Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAfter he undergoes a throat operation, Slip and the gang discover that Sach now possesses a beautiful singing voice and try to figure out how to make money off of it.After he undergoes a throat operation, Slip and the gang discover that Sach now possesses a beautiful singing voice and try to figure out how to make money off of it.After he undergoes a throat operation, Slip and the gang discover that Sach now possesses a beautiful singing voice and try to figure out how to make money off of it.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
William 'Billy' Benedict
- Whitey
- (as William Benedict)
Sailor Vincent
- Teddy Davis
- (as William Vincent)
Gertrude Astor
- Nightclub Patron
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Paul Bradley
- Nightclub Patron
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Steve Carruthers
- Nightclub Patron
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jack Chefe
- Henry - Headwaiter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Tom Coleman
- Bartender
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
BLUES BUSTERS (Monogram, 1950), directed by William Beaudine, the 20th entry to the long running 48 film "Bowery Boys" series, is regarded possibly the most entertaining of its entries. If not the best, then the most different from any film thus far or since. Following the earlier patterns of newspaper stories, "film noir" mysteries or even a hillbilly comedy, BLUES BUSTERS comes across as most original for being classified as a musical. Unlike their earlier "East Side Kids" series (1940-1945), the production values are first rate (though not with the MGM gloss) with good comedy, songs and fine story regardless of this not being highly original.
Naturally set in the Bowery district of New York City, the story starts off with the Bowery Boys: Whitey (Billy Benedict), Chuck (David Gorcey), Butch (Bennie Bartlett), and their ringleader, "Slip" Mahoney (Leo Gorcey), accompanied by their closest friend, Louie Dumbrowski (Bernard Gorcey), owner of Louie's Sweet Shop, visiting the hospital room where their goofy pal, Horace Debussy Jones, better known as "Sach" (Huntz Hall) is recovering from the removal of his tonsils. Later back at the suite shop, the Bowery Boys hear some nice vocalizing not from a radio but from Sach. To help pay back Louie for supplying the hospital expenses for Sach, Slip comes up with an idea of quick cast by showcasing Sach to the crooning sensation of a "Bing Crosby" or "Frank Sinatra." Rejected by Rick Martin (Craig Stevens), owner of the Cabana night club near Louie's, Gabe Moreno (Gabriel Dell), Slip's pal now working as a song plugger, assists the gang by reverting Louie's Sweet Shop into Louie's Bowery Palace. Sach's singing and tap-dancing specialty by Sally Dolan (Phyllis Coates), Slip's girlfriend, soon attracts crowds to standing room only. This forces Martin to lose customers and having his own vocalist, Lola Stanton (Adele Jergens) singing to a near empty night club. With the help of Lola, she manages to engage Sach, now known as "The Bowery Thrush," to go under contact with Martin. In spite of his fame and fortune, Sach lives to regret it. Others in the cast include Paul Bryar, Matty King, William Vincent and Alphonse Martel.
Songs include: "Wasn't It You?" "The Battle of Jerricho," "The Blue Birds Keep Singing in the Rain," "Let's Have a Heart-to-Heart Talk," "The Blue Birds Keep Singing in the Rain" (tap dance solo by Phyllis Coates); "You Walked By," "You Better Be Looking Out for Love," "Let's Have a Heart-to-Heart Talk," "Swanee River," "Dixie" and "The Blue Birds Keep Singing in the Rain" (reprise).
For anyone who has ever seen Eddie Bracken singing like Bing Crosby in the seldom televised OUT OF THIS WORLD (Paramount, 1945) may see similarities between this and BLUES BUSTERS. Naturally the singing voice for Huntz Hall is dubbed but not by the similar sounding Bing Crosby. Although a night club story has some rumbles, there's no Slip Mahoney giving out the signal to his Boys for a "Routine Six." Quite different in format yet change is often good for the advancement of a series such as this. Hall is still amusing but not overly goofy or childlike as he would be in the latter entries. Best moments: Slip trying to sing in Sach's place; and good somber moment between Slip and Sach that doesn't make any disturbance to the story. The finish, however, is true classic in the best Bowery Boys tradition. Of the series regulars, this would become Gabriel Dell's farewell performance as Gabe Moreno.
