Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA young girl is left with the notoriously cheap Sorrowful Jones as a marker for a bet. Her father disappears and he learns that taking care of her cramps his free-wheeling life. Sorrowful mu... Leggi tuttoA young girl is left with the notoriously cheap Sorrowful Jones as a marker for a bet. Her father disappears and he learns that taking care of her cramps his free-wheeling life. Sorrowful must evade gangsters and do some horse-thieving.A young girl is left with the notoriously cheap Sorrowful Jones as a marker for a bet. Her father disappears and he learns that taking care of her cramps his free-wheeling life. Sorrowful must evade gangsters and do some horse-thieving.
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- 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura in totale
- Happy - the Mortician
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- Jack - Bettor on Green Demon
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- Agnes 'Happy Hips' Noonan
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- Horse Player
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- First Jockey
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- Psychiatrist
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Recensioni in evidenza
I didn't always think Hope was funny but this movie had a lot of laughs, a great story and a cute kid. It isn't as hokey or dated as most of Hope's films and some of his lines in here are downright clever.
Mary Jane Saunders does a nice imitation of Temple-Margaret O'Brien, a combination of those two child stars. You also get Lucille Ball in here, although she's just okay, nothing hilarious. She does get some good wise-cracks in, however.
This is a solid, underrated comedy. I'm sorry to see I am only the second person to review this film on IMDb. A lot of people are missing out on a funny movie.
Here it fails once again to provide BOB HOPE and LUCILLE BALL with anything more than routine roles in this racetrack comedy about an unlikely man to chaperone a kid (MARY JANE SAUNDERS in the role originated by Shirley Temple in "Little Miss Marker"). Saunders is cute, but that's about it. She's no Temple and never went on to child star stardom as Temple did.
Sidney Lanfield directed a lot of lightweight films for Paramount, not all of them successful, and this has to be counted among his least likable comedies--unless, of course, you happen to be a fan of the stars and can watch them in anything.
Hope has some amusing one-liners as the man who takes a marker on a kid who becomes a big part of his life and Lucille Ball has a few quips of her own. Adolphe Menjou played the unsuitable man in the Temple film, with better and more believable results. Hope and Ball are simply killing time here and it shows.
The story, which depends so much on the charisma and appeal of a child star, simply hasn't got the strength to support Hope and Ball. This one's a real loser without the charm of the original.
The girl is a cutie, but she's no Shirley Temple. This is very much Bob Hope's movie and he's good at doing this character. Lucille Ball is sassy, but she is not doing much more than hitting the ball back to Bob Hope. She is certainly capable. Their back and forth is pretty good. Mostly, this is pretty good.
The story is about a period in the life of the Damon Runyon character, Sorrowful Jones. All of Runyon's characters had colorful names like this, by the way. Jones is a professional gambler--a sharpie with an aluminum heart. First and foremost, he is interested in money and hasn't an ounce of sentiment about him. However, when a poor schnook leaves his four year-old child with Jones, temporarily, Jones is forced to care for the tyke. Sadly, however, her father runs afoul of a mobster and is killed--leaving the kid to either stay with Hope or go to an orphanage. Naturally, the struggle throughout the film is for Hope to show SOME nurturing skills and force down his natural impulse to be a money-grubbing jerk. To help him in this process is his on-again/off-again girlfriend played ably by Lucille Ball.
In a goofy twist (and one I didn't care for that much), the child becomes the owner of a racehorse...of sorts. Crooks decide to put the horse in the child's name in an effort to dodge the police--but the child becomes enamored with it. This leads to a schmaltzy portion of the film when the child is hurt and ends up in the hospital. They almost give up hope (not the actor) until Bob gets the idea of sneaking the horse into the hospital (this happens all the time). But, to do this, he has to fight thugs who are intent on killing the horse instead.
All in all, this was not a bad Bob Hope vehicle despite the emphasis on schmaltz instead of humor--though I would have preferred more humor and less sentiment. It's agreeable and cute, though as I said above, some may balk at the fact that the humor, such as it is, is pretty restrained. But, Hope did show that he could handle a role with a bit more to it than his usual characters...just a bit.
By the way, there have been four versions of this film. I haven't seen any of the others, so I cannot compare them. But based on the plot, I'm not in a huge hurry to see the rest. Meh.
FYI---Little Mary Jane Saunders grew up to marry Jay Johnstone, the major league baseball player.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizFirst of four feature films that Bob Hope and Lucille Ball made together.
- BlooperA moving shadow of the boom microphone is visible on the wall as Sorrowful walks up to greet "Happy Hips" Noonan on the street.
- Citazioni
Humphrey 'Sorrowful' Jones: [kneeling next to the bathtub, and has just begun to scrub Martha Jane's back when the doorbell rings] Saved by the bell!
Martha Jane Smith: [enthusiastically] Do you want me to answer it?
Humphrey 'Sorrowful' Jones: Not in that costume.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Bob Hope's Love Affair with Lucy (1989)
- Colonne sonoreHavin' a Wonderful Wish (Time You Were Here)
Music by Jay Livingston
Lyrics by Ray Evans
Sung by Lucille Ball (dubbed by Annette Warren (uncredited))
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 28 minuti
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- 1.37 : 1