgang Zilzer
- Françoise Rosay