Añade un argumento en tu idiomaYoung boxer Terry Dolan lies to his mother, confides in Maisie his fear of boxing and desire to quit. His manager Skeets hope for Terry's championship. Maisie persuades Terry to tell Skeets,... Leer todoYoung boxer Terry Dolan lies to his mother, confides in Maisie his fear of boxing and desire to quit. His manager Skeets hope for Terry's championship. Maisie persuades Terry to tell Skeets, whose reaction compels Terry to continue boxing.Young boxer Terry Dolan lies to his mother, confides in Maisie his fear of boxing and desire to quit. His manager Skeets hope for Terry's championship. Maisie persuades Terry to tell Skeets, whose reaction compels Terry to continue boxing.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Vic
- (as 'Rags' Ragland)
- Jackie-Boy Duffy
- (as Eddie Simms)
- Shady Lawn Waiter
- (sin acreditar)
- Boxing Match Spectator
- (sin acreditar)
- Shady Lawn Band Leader
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
When I watched the first Maisie film, I felt like I was watching Jean Harlow. I later learned that the Maisie character was intended for Jean; however I enjoyed Ann Sothern's performance as the sassy character.
Ann does a great job showing that a woman could handle herself in every situation and always land on her feet. She is smart, sexy, and savvy.
I am so grateful to TCM for showing these films, so that I can get the chance to see them for the first time.
Even if it's not perfect, it's excellent.
Maisie gets a chance to demonstrate her own character, her strength, her determination. One speech to a certain cynic gives us a chance to cheer -- literally cheer -- this gutsy and decent young woman who gets knocked down because she is decent.
But, like a champion boxer, she keeps getting up.
Hollywood had an unfortunate tendency to cast flabby or, well, let's say "underdeveloped" men as "heavyweight" boxers, such as Stu Irwin or, in this case, Robert Sterling, an otherwise good actor, and a good-looking leading man.
But he's no Sylvester Stallone.
In this boxing movie, Hollywood didn't make the mistake it did in "Cinderella Man," in which a real-life boxer's character was slimed in order to make a dramatic point.
Of course there's conflict, or it wouldn't be drama, but there are no two-dimensional straw-man villains.
Instead there are real people, with their own goals and dreams, trying to fit into the real world, trying to get ahead within the context of what seemed possible, and to do it while remaining decent and true to themselves.
Ann Sothern just outdid herself in this, a role that gave her a chance to show strength as well as charm.
The rest of the cast, from "Slapsie Maxie" Rosenbloom, in one of his best roles, to Margaret Moffatt and John Indrisano, the latter two pretty unknown today, to the great George Murphy, were just super.
Honest: You ought to see this one.
It has a few small problems that can be attributed to its time. The flouncy desk clerk is one, but prissy, effeminate desk clerks were a staple of movies for a couple decades. (Alas.)
In a way, the notion that prize fighter Robert Sterling would rather die than continue his life as a blind person is dated, too. But this movie is generally good with disabilities. People are still terrified of blindness, though more is known about it now; and the character of Sterling's mother is in a wheelchair and not treated in at all a condescending fashion.
The idea that a smart, pretty, self-sufficient woman like Sothern's Maisie would chose the (to me) thoroughly unappealing George Murphy over the tender character played by the very handsome Robert Sterling is kind of laughable. And apparently the offscreen Sothern felt that way too, since she and Sterling were married two years after this picture's release.
I still like Maisie but the guys are duds. The girlfriend is a blank. Non of the characters are that compelling although I like Terry for the most part. It's a less than compelling melodrama. The boxing isn't thrilling and quite frankly, I fast forward a lot of that. A grocery store has never sounded more pathetic. I keep thinking that this movie is stuck in mud.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesAnn Sothern and co-star Robert Sterling went on to marry in real life. They were married from 1943 to 1949. This was their only film together.
- Citas
Skeets Maguire: Pickin' up yellow-haired mice when you oughtta be doing your roadwork!
Maisie Ravier: Wait a minute, foul mouth.
- ConexionesFollowed by Maisie Gets Her Man (1942)
- Banda sonoraA Bird in a Gilded Cage
(uncredited)
Music by Harry von Tilzer (1900)
Lyrics by Arthur J. Lamb
Sung by Virginia O'Brien at the Shady Lawn Hotel
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Duración1 hora 35 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1