Available on DVD, BLUES BUSTERS, at 67 minutes, can be seen and enjoyed whenever it turns up on Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere: August 8, 1999). Next installment: BOWERY BATTALION (1951). (***)
Naturally set in the Bowery district of New York City, the story starts off with the Bowery Boys: Whitey (Billy Benedict), Chuck (David Gorcey), Butch (Bennie Bartlett), and their ringleader, "Slip" Mahoney (Leo Gorcey), accompanied by their closest friend, Louie Dumbrowski (Bernard Gorcey), owner of Louie's Sweet Shop, visiting the hospital room where their goofy pal, Horace Debussy Jones, better known as "Sach" (Huntz Hall) is recovering from the removal of his tonsils. Later back at the suite shop, the Bowery Boys hear some nice vocalizing not from a radio but from Sach. To help pay back Louie for supplying the hospital expenses for Sach, Slip comes up with an idea of quick cast by showcasing Sach to the crooning sensation of a "Bing Crosby" or "Frank Sinatra." Rejected by Rick Martin (Craig Stevens), owner of the Cabana night club near Louie's, Gabe Moreno (Gabriel Dell), Slip's pal now working as a song plugger, assists the gang by reverting Louie's Sweet Shop into Louie's Bowery Palace. Sach's singing and tap-dancing specialty by Sally Dolan (Phyllis Coates), Slip's girlfriend, soon attracts crowds to standing room only. This forces Martin to lose customers and having his own vocalist, Lola Stanton (Adele Jergens) singing to a near empty night club. With the help of Lola, she manages to engage Sach, now known as "The Bowery Thrush," to go under contact with Martin. In spite of his fame and fortune, Sach lives to regret it. Others in the cast include Paul Bryar, Matty King, William Vincent and Alphonse Martel.
Songs include: "Wasn't It You?" "The Battle of Jerricho," "The Blue Birds Keep Singing in the Rain," "Let's Have a Heart-to-Heart Talk," "The Blue Birds Keep Singing in the Rain" (tap dance solo by Phyllis Coates); "You Walked By," "You Better Be Looking Out for Love," "Let's Have a Heart-to-Heart Talk," "Swanee River," "Dixie" and "The Blue Birds Keep Singing in the Rain" (reprise).
For anyone who has ever seen Eddie Bracken singing like Bing Crosby in the seldom televised OUT OF THIS WORLD (Paramount, 1945) may see similarities between this and BLUES BUSTERS. Naturally the singing voice for Huntz Hall is dubbed but not by the similar sounding Bing Crosby. Although a night club story has some rumbles, there's no Slip Mahoney giving out the signal to his Boys for a "Routine Six." Quite different in format yet change is often good for the advancement of a series such as this. Hall is still amusing but not overly goofy or childlike as he would be in the latter entries. Best moments: Slip trying to sing in Sach's place; and good somber moment between Slip and Sach that doesn't make any disturbance to the story. The finish, however, is true classic in the best Bowery Boys tradition. Of the series regulars, this would become Gabriel Dell's farewell performance as Gabe Moreno.
Available on DVD, BLUES BUSTERS, at 67 minutes, can be seen and enjoyed whenever it turns up on Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere: August 8, 1999). Next installment: BOWERY BATTALION (1951). (***)
A rather good entry in the series and Horace DeBusey Jones gets a singing voice and the Boys get into the nightclub business. The ladies are beautiful as the Boys play out the film.
The Bowery Boys invade the world of music and nightclubs when after a tonsillectomy which the hapless Bernard Gorcey paid for leaves Huntz Hall with a radio crooner's voice. Naturally Leo Gorcey and the rest of the boys want to capitalize on this if for no other reasons than to pay poor Bernard Gorcey back. They don't want to lose the ambiance of Louis Dumbrowski's Bowery Sweet Shop as a hangout.
But the elder Gorcey gets in far deeper as song plugger Gabriel Dell and Leo get the Sweet Shop owner to turn his place into a nightclub as a showcase for Hall. That doesn't please Craig Stevens who owns a nightclub across the street with his featured singer Adele Jergens, they don't like the competition. That sets up the crazy antics of this Bowery Boys feature.
A few years earlier Eddie Bracken did a comedy at Paramount where he played his usual schnook character who is discovered to have a velvety singing voice. A guy named Crosby was also under contract to Paramount and they dubbed Bing's singing voice to Bracken's songs.
Monogram couldn't afford Bing Crosby so they grabbed a singer named John Lorenz to dub Huntz Hall. I'm sure Mr. Lorenz was like thousands of others who couldn't get a break because he sounded like Bing Crosby. Still he's effective in Blues Busters.
