Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe boys get mixed up with a race horse and crooked gamblers.The boys get mixed up with a race horse and crooked gamblers.The boys get mixed up with a race horse and crooked gamblers.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
William 'Billy' Benedict
- Whitey
- (as William Benedict)
David Gorcey
- Chuck
- (as David Condon)
Benny Bartlett
- Butch
- (as Bennie Bartlett)
Avis à la une
I'm watching Crazy Over Horses (1951) on TCM right now. The Mahoney Collection Agency goes to work for Louie, and collect a $200 debt owed him by a stable owner. Slip winds up accepting a race horse, My Girl, as payment. Unfortunately, the horse was owned by gambler Duke, who hadn't paid his boarding fees to the stable owner. Duke plans to run My Girl in a race as a ringer for a slower horse, Tarzana. When Slip and Louie won't sell the horse back to Duke, he decides to steal her back by switching her for Tarzana. The slapstick involves both sides switching the horses back and forth until race day. Somehow, Sachs winds up as the jockey in the big race. But which horse is he actually riding?
In Crazy Over Horses (1951, Louie has a female counter employee, Mazie, played by Peggy Wynne. She even has a couple of lines. Chuck (David Gorcey billed as David Condon) and Butch (Benny Bartlett) are on hand as scenery, and Whitey (William Benedict) returns, looking like Louie's older brother. Louie (Bernard Gorcey) has some good scenes. Pretty Gloria Saunders plays Terry, the stable owner's daughter and obligatory female presence. Veteran heavy Ted de Corsica is Duke. And Allen Jenkins is on hand as Weepin' Willie.
Watching Crazy Over Horses (1951) is an OK way to spend a freezing cold Saturday morning, but it's not the best of The Bowery Boys.
In Crazy Over Horses (1951, Louie has a female counter employee, Mazie, played by Peggy Wynne. She even has a couple of lines. Chuck (David Gorcey billed as David Condon) and Butch (Benny Bartlett) are on hand as scenery, and Whitey (William Benedict) returns, looking like Louie's older brother. Louie (Bernard Gorcey) has some good scenes. Pretty Gloria Saunders plays Terry, the stable owner's daughter and obligatory female presence. Veteran heavy Ted de Corsica is Duke. And Allen Jenkins is on hand as Weepin' Willie.
Watching Crazy Over Horses (1951) is an OK way to spend a freezing cold Saturday morning, but it's not the best of The Bowery Boys.
The twenty-fourth Bowery Boys movie has the boys going to collect a debt for Louie and instead getting a race horse, which leads to them getting mixed up with gangsters. They were always mixed up with gangsters, it seems. A funny entry in the series with an increased amount of screen time for the always entertaining Bernard Gorcey as Louie the Sweet Shop owner. His scenes are among the movie's highlights. Leo Gorcey's malapropisms and Huntz Hall's rubberfaced idiocy provide the usual laughs. David Gorcey (now going by David Condon) hangs around in the background rarely speaking. Bennie Bartlett returns to playing Butch after a two-year absence. This is the last Bowery Boys film for William "Whitey" Benedict, who had been with the boys since the Little Tough Guys and East Side Kids days. Allen Jenkins is fun in a supporting role, his second consecutive Bowery Boys film (playing a different character than last time). Lovely Gloria Saunders plays the obligatory pretty girl (every movie in the series seemed to have one). Ted de Corsia is good as the main heavy. The plot is familiar but it doesn't hurt the picture much. The things that work well here (Slip, Sach, Louie) are what I enjoy most about the series.
The Bowery Boys are kind of hit and miss with me. Their weak ones aren't that bad but their good ones are very funny. "Crazy Over Horses" is one of the good ones. I laughed a bit and smiled a lot while watching this movie. What more could I want?
