Nothing But the Truth (1929) Poster

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6/10
First sound film for Dix and all of the cast
SimonJack7 November 2019
"Nothing But the Truth" is one of the first talking pictures by Paramount and the first by the studio's male lead from the silent films of the previous decade, Richard Dix. This is a good film to study the changes that sound would bring to the cinema. Dix was a good actor and a handsome leading man whose films and career improved with sound. But in this first Paramount sound film, one can see him overacting and still having some silent traits that appear very hammy. He pauses and makes very deliberate moves, including projecting himself. So, it gives an appearance of mixed hamming it up, overacting and woodenness.

Most of the rest of the cast are okay, but all of the main male cast - the men in the stock brokerage office, seem a little wooden. Their early office scenes actually appear very stagy. That's understandable from the fact that this story is based on a novel and the stage play that was written from it and performed on Broadway in the mid-19 teens.

The story has a good plot that is a natural for humor. Dix's Robert Bennett must go 24 hours without telling the slightest lie or untruth in order to win a huge bet with three men from his firm. There are some strings attached to the money he puts up, and he risks everything for the love of his girl and a good cause. A very good Hollywood rendition of the story was made in 1941. It starred Bob Hope and Paulette Goddard. Other versions of the story were made in the languages of various European countries.

The best thing about this film is the comedy. Even with the rough quality and crude technical aspects, this movie remains watchable and notable just for the witty and funny script.

This 1929 Paramount movie was the first sound film made by all the members of the cast. All of the male actors continued on with substantial careers, although Louis John Bartels who plays Frank Connelly would die in 1932 of a stomach ailment at just age 36.

It was a different story for the actresses, however. This was their very first film for three of the actresses. And, it was the biggest roles for two who would have very short movie careers. Madeline Grey plays Mrs. E.M. Burke, but she would appear in only 10 more films -all but one in uncredited roles, ending her film career in 1945. Helen Kane who plays Mabel Jackson would appear in just half a dozen more films in bit parts, ending her film career in 1931. Only Wynne Gibson, who plays the other nightclub sister, Sabel Jackson, would go on to have a substantial film career. She had leads in several films and notable supporting roles in several more, ending her career in 1956 on television.

One of the female leads, Dorothy Hall, who plays the love interest of Dix's Robert Bennett, had her start in silent films and was on the rise when sound came out. She had the female leads in her first three films before this one. While she may have been a good actress for silent films, she couldn't make the jump to sound with her very squeaky voice. With her voice, she comes across here as something of a hair-brain, and one has to stretch credibility to think that Dix would fall for her. She appeared in just three more films after this, all minor roles that included one short. Her Hollywood career ended in 1931.

Until a scene about halfway when the police raid a night club, I had forgotten that the movie was made during Prohibition. And one curiosity that stood out was E.M. Burke driving his car from the right side. I don't know what kind of car it was, but it clearly was driven from the right side. Here are some favorite lines from this movie.

E.M. Burke, "Oh, you're a smart little fellow, aren't you?" Robert Bennett, "My mother thinks I am." Burke, "You wouldn't want to buy any of this stock yourself, would you?" Bennett, "Oh, I, I don't want to change my mother's opinion."

Frank Connelly, "By the way, when do you think of getting married?" Robert Bennett, "Constantly!"

Robert Bennett, "Hello, Mr. Van Dyke." Clarence Van Dyke, "How are you, Mr. Bennett? Thanks for that tip on V.K." Bennett, "Oh, not at all. Not at all. I was only too glad to take you in."

