
Taxi! Taxi!
Comedy
Overview
An architect, constantly in trouble with his employers, falls for the boss's niece. When he spontaneously buys a taxicab to take her home on a rainy night, the purchase leads to more trouble.
Top Cast


Edward Everett Horton
Edward Everett Horton
Peter Whitby
Edward Everett Horton
Peter Whitby


Marian Nixon
Marian Nixon
Rose Zimmerman
Marian Nixon
Rose Zimmerman


Burr McIntosh
Burr McIntosh
Grant Zimmerman
Burr McIntosh
Grant Zimmerman


Edward Martindel
Edward Martindel
David Parmalee
Edward Martindel
David Parmalee


William V. Mong
William V. Mong
Nosey Ricketts
William V. Mong
Nosey Ricketts


Lucien Littlefield
Lucien Littlefield
Billy Wallace
Lucien Littlefield
Billy Wallace


Freeman Wood
Freeman Wood
Jersey
Freeman Wood
Jersey


Helen Ferguson
Helen Ferguson
(uncredited)
Helen Ferguson
(uncredited)


Bud Jamison
Bud Jamison
Masher on train (uncredited)
Bud Jamison
Masher on train (uncredited)
Similar Movies

At a residence hotel, Patsy is moving in with Thelma. Thelma has prepared some rules, including singing whenever one feels quarrelsome or angry. Although Thelma tells Patsy that they'll share everything, there's precious little closet or drawer space for Patsy's clothes, little room to maneuver around Thelma in the bathroom, and then a sleepless night for Patsy when Thelma goes sleepwalking. Can they share and share alike, or will Patsy keep on singing?

Ham is interested in a girl named Marie and wants to impress her. First he buys a car and then he takes her out to a swanky nightclub. During the course of this disastrous date Ham realizes that Marie isn't the nice girl he thought she was: she only went out with him to make her real boyfriend jealous. The boyfriend is a dancer at the club, and when she sees him kissing his dance partner she becomes enraged and smashes up the place, while poor Ham is stuck with the bill.

Germany in the Thirties. A movie teller realizes that his profession is not longer needed. Silent movies are not produced any longer. Telling stories is the only thing the man was ever good in, so he does not know what to do now. As political circumstances are changing dramatically these days in Germany, he gets new hope that things will again be going better for him...

Vitaphone production reels #2471-2478; third Warner Bros. feature film - the first being The Jazz Singer and the second Tenderloin - to include talking sequences, along with the by now usual Vitaphone musical score and sound effects. A copy of this film survives at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., but the sound disks are lost.

SAL OF SINGAPORE was nominated for an Oscar for achievement in Writing during the second year of the Academy Awards. The film, being a part-talkie, nearly disappared from view. However, a preservation print does exist at UCLA, although it is unavailable for public viewing, awaiting restoration.