Crazy Over Horses (1951)
** (out of 4)
Rather bland entry in the series has the Louie being owed money by an old friend so he sends the boys out to collect but instead of cash they come back with a horse. It turns out this is a very special horse as gangsters plan on replacing it with a lookalike so that they can have the odds go up on a bad horse and then they'll race the quick one. Number twenty-four (if you're still counting) isn't all that memorable as we get a rather familiar story of the boys getting involved with a crooked scam and nothing here is one bit original or and we've seen it countless times before. The entire movie just had a very lazy feel to it as if everyone involved knew they weren't doing anything overly special and they just mailed everything in. The only sequence that comes off mildly entertaining is one where the boys charge into Louie's restaurant thinking that he has turned the horse into hamburger and what happens to the customer inside the store is pretty funny. Outside of that this is pretty weak all around. The most surprising thing is that the cast pretty much just sleepwalks through things. Leo Gorcey is once again back as Slip but he appears to be bored and many of his mixed up words simply aren't funny or too cleaver here. Huntz Hall continues to grow dumber and dumber but the screenplay really doesn't do him any favors. There's one interesting scene where Gorcey pretty much sends him packing but nothing ever really comes of it. The horse racing scenes are all boring as the supporting cast doesn't help much either and that includes Allen Jenkins in his supporting role. Heck, even Bernard Gorcey comes off rather tame this time out.
** (out of 4)
Rather bland entry in the series has the Louie being owed money by an old friend so he sends the boys out to collect but instead of cash they come back with a horse. It turns out this is a very special horse as gangsters plan on replacing it with a lookalike so that they can have the odds go up on a bad horse and then they'll race the quick one. Number twenty-four (if you're still counting) isn't all that memorable as we get a rather familiar story of the boys getting involved with a crooked scam and nothing here is one bit original or and we've seen it countless times before. The entire movie just had a very lazy feel to it as if everyone involved knew they weren't doing anything overly special and they just mailed everything in. The only sequence that comes off mildly entertaining is one where the boys charge into Louie's restaurant thinking that he has turned the horse into hamburger and what happens to the customer inside the store is pretty funny. Outside of that this is pretty weak all around. The most surprising thing is that the cast pretty much just sleepwalks through things. Leo Gorcey is once again back as Slip but he appears to be bored and many of his mixed up words simply aren't funny or too cleaver here. Huntz Hall continues to grow dumber and dumber but the screenplay really doesn't do him any favors. There's one interesting scene where Gorcey pretty much sends him packing but nothing ever really comes of it. The horse racing scenes are all boring as the supporting cast doesn't help much either and that includes Allen Jenkins in his supporting role. Heck, even Bernard Gorcey comes off rather tame this time out.
In the summary I say that Huntz Hall is more annoying than usual. Well, you expect him to be annoying...but here in "Crazy Over Horses" he's worse than usual. I've seen most of the Bowery Boys' films...and here he's even more grating than you'd expect!
A man owes Louie some money and Louie gets Slip and the guys to go collect. Well, the guy has no money to give but gives them a horse instead...one that had been abandoned long ago. So, they take the horse to Louie...who is NOT pleased to have a race horse in his shop in New York!
It turns out this horse belonged to a group of crooks who were planning on using it to make a killing at the race track. After all, a lousy horse they own is a spitting image of the abandoned one...and the abandoned one has the makings of a champion. So why would they just leave the horse and forget to pay for boarding it? Well, that is a huge hole in the story! What's next? See the film.
The story is watchable but as I've already said, Sach (Huntz Hall) seems to be at his most annoying throughout the film. This combined with a hole-ridden plot, and a tasteless blackface scene (with Hall, of course) make this subpar even for a Bowery Boys outing.
A man owes Louie some money and Louie gets Slip and the guys to go collect. Well, the guy has no money to give but gives them a horse instead...one that had been abandoned long ago. So, they take the horse to Louie...who is NOT pleased to have a race horse in his shop in New York!
It turns out this horse belonged to a group of crooks who were planning on using it to make a killing at the race track. After all, a lousy horse they own is a spitting image of the abandoned one...and the abandoned one has the makings of a champion. So why would they just leave the horse and forget to pay for boarding it? Well, that is a huge hole in the story! What's next? See the film.
The story is watchable but as I've already said, Sach (Huntz Hall) seems to be at his most annoying throughout the film. This combined with a hole-ridden plot, and a tasteless blackface scene (with Hall, of course) make this subpar even for a Bowery Boys outing.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis was Whitey's (William 'Billy' Benedict) last appearance in the series.
- GaffesThe first time the boys bring the horse to the racetrack to retrieve My Girl, Slip says "Whitey, you and Sach switch the horses - and do it with dispatch." Sach replies "I thought we were gonna do it with Tarzana," but there's no way at that point that Sach could have known the other horse is named Tarzana.
- Citations
Terence Aloysius 'Slip' Mahoney: Si'down, make yourselves homely.
- ConnexionsFollowed by Hold That Line (1952)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Jinx Jockey
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 5min(65 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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