Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThree successful Irish brothers cross paths in a very unexpected way.Three successful Irish brothers cross paths in a very unexpected way.Three successful Irish brothers cross paths in a very unexpected way.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Katherine Perry
- Kathleen Doyle
- (as Kathryn Perry)
Walter MacNamara
- Patrick Doyle
- (as Walter McNamara)
Edwin August
- Henchman Mac
- (sin créditos)
Irving Bacon
- Henchman Slim
- (sin créditos)
George Beranger
- Villain
- (sin créditos)
Tyrone Brereton
- Villain
- (sin créditos)
June Clyde
- Judy - the Singer
- (sin créditos)
Heinie Conklin
- Drunk at Party
- (sin créditos)
Al Hill
- Henchman Blondie
- (sin créditos)
George Raft
- Georgie Ames - the Dancer
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Though released at a time when all-talking pictures were the norm (Sept 1929), the recording and static camera technique mar an otherwise fascinating glimpse of the Moore brothers together.
Tom, Matt and Owen Moore play the three sons of Mr. and Mrs. O'Farrell, an oh-so-Irish couple living modestly in Manhattan. The O'Farrells express pride in their apparently successful sons as they prepare for a family get-together. This opening reel is an unmoving camera shot with ma and pa discussing each child and is rough going as Frank Sheridan (pa) and Emma Dunn (ma) speak with such thick brogue that the dialog is difficult to follow. This left my eyes wandering to the chandelier and the big black microphone clearly visible there. Placed far above the actors, the echoes it captured render many lines unintelligible.
As the sons arrive, the film's pace picks up. Jimmy (Tom Moore) is a uniformed cop, fresh to the force and following his father's policeman footsteps. John (Matt Moore) appears as ambulance surgeon, humble and soft-spoken. Last to show is the slick Dennis (Owen Moore), unknown to all as living a secret life as Mueller, the town's biggest gangster. The family scenes are good, and the picture improves consistently from this point on. I won't spoil a familiar plot, but Jimmy the cop makes detective and is assigned to investigate (brother) Mueller's gang. The Moore brother scenes are naturalistic and satisfying.
But, as the camera set-ups increase, so do the sound goofs. During one scene, you will hear things being moved around off-camera. Another unbilled performer is one of those big exhaust fans so prevalent before air conditioning. Clearly heard above the dialog, and with two scenes, it should have received a screen credit!
This is, however, the only chance to see Tom, Matt and Owen together on-screen, and that is worth the film's cinematic shortcomings. Tom and Matt would appear together in 1930's Costello Case and Woman Racket, but they would all fade into obscurity as the sound era took hold and brought fresh faces from Eastern theater stages. Tom, who would live until 1955, disappeared from the screen by 1938, and his talkie zenith is 1934's Return Of Chandu. Matt starred in 1933's Deluge, but would be more accessible in Rain (1932) as Dr. MacPhail. He ecked out a living in film as an uncredited character actor until his death in 1960. Most famous of the three was the hard-drinking Owen Moore. Owen married Mary Pickford secretly in 1911, their stormy marriage ending in 1920. Owen was slim, dark and didn't look like his other brothers. His casting as the gangster here is perfect, and his performance is very good. Owen is terrific in 1930's Outside The Law as Fingers O'Dell. It's a shame his life and career were cut short by drinking, he died in 1939.
Ironically, Owen's gangster-partner Silk Ruffo is played by Arthur Housman who made his career playing inebriated characters. And here his role is stone cold sober.
Enjoy this early talker from RKO which survives only in its 16mm TV distribution print.
Tom, Matt and Owen Moore play the three sons of Mr. and Mrs. O'Farrell, an oh-so-Irish couple living modestly in Manhattan. The O'Farrells express pride in their apparently successful sons as they prepare for a family get-together. This opening reel is an unmoving camera shot with ma and pa discussing each child and is rough going as Frank Sheridan (pa) and Emma Dunn (ma) speak with such thick brogue that the dialog is difficult to follow. This left my eyes wandering to the chandelier and the big black microphone clearly visible there. Placed far above the actors, the echoes it captured render many lines unintelligible.
As the sons arrive, the film's pace picks up. Jimmy (Tom Moore) is a uniformed cop, fresh to the force and following his father's policeman footsteps. John (Matt Moore) appears as ambulance surgeon, humble and soft-spoken. Last to show is the slick Dennis (Owen Moore), unknown to all as living a secret life as Mueller, the town's biggest gangster. The family scenes are good, and the picture improves consistently from this point on. I won't spoil a familiar plot, but Jimmy the cop makes detective and is assigned to investigate (brother) Mueller's gang. The Moore brother scenes are naturalistic and satisfying.
