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Make Me a Star

 Make Me a Star
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TVTItem
 Make Me a Star
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Make Me a Star
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MakeMeAStar
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Make Me a Star is a 1932 film directed by William Beaudine.Merton Gill is an errand boy for a general store in a small town in Middle America. He isn't a very good delivery boy, failing to pay much attention to his job because he is obsessed with becoming a movie star. Merton worships a cowboy movie star named Buck Benson, and imitates him slavishly. Despite lacking any whiff of talent, Merton has studied acting from a correspondence course and, when he's fired from his errand boy job, lights out for Hollywood and stardom.Armed only with some stills and his acting school correspondence school diploma, Merton shows up at the casting office of Majestic Pictures and asks for a part—not extras or bit parts or anything, because he has a diploma, but leads. The secretary at the front desk cackles in disbelief, then ignores Merton. Merton spends every day waiting on the bench at the casting office, and is approaching starvation when a slapstick actress, "Flips" Montague (Joan Blondell) takes pity on him. Flips asks a favor of a director, Merton gets hired to be an extra, and then after a couple more plot twists, he's playing a lead role. But not the type of lead role he wanted.
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Dropped link to TheDeterminator: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN
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DBTropes
 Make Me a Star / int_170128e9
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Right Behind Me
 Make Me a Star / int_170128e9
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Right Behind Me: Merton gets back to his room at Mr. Gashweiler's, after bungling another delivery and letting the horse loose. He finds that Mr. Gashweiler has been in his room and has found his acting school correspondence materials. He starts ranting about how "it's not fair!" that Mr. Gashweiler searched his room, only to turn around and find Mr. Gashweiler standing right behind him.
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 Make Me a Star / int_1b65dfad
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The Cameo
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The Cameo: This was a Paramount production and several of Paramount's big stars can be seen. Gary Cooper and Tallulah Bankhead walk by Merton, Merton sees Maurice Chevalier dropped off in front of the studio, and several other major stars appear briefly.
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 Make Me a Star / int_257ff2e7
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Maintain the Lie
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Maintain the Lie: Baird, the director of Merton's movie, has to work hard to keep Merton thinking they're making a drama. When Merton spots Ben Turpin the Comically Cross-Eyed guy in the cast, Baird says that Turpin is trying to be a dramatic actor. Baird gets a comic shot of Merton putting on makeup by hiding a camera. When production is wrapping, Baird tells Flips that he's relieved, because he's "running out of alibis."
 Make Me a Star / int_257ff2e7
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 Make Me a Star / int_25b5600
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Captain Ersatz
 Make Me a Star / int_25b5600
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Captain Ersatz: In-Universe. Merton's imitation of cowboy star Buck Benson is so slavish that Flips calls him "a blurred carbon copy." It's Flips who realizes that this could be used in a satire of Buck Benson movies.
 Make Me a Star / int_25b5600
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 Make Me a Star / int_5f91efd9
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Creative Closing Credits
 Make Me a Star / int_5f91efd9
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Creative Closing Credits: Opening credits. The opening credits flip past the camera as if they are pages being turned in a book, a creative touch uncommon for the era.
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 Make Me a Star / int_743437c4
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Chroma Key
 Make Me a Star / int_743437c4
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Chroma Key: In-Universe. Baird puts Merton up on a horse and instructs him to wave to the camera. Merton is up against a curtain, but Baird explains that they'll just superimpose him on a background of a cheering crowd. In fact, in the movie, the clip of Merton on the horse is used for a ridiculous shot in which he's crossing a canyon on a tightrope on horseback.
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 Make Me a Star / int_76b4b7dd
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The Comically Serious
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The Comically Serious: In-Universe. Merton is so deadly serious in his approach to a dumb cowboy B-Movie that Flips and Baird think that will just make the movie all the funnier. They're right.
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 Make Me a Star / int_8faea0c5
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Comically Cross-Eyed
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Comically Cross-Eyed: Discussed Trope. Merton, who believes in the movies as an expression of high dramatic art, disapproves of Slapstick and specifically dislikes the Comically Cross-Eyed trope. When he finds out that Ben Turpin, the patron saint of this trope, has been cast in his film, Merton is horrified. Baird the director, who is actually making a slapstick satire of westerns but doesn't want Merton to know what he's starring in, lies and says that Ben Turpin has always dreamed of playing a dramatic role.
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 Make Me a Star / int_978937d6
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Brand X
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Brand X: Merton, talking about how much he hates the Comically Cross-Eyed trope, specifically mentions "those awful Loadstone comedies." This obviously is a dig at Keystone Studios, the slapstick studio where Ben Turpin played for years.
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 Make Me a Star / int_a5e0c01
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As Himself
 Make Me a Star / int_a5e0c01
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As Himself: Ben Turpin, the king of Comically Cross-Eyed, appears in this film as himself, playing a part in Merton's silly movie.
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 Make Me a Star / int_fabd6906
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Everytown, America
 Make Me a Star / int_fabd6906
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Everytown, America: Simsbury, Merton's hometown, seems to have no distinguishing characteristics other than being 1000 miles from New York and 2000 miles from Los Angeles.
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Make Me a Star

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Make Me a Star
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Comically Cross-Eyed / int_2b2e213