The Cuckoos (1930 film)


The Cuckoos is an American Pre-Code musical comedy film, released by RKO Radio Pictures and partially filmed in two-strip Technicolor. Directed by Paul Sloane, the screenplay was adapted by Cyrus Wood, from the Broadway musical, The Ramblers, by Guy Bolton, Bert Kalmar, and Harry Ruby. It starred Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey, and although they had appeared on Broadway and in other films together, this was their first time starring as a team. The success of this picture, combined with Rio Rita being their most successful film of 1929, convinced the studio to headline them as the comedy team Wheeler & Woolsey, through 1937.

Plot

Professor Bird and his partner, Sparrow, are a pair of charlatan fortune tellers who are bankrupt and stranded at a Mexican resort just south of the border. An heiress, Ruth Chester, appears, who is running away from her aunt, Fanny Furst. She is in love with an American pilot, Billy Shannon, but her aunt wishes her to marry the European nobleman, The Baron, whom the aunt believes is the "right" type of person for her niece.
Sparrow, meanwhile has fallen in love with a young American girl, Anita, who has been living with a band of Gypsies. This creates an issue, since the leader of the Gypsy band, Julius, has had his eye on Anita for years.
When Fannie Furst arrives, she attempts to persuade Ruth into marrying the Baron, but unbeknownst by Fannie, The Baron is only interested in marrying Ruth for her money. During the course of events, Fannie falls in love with Bird, but when the Baron finds out that Ruth is engaged to Billy, he conspires with Julius to kidnap her. During the kidnapping, Anita is also taken, and the girls are taken deeper into Mexico. Bird, Sparrow and Billy track them down and recover the girls, and they live happily ever after.

Cast

All songs are music by Harry Ruby with lyrics by Bert Kalmar, unless otherwise noted.
The film made a profit of $335,000. The New York Times gave the film a positive review, calling it, " pleasantly irrational screen comedy, with sequences in color and riotous and, at times, ribald buffoonery..."