But, as the camera set-ups increase, so do the sound goofs. During one scene, you will hear things being moved around off-camera. Another unbilled performer is one of those big exhaust fans so prevalent before air conditioning. Clearly heard above the dialog, and with two scenes, it should have received a screen credit!
This is, however, the only chance to see Tom, Matt and Owen together on-screen, and that is worth the film's cinematic shortcomings. Tom and Matt would appear together in 1930's Costello Case and Woman Racket, but they would all fade into obscurity as the sound era took hold and brought fresh faces from Eastern theater stages. Tom, who would live until 1955, disappeared from the screen by 1938, and his talkie zenith is 1934's Return Of Chandu. Matt starred in 1933's Deluge, but would be more accessible in Rain (1932) as Dr. MacPhail. He ecked out a living in film as an uncredited character actor until his death in 1960. Most famous of the three was the hard-drinking Owen Moore. Owen married Mary Pickford secretly in 1911, their stormy marriage ending in 1920. Owen was slim, dark and didn't look like his other brothers. His casting as the gangster here is perfect, and his performance is very good. Owen is terrific in 1930's Outside The Law as Fingers O'Dell. It's a shame his life and career were cut short by drinking, he died in 1939.
Ironically, Owen's gangster-partner Silk Ruffo is played by Arthur Housman who made his career playing inebriated characters. And here his role is stone cold sober.
Enjoy this early talker from RKO which survives only in its 16mm TV distribution print.
Despite the negativity of other reviews, I enjoyed everything in this movie except the disgusting old reprobate drunks. I give all movies from 1929 a break because of the intense pressure that all of the participants were under. This was a difficult time for many reasons but they did the best they could and I do not mind extraneous sounds and not so hidden microphones. Acting styles were in a state of transition and just getting any sound at all on film was an amazing feat. A wonderful treat to see all three Moore brothers together and of course George Raft was a fine hoofer. Wish I could have been there to see this in that wonderful year!
SIDE STREET (RKO Radio, 1929), written and directed by Malcolm St. Clair, is an early talkie starring natural Irish brothers playing fictional Irish siblings. Starring the Moore Brothers (not the Marx Brothers) featuring Tom, Owen and Matt, it's a dramatic story filmed like a stage play set in apartments with limited intercut street scenes and no underscoring, not even during the opening and closing credits. In spite of these handicaps for anyone accustomed for more improved methods found through the development in latter sound movies, SIDE STREET is something to consider for what it has to offer: all dialogue, a dancing sequence performed by the uncredited future star actor by the name of George Raft.
Set in New York City, the plot development begins in the apartment of the O'Farrell family: Mr. O'Farrell (Frank Sheridan), retired police officer with wife, Nora (Emma Dunn), devoted mother of three grown sons: Jimmy (Tom Moore), a policeman; John (Matt Moore), educated in medical school with the help of his older brother, Dennis (Owen Moore), a piano player and businessman by profession. With Jimmy discussing with his father about gangland killings headed by mobster Barney Muller, a shooting occurs during their dinner gathering outside their building. Jim Burke, a friend of the family is identified and believed to be the murder victim by the Muller mob. Engaged to Kathleen Doyle (Kathryn Perry), Jimmy finally gets his promotion to plainclothesman detective with his first assignment being the investigation on the Muller case. As Kathleen returns home with her friend Bunny (Mildred Harris), they are invited by Max Kimball (Charles Byer) to attend a Park Avenue cocktail party. While here, Kathleen not only meets up with the notorious Barney Muller, so does John arriving on ambulance duty to take in Pinky (Dan Wolheim), an injured guest with skull fracture to the hospital. For reasons of their own, both decide to keep Muller's identity a secret from Jimmy.
Other members in the cast include Arthur Housman, Walter McNamara, Al Hill, Heinie Conklin and Raymond Turner. Aside from the story coming to life with the presence of then unknown George Raft (as Georgie Ames), there's nice vocalization by June Clyde (as Judy) with chorus girls dancing to "Take a Look at Her Now." Aside from George Raft's solo dancing in the best George Raft style, he does have some spoken dialogue in the story as well set during the cocktail party sequence. How fortunate SIDE STREET has survived intact all these years or else it would have never been known that George Raft ever appeared in this virtually unknown production.
With the careers of the three Moore brothers dating back to the earliest days of the silent era, their transition to talkies were well established, but by 1929 they were no longer popular individual leading men as they were back decades ago.
Probably due to primitive production style of spoken dialogue echoes and lack of marquee names by today's standards have limited SIDE STREET from ever being televised. Regardless of its age, SIDE STREET does have some interesting touches found in early talkies, namely an individual scene where two brothers are conversing while the other is on telephone in the background, hearing all three voices talking over one another, making it evident that talkies are here to stay.