Clarence van Dyke, "When I was nine years old, I told my mother the truth about something that happened at school. What happened at home cured me."
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7/10
A Truthful Review
boblipton12 April 2022
For someone who rarely got a chance to do it during the sound era, Richard Dix gives a fine comic performance in the lead later performed by Bob Hope. Preston Foster is supposed to be in a bit part, but I couldn't spot him and Helen Kane is best taken in small doses. Ned Sparks is relatively restrained and Berton Churchill -- I've seen in about four times in the last month and am getting a bit weary of him -- is his usual emphatic, slimy self.
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6/10
Nothing But the Truth review
JoeytheBrit5 May 2020
Richard Dix plays a stockbroker - and inveterate liar - who rashly accepts a wager that he must speak nothing but the truth for 24 hours. Naturally, complications quickly arise. The story is fanciful nonsense, but director Victor Schertzinger does manage to coax a likable performance from leading man Richard Dix. Unfortunately, the limitations of early-talkie camera movement and sound recording prove to be even more suffocating than the conditions of Dix's bet.
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4/10
I can see why Dix became a star and Kane became a has-been.
planktonrules17 January 2016
In the 1927-29 period, American movie studios were making the only sound pictures in the world. Because of this, there were no guidelines on how to make such pictures--just a lot of trial and error. For example, in most early sound pictures, the accompanying sound was NOT inserted into the strip of film which soon became the standard. And, adding music to films literally meant having a band immediately off-camera doing the music live! Another standard practice that they had to work out was making films too talking. After years of making silent films, too often studios had folks talk and talk and talk-- with very little action. Why? Well it wasn't only making up for lost time but because microphones needed to be VERY close to actors...and many times they stood practically still because of this. As a result, most films made during this era are pretty terrible when you see them today...and most were remade a lot better only a few years later. This is DEFINITELY true of "Nothing But the Truth"--a decent idea for a film but one that is severely hindered by primitive sound movie techniques. Folks talk way too much, the action a bit stilted AND Helen Kane's routine grew VERY tiresome very quickly. She was the inspiration for Betty Boop...which is fine in an 8 minute cartoon...but imagine a woman talking just like this character throughout a live-action movie! Now this in not saying the film is all bad. Star Richard Dix is more natural on camera than the other actors in the film...and it is very easy to understand how he was a big star in the early 1930s.

As to the movie, as I said above, it is very dated and doesn't work very well today. The story, while a bit hard to believe, is enjoyable and the film still worth seeing provided you are able to see it in context and cut it some slack! After all, the idea of a man making a bet he could ONLY tell the truth for 24 hours and how difficult this could be might make for a good film. Here, despite many problems, it's still a cute idea.
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4/10
Little More Than a Curiosity!
JohnHowardReid30 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Fascinatingly awful! Richard Dix hands us a mannered and extremely stagey performance, forever mopping his brow with a stage handkerchief. Indeed, he stops considerably short of the realism demanded by the cinema camera. Aside from Wynne Gibson, who is moderately effective – except in her long drunk sequence – the girls similarly overact and prance around, delivering their lines as if they were on a theater stage. Admittedly, Churchill is effective at the end of Act One, but otherwise his continuous blustering and double takes convey very little real humor. Sparks is his usual self. The most realistic performance is handed out by Louis John Bartels. As for the direction by Victor Schertzinger, you might well ask, "What direction?" It shows a complete absence of style, polish or sophistication. My question is: "Why hire Schertzinger? The janitor could have done as good a job!" The producer's aim was obviously to save money. The budget is ridiculously small. The film was shot entirely within the studio on no more than five or six sets and for the most part, the movie is put across in extremely long takes which are occasionally broken up by inserted close-ups. Admittedly, there is a small amount of camera movement – evidently achieved by putting the sound recording booth on wheels – but the booth's restrictions on movement are still very evident and the grainy, diffused lighting is a dead giveaway. Apart from the moderately lively and amusing finale to the First Act, Nothing But the Truth has little more than curiosity value.
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8/10
shows Richard Dix was a natural for the "talkies"
kidboots8 December 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Richard Dix was such a natural actor and this early talkie shows why he would have just as big a career in them as he did in the silents.

It is a breezy comedy with a musical interlude to show off Helen Kane in her first film. Made at Paramount's Long Island Astoria studios, it was released (20th April) before the 1929 stock market crash, so there is a very upbeat air to the film. Richard Dix plays Bob a stockbroker who is very carefree with other people's money. Encouraging clients to buy stocks in companies that are failing is all in a day's work to him.

His co-workers (including the wonderful Ned Sparkes) have had enough of his glibness and the lies he tells his clients. His fiancée comes to him with $10,000 from her charity group to invest - she wants him to double it in 5 days - "you can't go wrong in the stock market" she says. The world would find out by the year's end how wrong that was.

Meanwhile a couple of his friends bet him $10,000 that he cannot tell the truth for 24 hours. he gleefully accepts, thinking how easy it will be.

They go to a nightclub where they are entertained by a sister act - Mabel and Sabel. Helen Kane sings "Do Something" - her sister is played by Wynne Gibson, who had a pretty good career playing hard boiled dames, like the one she plays in this movie.

They are two gold-diggers on the look out for a sugar daddy (Burton Churchill) an old wealthy business man to back their show. The show looks pretty bad (there is a running gag that has Helen Kane launching into her part "I was a poor but honest girl" at the drop of a hat.

