

Duck Soup
Rufus T. Firefly is named president/dictator of bankrupt Freedonia and declares war on neighboring Sylvania over the love of wealthy Mrs. Teasdale.
Director(s)
Leo McCarey
Where to watch

Amazon Video
Rent
Cast & crew
Edmund Mortimer
Minister (uncredited)

Leo McCarey
-

Edmund Breese
Zander

Edwin Maxwell
Freedonia's Secretary of War #1 (uncredited)

Dale Van Sickel
A Palace Guard (uncredited)

Joseph Crehan
Dignitary at Reception (uncredited)

Wade Boteler
Officer at Battle Headquarters (uncredited)

Charles Middleton
Prosecutor

Groucho Marx
Rufus T. Firefly

Harpo Marx
Pinky

Chico Marx
Chicolini

Zeppo Marx
Bob Roland

Margaret Dumont
Gloria Teasdale

Raquel Torres
Vera Marcal

Louis Calhern
Ambassador Trentino

Leonid Kinskey
Sylvanian Agitator

Edgar Kennedy
Street Vendor

Edward Arnold
Politician (uncredited)

Sidney Bracey
Mrs. Teasdale's Butler (uncredited)

E.H. Calvert
Officer in Battle Sequence (uncredited)

Davison Clark
Minister of Finance #2 (uncredited)

Louise Closser Hale
Reception Guest (uncredited)

Carrie Daumery
Reception Guest (uncredited)

Maude Turner Gordon
Reception Guest (uncredited)

Florence Wix
Reception Guest (uncredited)
Mario Dominici
Minister (uncredited)

Charles West
Minister (uncredited)

Verna Hillie
Trentino's Blonde Secretary (uncredited)

Edward LeSaint
Secretary of Labor (uncredited)

George MacQuarrie
First Judge (uncredited)

Frederick Sullivan
Second Judge (uncredited)

Eric Mayne
Third Judge (uncredited)

Dennis O'Keefe
Bridegroom at Firefly's Reception (uncredited)
Leo Sulky
Agitator (uncredited)

William Worthington
First Minister of Finance (uncredited)
Details
Reviews
tmdb47633491
The Marx Bros are to Blockbuster as Monty Python are to Netflix and I mean that in the best way possible
kineticandroid
I never get tired of the idea that someone would think of Groucho Marx is the perfect man to lead a nation into war. Or that Harpo and Chico would be good spies. Or that Zeppo would be interested in another film after this one.
Filipe Manuel Neto
**I would love to send a copy of the film to Vladimir Putin. Would he understand the gesture?** Who would have thought that this film is almost a hundred years old? I just saw it, and it is fresher and lusher than many vegetables in the supermarket! Many people no longer know who the Marx Brothers are, but a hundred years ago, at a time when there were no internet memes (or the internet), they were the kings of comedy, and it's always worth seeing what they did. They passed away a long time ago, but they left us a polite, intelligent, sharp, accessible humor that the whole family can see. The film was released in 1933, at a time dominated by the imminent threats of war. It reminds us of our own time, doesn't it? One hundred years later, we continue to make the same mistakes and show God that we have learned nothing from them. The film makes fun of this by giving us a portrait of a bankrupt country led by an incompetent man, very vain, arrogant and surrounded by sycophants who treat him as a savior of the nation. It could be Mussolini, or Hitler... and the explicit criticism of European dictators could not be sharper today, if we think about some tyrants of our time. The film is dominated by the four Marxes: Zeppo, in his last appearance as a member of the group, has a much more solid character than usual and as a result we never feel that he is too much in the film. Chico also does very well. Harpo does what he's used us to, managing to be funny without saying a word and putting all his tricks as a mime and vaudeville clown to good use. Groucho, as usual, intelligently leads the group. The king of ready answers couldn't have a quicker wit or a sharper tongue. In addition, we have Margaret Dumont in a skillful and healthy collaboration with them. Good sets and very well-imagined costumes help us compose Freedonia, a republic on the verge of collapse, bankruptcy and a foreign invasion. There is an unbelievable dose of anthological scenes in this film, from the motorcycle joke with the sidecar to the joke with the mirror. The black-and-white cinematography is sharp, well-shot, and the film doesn't look as old as it actually is. The soundtrack adds the finishing touch.


