Inspector General Trailer
2m 6s
Georgi is illiterate, broke, and has just been thrown out of a travelling medicine show for accidentally telling the truth about the fake elixir his boss Yakov has been peddling to gullible villagers. Wandering hungry into the small town of Brodny, he is arrested on a vagrancy charge and thrown in jail. The town's deeply corrupt officials, convinced he is the Emperor's feared Inspector General sent to expose them, suddenly treat him like royalty. Half the town grovels, the other half panics, and Georgi simply wants to eat a decent meal and get out before anyone figures out who he really is. Loosely based on Nikolai Gogol's savage 1836 satirical play, this Technicolor musical comedy is built around one of Hollywood's great physical performers, Danny Kaye, at his most wildly inventive, supported by Walter Slezak, Elsa Lanchester, and Gene Lockhart. The score, largely written by Kaye's wife and creative partner Sylvia Fine, won a Golden Globe for Johnny Green.
Why This Film Matters: Gogol wrote The Inspector General in 1836 as a direct attack on government corruption, bureaucratic cowardice, and the absolute willingness of officials to humiliate themselves before anyone they believe has power over them. Nearly two centuries later, the satire has lost nothing. The sight of corrupt politicians falling over each other to impress someone they are terrified of, changing their story entirely based on who is watching, covering for each other while privately scheming to survive, is not a period piece. It is a portrait of how institutional corruption actually operates, wrapped in slapstick and song. For younger audiences who have grown up watching officials perform accountability while practicing none of it, Gogol's insight, that power reveals character more completely than anything else, lands with the same force it always has.