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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writer:
Preston Sturges (written by)
Release Date:
December 1941 (USA) more
Tagline:
A Happy-Go Lucky Hitch-Hiker on the Highway to happiness! He wanted to see the world . . . but wound up in Lover's Lane! more
Plot:
A director of escapist films goes on the road as a hobo to learn about Life...which gives him a rude awakening. full summary | add synopsis
Awards:
1 win more
User Comments:
A celebration of the healing power of comedy more (91 total)
Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Joel McCrea | ... | John L. Lloyd 'Sully' Sullivan | |
| Veronica Lake | ... | The Girl | |
| Robert Warwick | ... | Mr. Lebrand | |
| William Demarest | ... | Mr. Jones | |
| Franklin Pangborn | ... | Mr. Casalsis | |
| Porter Hall | ... | Mr. Hadrian | |
| Byron Foulger | ... | Mr. Johnny Valdelle | |
| Margaret Hayes | ... | Secretary | |
| Robert Greig | ... | Burroughs (Sullivan's butler) | |
| Eric Blore | ... | Sullivan's valet | |
| Torben Meyer | ... | The doctor | |
| Victor Potel | ... | Cameraman | |
| Richard Webb | ... | Radio man | |
| Charles R. Moore | ... | Colored chef (as Charles Moore) | |
| Almira Sessions | ... | Ursula Kornheiser |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Runtime:
90 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono (Western Electric Mirrophonic Recording)
Certification:
Australia:PG | South Korea:12 (2004) | Finland:K-16 | Sweden:11 (re-release) | Sweden:15 | UK:A (original rating) | UK:PG (re-rating) (2000) | USA:Approved (PCA #7382)
Filming Locations:
Bob Hope Airport - 2627 Hollywood Way, Burbank, California, USA more
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
In the airplane scene, the author of the book "Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?" is shown to be "Sinclair Beckstein", an amalgamation of the names of authors Upton Sinclair, Sinclair Lewis, and John Steinbeck. more
Goofs:
Plot holes: When the identification card in the dead man's boots was used to confirm Sullivan's death, the girl knew that his boots had previously been stolen. more
Quotes:
[discussing a prior 'serious' film]
LeBrand:
It died in Pittsburgh.
Hadrian:
Like a dog!
John L. Sullivan:
Aw, what do they know in Pittsburgh...
Hadrian:
They know what they like.
John L. Sullivan:
If they knew what they liked, they wouldn't live in Pittsburgh!
more
Movie Connections:
Featured in "Due South: The Witness (#2.3)" (1995) more
Soundtrack:
Let My People Go more
FAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (91 total)
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As a professional circus clown for twenty years,I think that Sullivan's Travels is the best, most lucid, explanation of what comedy is all about that has ever been made. Sure it's hokey, corny, contrived, and meandering. But so is all great comedy, from Shakespeare to Seinfeld! If you want your comedy to be tightly constructed, meaningful, unambiguous, and logical, then you do not want comedy at all -- you want some stuffy college professor's idea of What is Comedy for a term paper.
The glorious truth is that you cannot domesticate great comedy. It occurs on no regular basis, from no reliable source, and is accountable to no one for what it says and does. Preston Sturges wanted to make that point in Sullivans Travels and he does so exceedingly well with everything from slapstick frolics in the land cruiser to fleas in the bed to hectoring soliloquies about poverty from the butler.
Ten years before Chaplin tried to explain the same thing in his movie Limelight, Sturges tells a tale meant to both hearten and cozen us. It heartens us to know that a cynical, moneygrubbing place like Hollywood will continue to spin out comedies, because they make money. And it cozens us into thinking there is something magical about comedians. Anyone who has ever actually known or been married to a professional funnyperson knows they are by turns grumpy, lazy, tempermental, stubborn, and always insecure. Not the life of the party. But so what? They're clowns, god bless 'em, and that's all that counts.
You'll never understand the craft of humor if you don't watch, and love, Preston Sturges Sullivan's Travels!