To waste a Crosby voice on Huntz Hall, the shame of it.
But the elder Gorcey gets in far deeper as song plugger Gabriel Dell and Leo get the Sweet Shop owner to turn his place into a nightclub as a showcase for Hall. That doesn't please Craig Stevens who owns a nightclub across the street with his featured singer Adele Jergens, they don't like the competition. That sets up the crazy antics of this Bowery Boys feature.
A few years earlier Eddie Bracken did a comedy at Paramount where he played his usual schnook character who is discovered to have a velvety singing voice. A guy named Crosby was also under contract to Paramount and they dubbed Bing's singing voice to Bracken's songs.
Monogram couldn't afford Bing Crosby so they grabbed a singer named John Lorenz to dub Huntz Hall. I'm sure Mr. Lorenz was like thousands of others who couldn't get a break because he sounded like Bing Crosby. Still he's effective in Blues Busters.
To waste a Crosby voice on Huntz Hall, the shame of it.
I'm watching this one right now on TCM. Sach has his tonsils removed and suddenly finds that he can sing like Bing Crosby. Wonder why things like that never happened to Whitey? Rick Martin, the owner of the nightclub across the street from Louie's Sweet Shop, won't give Sach an audition and has Slip and Sach thrown out. The Boys turn the sweet shop into a night club with Sach, The Bowery Thrush, as the main attraction. Professional song plugger Gabe Moreno provides the publicity. Naturally, Rick across the street doesn't like the competition and is determined to get rid of it, one way or the other.
Gorgeous Adele Jergens and pretty Phyllis Coates provide the female touch. Phyllis is Slip's latest girlfriend. In a few years, she would become the first Lois Lane on the Superman TV series. Adele plays a singer at the rival night club and belts out "Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho" at the beginning of the movie. Both ladies really brighten "Bowery Blues." It's well worth watching.
Gorgeous Adele Jergens and pretty Phyllis Coates provide the female touch. Phyllis is Slip's latest girlfriend. In a few years, she would become the first Lois Lane on the Superman TV series. Adele plays a singer at the rival night club and belts out "Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho" at the beginning of the movie. Both ladies really brighten "Bowery Blues." It's well worth watching.
Huntz gets a rare chance to show his serious side, and the result is an absorbing study into how much latent talent there always was within the Bowery Boys troupe.
Bernard and Leo Gorcey along with Huntz make a great comic film trio indeed. But in 'Blues Busters', Huntz becomes a teen singing idol following a tonsillectomy which changes his voice to a rich baritone a la Bing Crosby. (There's flawless dubbing to the real voice of John Lorenz.) Louie's Sweet Shoppe is transformed into a nightclub, as Louis Dumbrowsky and the Boys attempt to capitalize on Sach's newly-developed gift of song.
The great title tune "Bluebirds Keep Singing in the Rain" and other ditties make 'Blues Busters' a rare and offbeat must-see entry in the Bowery Boys saga, and will be a reminder of the great old moviegoing days when you left the theatre humming.
Highly recommended to all.
Bernard and Leo Gorcey along with Huntz make a great comic film trio indeed. But in 'Blues Busters', Huntz becomes a teen singing idol following a tonsillectomy which changes his voice to a rich baritone a la Bing Crosby. (There's flawless dubbing to the real voice of John Lorenz.) Louie's Sweet Shoppe is transformed into a nightclub, as Louis Dumbrowsky and the Boys attempt to capitalize on Sach's newly-developed gift of song.
The great title tune "Bluebirds Keep Singing in the Rain" and other ditties make 'Blues Busters' a rare and offbeat must-see entry in the Bowery Boys saga, and will be a reminder of the great old moviegoing days when you left the theatre humming.
Highly recommended to all.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe song "Let's Have a Heart to Heart Talk" - apparently sung by Huntz Hall - was actually dubbed by John Laurenz (1909 - 1958).
- BlooperAs with many movies made before the late 1950s, this one features a vacuum tube driven radio that comes to life immediately when it is turned on. In reality, vacuum tube devices took several seconds to warm up before any audio could be heard.
- Citazioni
Slip Mahoney: [after Sach loses his voice] Dis is the woist thing that's happened since television!
- ConnessioniFollowed by Bowery Battalion (1951)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- The Bowery Thrush
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 7min(67 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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