Never distributed on video cassette nor DVD format, SIDE STREET did have some limited cable television broadcasts over the years: American Movie Classics (1988-1991) and Turner Classic Movies. Story material might have proved beneficial had SIDE STREET been remade as a second feature in the late thirties possibly casting Preston Foster in the lead, with better film-making technology and pacing that would have improved over its original. As it stands now, this is the one and only. (**1/2)
Set in New York City, the plot development begins in the apartment of the O'Farrell family: Mr. O'Farrell (Frank Sheridan), retired police officer with wife, Nora (Emma Dunn), devoted mother of three grown sons: Jimmy (Tom Moore), a policeman; John (Matt Moore), educated in medical school with the help of his older brother, Dennis (Owen Moore), a piano player and businessman by profession. With Jimmy discussing with his father about gangland killings headed by mobster Barney Muller, a shooting occurs during their dinner gathering outside their building. Jim Burke, a friend of the family is identified and believed to be the murder victim by the Muller mob. Engaged to Kathleen Doyle (Kathryn Perry), Jimmy finally gets his promotion to plainclothesman detective with his first assignment being the investigation on the Muller case. As Kathleen returns home with her friend Bunny (Mildred Harris), they are invited by Max Kimball (Charles Byer) to attend a Park Avenue cocktail party. While here, Kathleen not only meets up with the notorious Barney Muller, so does John arriving on ambulance duty to take in Pinky (Dan Wolheim), an injured guest with skull fracture to the hospital. For reasons of their own, both decide to keep Muller's identity a secret from Jimmy.
Other members in the cast include Arthur Housman, Walter McNamara, Al Hill, Heinie Conklin and Raymond Turner. Aside from the story coming to life with the presence of then unknown George Raft (as Georgie Ames), there's nice vocalization by June Clyde (as Judy) with chorus girls dancing to "Take a Look at Her Now." Aside from George Raft's solo dancing in the best George Raft style, he does have some spoken dialogue in the story as well set during the cocktail party sequence. How fortunate SIDE STREET has survived intact all these years or else it would have never been known that George Raft ever appeared in this virtually unknown production.
With the careers of the three Moore brothers dating back to the earliest days of the silent era, their transition to talkies were well established, but by 1929 they were no longer popular individual leading men as they were back decades ago.
Probably due to primitive production style of spoken dialogue echoes and lack of marquee names by today's standards have limited SIDE STREET from ever being televised. Regardless of its age, SIDE STREET does have some interesting touches found in early talkies, namely an individual scene where two brothers are conversing while the other is on telephone in the background, hearing all three voices talking over one another, making it evident that talkies are here to stay.
Never distributed on video cassette nor DVD format, SIDE STREET did have some limited cable television broadcasts over the years: American Movie Classics (1988-1991) and Turner Classic Movies. Story material might have proved beneficial had SIDE STREET been remade as a second feature in the late thirties possibly casting Preston Foster in the lead, with better film-making technology and pacing that would have improved over its original. As it stands now, this is the one and only. (**1/2)
This is an interesting little family drama around three Irish brothers...one is a police officer, John, one is a doctor, Jimmy, and the third is a bootlegging gangster(but the family doesn't know because he is operating under a pseudonym)-Denny. The three converge for family dinners with their parents, Mrs. Nora 'Farrell and Mr. Tom 'Farrell, who are loving and supportive. John gets promoted to detective and gets engaged with his girl friend, Kathleen Doyle...which causes quite the family conundrum as Kathleen has accidentally met Denny under his pseudonym and John has been given his first task as detective to take him down. Not knowing that Kathleen is John's fiancé, Denny puts out a hit on Kathleen. But Jimmy is the first to find out who Denny is as his pseudonym...when he is called to his apartment for an injured man post a fight at one of his cocktail parties.
"He hasn't got enough blarney to win a girl like you"
"Cut out the Sherlock Holmes stuff you're off duty."- Denny
"The only place a man is safe nowadays is in jail."
I didn't quite know where this story was going, but I knew it wouldn't be good. I do find it interesting that the brothers collectively choose to lie to their parents. I'm also kind of glad that no innocents were taken out. This is the only film I have ever seen that starred three actual Irish brothers...playing three Irish brothers! The three Moore siblings had all achieved acting fame and I think this might be the only film containing all three together. It was fun to see George Raft have a little cameo, I didn't know he could dance! This was kind of a b-track for me, but it was enjoyable.
"He hasn't got enough blarney to win a girl like you"
"Cut out the Sherlock Holmes stuff you're off duty."- Denny
"The only place a man is safe nowadays is in jail."