Complications ensue when they bring the chorus girls home to Churchill's house. Trying to smooth things over with someone in the group that has promised to tell the truth is very hard. There is a joke at the end that has his friend winding forward the clock so Bob will start fibbing before the time is out and they will not have to pay him the money and Bob keeps winding it back!!!!
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9/10
Outstanding comedy that is an odd snapshot in time
AlsExGal25 July 2010
This film features excellent production values, a brisk pace, and natural performances in this first full year of talking pictures that is a rare jewel. It's also something even more valuable - a talking picture featuring the attitudes and all the excesses of the roaring 20's just months before the stock market crash. Technically, it would have been impossible to make such a film just a year before. A year later, a film such as this one - a comedy about lying stockbrokers - would have seemed ridiculous and likely angered the suffering depression era audiences, and thus it would not have been made in the first place.

Richard Dix stars as stock broker Robert Bennett working in a brokerage firm where the boss, E. M. Burke, postulates that lying is a necessary part of their business. He has to lie to sell stocks, he says, as long as he believes in the long run the stock is a good investment he believes it's OK. Dix says that one should always tell the truth. Since Bennett is given to some lying himself ,the other brokers in the office and the boss bet 10,000 dollars against Bennett's 10,000 dollars that Bennett cannot tell the absolute truth for 24 hours. What the boss and the other brokers don't know is that Burke's daughter and Bob's fiancée Gwen has visited Bob just minutes before and said that she has raised 10,000 dollars for charity and needs to double it in five days because if she does her father has said he will match it - this is the 10K that Bob is betting. Apparently a total of 40K is needed for what her charitable group is trying to accomplish. Realize in 1929 40K is roughly equivalent to half a million dollars in 2010. So, without knowing it, Mr. Burke has much more on the line than ten thousand dollars.

What follows is a briskly paced comedy as the brokers and the boss won't let Bennett out of their sight until 4PM the next day when the bet expires, waiting for him to tell that one bet-ending lie. Side plots include two gold-digging chorus girls who meet Burke and the brokers in a speak-easy that night and are determined to hold Burke to his promise to finance their idea for a show. They're not taking no for an answer. They seem to hold all the cards as they have managed to enter Burke's home and refuse to leave without the cash. Burke could refuse them and have them thrown out, but then he'd have to explain to his wife how he knew these two buxom chorines and what they were doing in their home. Meanwhile, as a guest in his future in-laws' home, Bob is faced with the torment of listening to the terrible singing of a female guest whose choice of haberdashery looks like a milk pail with a bow on it. Of course he's asked to give his opinion on both her hat and her singing.

I'd recommend this one to anybody who likes a good comedy. You don't even have to be a precode or early talkie fan to enjoy this one. A tolerance for a modest dose of Helen Kane (she plays one of the gold-digging chorus girls) is really all that's required. Honest, I'm telling the truth here.
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8/10
Fun comedy; ever so slightly dated and stage-bound, but really well done!
mmipyle1 March 2021
"Nothing But the Truth" (1929) is an early soundie with Richard Dix as a stockbroker who lies so much to sell his share of stocks in his company that he barely knows the meaning of truth. His partner, Berton Churchill, is also father to the woman Dix hopes to marry in the near future, Dorothy Hall. BUT - due to the fact that Churchill is invested by $100,000 in Quicksilver mine stocks and needs desperately to divest himself of such, the company is asked to help. Dix thinks the stock is garbage. Due to several incidents leading up to the plot driver, it comes about that a bet is now put upon Dix between him and Churchill, Ned Sparks, and Louis John Bartels, a bet of $10,000 that Dix can't tell the absolute, absolute truth for 24 straight hours! Of course, the $10,000 Dix bets actually belongs to Hall (Churchill's daughter, remember), though she's somewhat "borrowed" it in turn from a fund for an orphanage. It's getting too complicated to explain much further. This is somewhat stage-bound by today's standards, but I must say that this is really a very delightful old-fashioned farce, and Dix is definitely up to the challenge. It may be much more in the future Cary Grant's type of comedy, but Dix shows that he had much more acting chops than the rather over-ripe performance of two years later in "Cimarron" or even his nicely performed parts in "The Whistler" series. He'd done silent comedy before, and actually quite well, in such shows as "The Lucky Devil" and others, but he went out of silents with a roar in "Redskin" and into sound with plenty of oomph in 1929 with this film, "Seven Keys to Baldpate" and others.

Though Dorothy Hall plays the love foil in "Nothing But the Truth", it's actually Helen 'Babe' Kane and Wynne Gibson who are the featured ladies, playing a sister-pair who are in showbusiness and are looking for a backer, and who look to Churchill to back them - - - and this behind the back, so to speak, of Churchill's daughter, Hall, and wife, Madeline Grey. This all adds plenty to the complications already set afoot by the bet with Dix.

Genuinely a pleasant surprise and wonderful 78 minute watch. Recommended. Hopefully, someone will eventually release this in a decent, cleaned-up format.
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