Ajouter une intrigue dans votre languePrizefighter Jimmy Dolan accidentally kills someone, fleeing to a children's health farm. He bonds with the kids and caretakers, confronting his cynicism. Recognized by a detective, Jimmy mu... Tout lirePrizefighter Jimmy Dolan accidentally kills someone, fleeing to a children's health farm. He bonds with the kids and caretakers, confronting his cynicism. Recognized by a detective, Jimmy must choose - escape or face responsibility.Prizefighter Jimmy Dolan accidentally kills someone, fleeing to a children's health farm. He bonds with the kids and caretakers, confronting his cynicism. Recognized by a detective, Jimmy must choose - escape or face responsibility.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Budgie
- (as Fifi Dorsay)
- Mary Lou
- (as Dawn O'Day)
- Police Inspector Ennis
- (non crédité)
- Well-Wisher
- (non crédité)
- Sheriff
- (non crédité)
- Minor Role
- (non crédité)
- Man on Stairway Giving Directions
- (non crédité)
- Boxing Handler
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Framed for a murder and thought to be dead, an embittered Jimmy D. takes to the lonely road and winds up on a health ranch for invalid children. Run by sad-eyed earth mother Aline MacMahon and the winsome Loretta Young, and populated with the likes of such professional heart-tuggers as Mickey Rooney and Allen "Farina" Hoskins, you can bet that Jimmy's redemption is waiting around the bend. But the film is so sharply written and cunningly played that the shamelessly convenient finale still packs an emotional punch.
With Guy Kibbee as the myopic ex-detective, Lyle Talbot as the crooked manager, and a youthful John Wayne in the antithesis of his macho image as a diffident amateur boxer.
I'm a big fan of Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. who to me always epitomized class and elegance. And because of that, try as he might, he just doesn't come across as a pugilist. John Garfield would have faired no better taking on Fairbanks's kind of roles.
In those early days John Wayne was starring in his own B westerns, but occasionally he would support in another film. The Life of Jimmy Dolan gives you a rare glimpse of the Duke, not as the Duke. He plays an amateur fighter who is with the on-the-run Fairbanks. His scene is in the arena dressing room with Fairbanks as he's trying to psyche himself up for the upcoming bout.
Mickey Rooney plays one of the kids at the ranch run by Loretta Young and her aunt Aline McMahon. In They Made Me a Criminal the ranch was a camp for city kids, in The Life of Jimmy Dolan it is for kids who have infantile paralysis. It was originally started by Young's father who was a doctor and he's passed on, leaving her with kids and a mortgage. Of course in seeking screen properties for the Dead End Kids while they were under Warner Brothers contract, someone had the good idea to dust this one off which they already owned. The Dead End Kids are a little older than the youths here.
Loretta Young does well in her part and I'm convinced she probably helped John Wayne get the part he got. She and her sisters were friendly with the Duke and his first wife. He did a couple of films with Loretta in their salad days. They never worked together once Wayne hit it big in Stagecoach.
Even with the Code restrictions that They Made Me a Criminal had to operate under, I think it is better than The Life of Jimmy Dolan, because of the casting. But they really should be viewed side by side for comparison.
Segment One was a crime story in which the leading character, "Jimmy Dolan" (Douglas Fairbanks Jr.) is shown as a heavyweight champion (at 170 pounds? Well, boxing stories weren't all that realistic on film for many years) who is nothing like his public image. (Hmm...sounds like something familiar, even today). Anyway, a reporter finds out Dolan is not as wholesome as he portrays himself, states he's going to blow the whistle on him and Dolan socks him in the face before he can divulge his "scoop." Unfortunately, the blow kills the man. Without going into other details to ruin it anyone who has not seen this, Dolan winds up on the lam out west in Salt Lake City.
Segment Two is a romance, human--interest story. Loretta Young and Ailine MacMahon are introduced into the film as a young woman-and-aunt who run a ranch for several disable kids who were rescued out of an institution. As things progress, Young falls for Fairbanks, and slowly takes the cynicism out of him. The kids are all pretty entertaining and among them is a very young Mickey Rooney who delivers his lines so naturally you can see why he became a big star at a young age. Anne Shirley is also among the kids.
Segment Three involves a boxing match in which Fairbanks is trying to earn money to help save the ranch for the women and kids. In that segment is a young John Wayne, with a greasy 1950s hairdo! The boxing scenes are almost laughable, but that's okay. We are more interested in what happens than how real it looks. This segment also involves Guy Kibbe, a detective who has been tracking down Fairbanks. I can't say more about him without risking spoiling the ending.
That mixture of crime, suspense, action, romance, drama, family and kids sentiment all make this 87-minute film worth your time.
The nice thing about precode is you're never sure how a film will end. This movie has a toughness about it but also a poignancy.
"The Life of Jimmy Dolan" joins "The Emperor's Candlesticks" and "Remember Last Night" as having longevity water somewhere on the set. Fairbanks, Jr. lived to the age of 90; Loretta Young to 87; Aline MacMahon to 92; Lyle Talbot to 94, and Mickey Rooney, approaching 90, is still with us as of this writing. So you have your "Rebel Without a Cause" and "Blood & Sand," where everyone died young, and films like this. Go figure.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film was shot over a period of 28 days and cost a total of $202,000, according to production notes in the AMPAS Library file on the film.
- GaffesThe police broadcast the license number of Dolan's car in which Woods and Goldie are fleeing (1U-42-91), but it's not the same as the actual license plate of their Lincoln which is visible in several shots (4B72-47). When the car is wrecked, it has changed from a Lincoln to a Ford and now bears the same license number as the one originally broadcast.
- Citations
King Cobra: Then why'd ya come here and fight me for?
Jimmy Dolan: I saw yer picture in the papers, I thought I might like ta be alone with ya.
- ConnexionsVersion of Je suis un criminel (1939)
- Bandes originalesHow Deep Is the Ocean?
(1932) (uncredited)
Music by Irving Berlin
In the score often as a love theme between Jimmy and Peggy
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Life of Jimmy Dolan?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Kid's Last Fight
- Lieux de tournage
- Agoura Ranch, Californie, États-Unis(Photographs)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 202 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée1 heure 28 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1