अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंThe gang teams up with a fighter to break up a fight-fixing racket.The gang teams up with a fighter to break up a fight-fixing racket.The gang teams up with a fighter to break up a fight-fixing racket.
- निर्देशक
- लेखक
- स्टार
William 'Billy' Benedict
- Whitey
- (as Billy Benedict)
Evelynne Eaton
- Bunny Talbot
- (as Evelynn Eaton)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
I have watched a few Bowry Boys films here or there, but I am hardly someone you would call a fan. For every decent one of their films I've seen, I've probably seen two others that were rather poor. But I do have to give them credit where credit's due, as "Fighting Fools" is actually pretty good. Sure, it has a bunch of boxing clichés but the overall effort is very watchable.
Slip and the gang are horrified when one of their friends is beaten to death in a boxing match. They promise to try to help the guy's mother and little brother and so they stage a boxing match, on the level, to raise money for them. At the same time, Slip announces that the dead guy's brother, Johnny (Frankie Darro), will come out of retirement and he'll eventually be battling for the title. Considering he never asked Johnny, this IS a rather bold announcement. Eventually, however, he convinces Johnny and Johnny's mother and Slip and the gang manage the fighter. However, a evil jerk and his 'associates' are determined to control the fight industry and are not above cheating to hang on to the ill-gotten title.
Slip and the gang are exactly what you'd expect in the film...though (fortunately) a bit restrained. The acting aside from them is good and the story, while familiar, is well handled. Entertaining and a nice time-passer.
Slip and the gang are horrified when one of their friends is beaten to death in a boxing match. They promise to try to help the guy's mother and little brother and so they stage a boxing match, on the level, to raise money for them. At the same time, Slip announces that the dead guy's brother, Johnny (Frankie Darro), will come out of retirement and he'll eventually be battling for the title. Considering he never asked Johnny, this IS a rather bold announcement. Eventually, however, he convinces Johnny and Johnny's mother and Slip and the gang manage the fighter. However, a evil jerk and his 'associates' are determined to control the fight industry and are not above cheating to hang on to the ill-gotten title.
Slip and the gang are exactly what you'd expect in the film...though (fortunately) a bit restrained. The acting aside from them is good and the story, while familiar, is well handled. Entertaining and a nice time-passer.
Fighting Fools (1949) has a much more serious tone than the usual slapstick hijinks seen in the other BB movies. It opens with the Boys working as vendors at a boxing match. Their friend, Jimmy Higgins, takes a bad beating beating and dies in the ring. Sach and Slip find Jimmy's brother, Johnny, to tell him the bad news. Johnny was a promising fighter until he was double crossed by crooked hoodlum/gambler manager Blinky Harris and lost his will to box. Now he's living on skid row and is down and out. Slip convinces him to get back in shape and make a comeback. With Slip, Sach, and the other boys holding workouts in Louie's Sweet Shop Johnny becomaes a real contender. Sports reporter Gabe Moreno gives the Boys good coverage in the newspaper. But will blinks Harris interfere with Johnny's march to the title?
There's not much comedy in this one. It's mostly a regular B-movie boxing drama. It's definitely not the typical Bowery boys flick.
Frankie Darrow plays Johnny and he fits right in with the Bowery Boys. Gabriel Dell is Gabe and he was always a positive addition to these movies. Lyle Talbot is properly nasty as Blinky Harris.
Check the credits for John Indrisano as the boxing coordinator. John fought as a welterweight from 1923-1934. He had a record of 64-9-4. The Ring Boxing magazine once called him "The Uncrowned Champion of the World." He worked as a driver and bodyguard for Mae West. John was also friends with Frank Sinatra and appeared in five of his movies. He trained most of the big male stars for roles in which they played a boxer. John died at the age of 62, apparently a suicide by hanging.
Fighting Fools (1949) is enjoyable as long as the viewer doesn't expect to see the usual comedy routines of the boys.
There's not much comedy in this one. It's mostly a regular B-movie boxing drama. It's definitely not the typical Bowery boys flick.
Frankie Darrow plays Johnny and he fits right in with the Bowery Boys. Gabriel Dell is Gabe and he was always a positive addition to these movies. Lyle Talbot is properly nasty as Blinky Harris.
Check the credits for John Indrisano as the boxing coordinator. John fought as a welterweight from 1923-1934. He had a record of 64-9-4. The Ring Boxing magazine once called him "The Uncrowned Champion of the World." He worked as a driver and bodyguard for Mae West. John was also friends with Frank Sinatra and appeared in five of his movies. He trained most of the big male stars for roles in which they played a boxer. John died at the age of 62, apparently a suicide by hanging.