I didn't quite know where this story was going, but I knew it wouldn't be good. I do find it interesting that the brothers collectively choose to lie to their parents. I'm also kind of glad that no innocents were taken out. This is the only film I have ever seen that starred three actual Irish brothers...playing three Irish brothers! The three Moore siblings had all achieved acting fame and I think this might be the only film containing all three together. It was fun to see George Raft have a little cameo, I didn't know he could dance! This was kind of a b-track for me, but it was enjoyable.
I give this 7/10 stars when compared with other early talking films. The dialogue flows well and it has an interesting plot with a few interesting footnotes. First off, the three Irish-American O'Farrell brothers are played by three Irish American brothers - Tom, Owen, and Matt Moore. Jimmy (Tom Moore) is a cop, John (Matt Moore) is an emergency room doctor, and Dennis (Owen Moore) tells his family he is a businessman when actually he is a big time gangster and bootlegger. Another footnote - look closely when Dennis O'Farrell is in his speakeasy. That is George Raft dancing to "Take a Look at Her Now" as the chorus girls back him up. Other than a couple of throw-away lines, though, that is all Raft does in the entire film. Finally, Emma Dunn, who plays Nora O'Farrell, mother of the three boys, is anywhere from only nine to 14 years older than the actors that play her sons yet does indeed look and act old enough to be their mother.
The story moves slowly at first - the older O'Farrells are proud of their three boys as they all sit down to dinner. It appears that the older O'Farrells are retired and probably their sons are supporting them in their old age, as was the custom at the time. Dennis has a completely different name that he is known as when he is living his "other life" as a criminal. His criminal associates do not know his real name or his origin in order to shield his family from any criminal reprisals. Likewise he has one brother - the cop - who wants to hunt his criminal alias down and arrest him, and another brother that is constantly seeing the emergency cases that are the results of his gang's shootouts. Thus Dennis has a lot of balls in the air and can never let his guard down. However he is managing to keep this juggling act going until the night that one drunk at his speakeasy cracks another drunk in the head and the doctor sent from the hospital is his brother John, and one of the girls that visits the speakeasy that same night with her friend turns out to be the girl that his brother Jimmy plans to marry.
Notice that what makes it possible for Dennis and all other 20's gangsters to become rich - Prohibition - isn't taken seriously by anyone. When Dennis brings a bottle of good booze to his parents' house as a gift on Thanksgiving, his dad and his friend have no problem with getting sauced even with dad's son the cop in the house who just smiles and finds the whole situation amusing.
I'd recommend this one if you have even the slightest interest in and tolerance for the early talking films. It is actually entertaining and not just a curio and shows what RKO had a talent for in its earliest days - showing rather ordinary people caught up in extraordinary circumstances.
The story moves slowly at first - the older O'Farrells are proud of their three boys as they all sit down to dinner. It appears that the older O'Farrells are retired and probably their sons are supporting them in their old age, as was the custom at the time. Dennis has a completely different name that he is known as when he is living his "other life" as a criminal. His criminal associates do not know his real name or his origin in order to shield his family from any criminal reprisals. Likewise he has one brother - the cop - who wants to hunt his criminal alias down and arrest him, and another brother that is constantly seeing the emergency cases that are the results of his gang's shootouts. Thus Dennis has a lot of balls in the air and can never let his guard down. However he is managing to keep this juggling act going until the night that one drunk at his speakeasy cracks another drunk in the head and the doctor sent from the hospital is his brother John, and one of the girls that visits the speakeasy that same night with her friend turns out to be the girl that his brother Jimmy plans to marry.
Notice that what makes it possible for Dennis and all other 20's gangsters to become rich - Prohibition - isn't taken seriously by anyone. When Dennis brings a bottle of good booze to his parents' house as a gift on Thanksgiving, his dad and his friend have no problem with getting sauced even with dad's son the cop in the house who just smiles and finds the whole situation amusing.
I'd recommend this one if you have even the slightest interest in and tolerance for the early talking films. It is actually entertaining and not just a curio and shows what RKO had a talent for in its earliest days - showing rather ordinary people caught up in extraordinary circumstances.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe first film to star Tom Moore, Matt Moore, and Owen Moore together, who were brothers who had all achieved stardom separately in silent films.
- Citas
Jimmy O'Farrell: Hello, Patrick. How are you tonight?
Patrick Doyle: Well, I'm better than I was before I was as bad as I am now.
- Bandas sonorasNocturne No. 2 in E-Flat Minor, Op. 9 No.2
(1830-1) (uncredited)
Written by Frédéric Chopin
Played on piano by Owen Moore
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Forty-Ninth Street
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 14 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.20 : 1
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By what name was Side Street (1929) officially released in India in English?
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