Fighting Fools (1949) is enjoyable as long as the viewer doesn't expect to see the usual comedy routines of the boys.
"The Bowery Boys" are hanging around the ring again, with chief Leo Gorcey (as Slip Mahoney) passing out boxing programs. Hot dog vendor Huntz Hall (as Sach), ice cream dispenser William "Billy" Benedict (as Whitey), ice cold drink holder David Gorcey (as Chuck), and popcorn salesman Benny "Bennie" Bartlett (as Butch) are also on hand. The plot involves Gorcey and the gang helping semi-regular Frankie Darro (as Johnny Higgins) crawl out of the gutter and back into the boxing ring, after his star brother suffers a terminal knockout.
With its recycling plot and characters, "Fighting Fools" is comfortable if not special. Mr. Darro does nicely with an uncommon (by this time) amount of story focus and screen time. Director Reginald Le Borg did very well with his short stint guiding the Bowery series; his just released "Trouble Makers" was good, and the forthcoming "Hold That Baby!" would be even better.
***** Fighting Fools (3/17/49) Reginald Le Borg ~ Frankie Darro, Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Teddy Infuhr
With its recycling plot and characters, "Fighting Fools" is comfortable if not special. Mr. Darro does nicely with an uncommon (by this time) amount of story focus and screen time. Director Reginald Le Borg did very well with his short stint guiding the Bowery series; his just released "Trouble Makers" was good, and the forthcoming "Hold That Baby!" would be even better.
***** Fighting Fools (3/17/49) Reginald Le Borg ~ Frankie Darro, Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Teddy Infuhr
Leo gorcey and huntz hall were now called the bowery boys, since the mid 1940s. And like so many others in the 1940s and 1950s, they had to make a film about corruption in the fights. Althought their's will undoubtedly have more humor than (any of) the others. Hollywood star lyle talbot is blinky, the crooked manager, handling the fixed fights. Gorcey's dad bernard is in this one, along with leo's brother david. When slip's friend dies in the ring, they talk johnny into going back into the ring to fight an honest fight, with the winnings going to the dead guy's family. The usual word play and tongue twisting, for humor. It's all in good fun. But of course, the thug managers have more tricks up their sleeves than to just let johnny take the fight without trickery and deceit. Can slip and johnny figure out what happened, and explain it to the commissioner? There's a serious story here, with a minimal amount of silliness and pratfalls in this one. It's good. Totally predictable, but good. Free on tubi streaming. Directed by reginald le borg. He made a bunch of the joe palooka films, and a real mish-mash of other films.
Thirteenth movie in Monogram's Bowery Boys series is another one with boxing as part of the plot. The last one was Mr. Hex, which saw Sach hypnotized into becoming a great prizefighter. This time none of the Boys enter the ring, but rather they help out a friend whose brother was killed in the boxing ring in a fight rigged up by racketeers. The friend is played by Frankie Darro, who returns for the second Bowery Boys movie in a row (playing a different character). The Boys help Darro train to fight and get vengeance for his brother. The regular cast is enjoyable in this entry that's a little heavier than the typical film in this series. Gabriel Dell plays a reporter in one of his more likable Bowery Boys appearances. Lyle Talbot is the gangster villain and he's solid as usual. Bernard Gorcey is fun as Louie ("Long live Louie's Sweet Shop!"). But this one really belongs to Frankie Darro, who turns in one of his better performances since his 1930s classics like "Wild Boys of the Road" and "The Mayor of Hell." The dramatics here work well but I will admit to being disappointed that there wasn't more comedy. I watch the Bowery Boys for laughs, after all. Also, the boxing backdrop is pretty played out even by 1949 standards. Still, I can't imagine many fans of the series hating this one.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe thirteenth of forty-eight Bowery Boys movies released from 1946 to 1958.
- गूफ़At the Higgins' apartment, Slip toasts Johnny with a glass of clear uncarbonated liquid. Satch says something stupid, prompting Slip to throw the liquid in his face. Satch licks his lips and says (probably ad-lib) "Cream soda," but cream soda is usually reddish-brown, which would look dark in a B&W film.
- भाव
Terence Aloysius 'Slip' Mahoney: [announcing a fight] All I can say is may the best gladiator submoige victorious. I thank you.
- कनेक्शनFollowed by Hold That Baby! (1949)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Bowery Comeback
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- उत्पादन कंपनी
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 9 मिनट
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.37 : 1
इस पेज में योगदान दें
किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें