Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaImpoverished boys get sent to reform school while an adult older brother to one of them gets put on death row - all innocent of their charges.Impoverished boys get sent to reform school while an adult older brother to one of them gets put on death row - all innocent of their charges.Impoverished boys get sent to reform school while an adult older brother to one of them gets put on death row - all innocent of their charges.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Luke Manning
- (as Guinn Williams)
- Policeman Burns
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Also odd are the occasional logical lapses in writing. For instance, when the boy help a truck driver, the police later arrest them because the truck and its contents were stolen. Instead of looking for the driver, they just assumed the boys were guilty despite no real evidence...and they are sent to reform school. Later, the same sort of thing happens when Danny's straight-arrow brother is accused of murder...there really isn't any evidence and so it's up to the boys to get out of reform school and investigate things themselves (in other words, find one of the crooks and beat him up). A rather dopey episode...but at least it isn't one where Muggs (Leo Gorcey) is so obnoxious and unlikable like he is in "Kid Dynamite" and a few other East Side Kids films!
Several points to mention. Note how the popular film star Billy Gilbert as fatso Knobby gets highlighted in the second part. But then he's a funny knock-about too. And, oh my gosh, is that Ann Doran as Dorothy the curvy youthful vamp. I only remember her from her middle-age roles like James Dean's mother in Rebel Without A Cause, (1955), among some 400 other screen credits! And add Douglas Fowley to the list, getting a sympathetic non-villianous role for a change.
Anyway, the flick's not an exceptional one in the Kids series, but does have its share of goofy chuckles. Meanwhile, as dictionary whiz Hall asks, ' Don't you like cinema on your toast'? I sure do, Huntz, especially when I'm munching a cheesy sandwich and watching your incomparable ditz.
Following the montage sequence of New York City's Bowery district, the story introduces the East Side Kids: Muggs Maginnis (Leo Gorcey), the leader; Danny Collins (Bobby Jordan), the "right-hand man," Glimpy Stone (Huntz Hall), the "lefty-hand man," Pee-Wee (David Gorcey), the "Yes" man; Skinny (Bill Lawrence), the "No" man; and Scruno ("Sumshine Sammy" Morrison), the "blackout warden." Almost immediately they run from the law fearing of being accused of breaking a bakery store window; then landing on the back of a truck driven by Nobby (Billy Gilbert) who evicts them after parking on the waterfront pier. At the same time, mobster Luke Manning (Guinn Williams) escapes from Blackwell Island and hides himself in a wine barrel. With the assistance of the East Side Kids, Copler (Warren Hymer) gets their help placing the barrel on the back of the truck driven by Nobby, who has disappeared after seeing a police car approaching. After Danny gives notice to his dock hand working brother, Bill (Douglas Fowley) being admitted into the Army, the East Side Kids get arrested for their involvement with Nobby's truck, reportedly stolen. They are then sentenced to Wilton Reform School where Bill once worked as a guard. Noticing improvements having Jim Barnes (Jack Mulhall) as its new superintendent, and Ann Mitchell (Joan Barclay) as his assistant, Bill finds the place might prove beneficial for both Danny and "Mr. Wise Guy" Muggs, until he finds brutal guard, Jed Miller (Dick Ryan) still in their employ. Things begin to change for Bill when, parked inside his car, being held at gunpoint in the back seat by Luke Manning following a drug store robbery and murder. The police give chase, only to find Bill the only one inside the car after Manning has made his escape. Found guilty and sent to prison to face execution, the East Side Kids discover that Charlie Nolan (Gabriel Dell) might know something that could help prove Bill's innocence. Featuring Bobby Stone ("Chalky" Jones); Ann Doran (Dorothy Melton, Luke's girl); Benny Rubin (The Waiter) and Sidney Miller.
With enough plot and subplot to make this a 90 minute production, being Monogram and not Warner Brothers, naturally scenes had to be briefed for pace purposes rather than story elements. It's a wonder why a brutal guard remains at an "honor system" type reform school after being taken over by those who want to help the boys rather than hurt them. Billy Gilbert, best known for his comedy performances for the Hal Roach/Laurel and Hardy unit, highlights as the double-talking bewildered stooge while Warren Hymer and Guinn Williams, who have played comic gangsters before with conviction, play it straight here. It's with MR. WISE GUY that the name of Ethelbert is revealed in juvenile court to be the birth name of Muggs Maginnis. Fans of the series, however, will overlook weakness and plot holes and simply enjoy for what and how it is.
Available on home video and DVD format, MR. WISE GUY has played on cable channels over the years as Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere: May 17, 2004) and MGM Plus on Demand. Next installment: LET'S GET TOUGH (1942). (**)
Also, Mr. Jordan's supposedly reformed big brother, Douglas Fowley (as Bill Collins) is convicted of murder. Pretty girlfriend Joan Barclay (as Ann Mitchell) and the "kids" think Mr. Fowley is innocent. Bumbling Billy Gilbert (as Knobby) and Guinn Williams (as Luke Manning) are crooked adversaries. Jaw-dropping moments to watch for include: the gang's brief swimsuit scene, Mr. Morrison's "white-wash" after chicken-thieving (he cries out "Deliver me from temptation!" in the coop), and Mr. Ryan's scene-stealing shoe beating.
**** Mr. Wise Guy (2/20/42) William Nigh ~ Leo Gorcey, Bobby Jordan, Billy Gilbert, Dick Ryan
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesGabriel Dell makes his first appearance in the series that his old DeadEnd Gang had started without him. Here he is cast as an adversary named 'Rice Pudding Charlie.' So is Bobby Stone, cast here as Dell's partner in crime, 'Chalky Jones.'
- Erros de gravaçãoAlthough African-American actor Ernest Morrison has plenty of screen time as Scruno (his recurring role in the East Side Kids film series), his name appears nowhere in the credits.
- Citações
Jed Miller - Abusive Reformatory Guard: [reading] Ethelbert McGinnis.
[no response]
Jed Miller - Abusive Reformatory Guard: Ethelbert McGinnis!
Glimpy Stone: "Ethelbert?" Can you imagine a guy with a moniker like that?
Jed Miller - Abusive Reformatory Guard: Which one of you is Ethelbert McGinnis?
Glimpy Stone: Ethelbert? We got a McGinnis, but no Ethelbert.
Jed Miller - Abusive Reformatory Guard: Oh, yes, you have. Now which one of you is it?
Ethelbert 'Muggs' McGinnis: [waking from a nap, hearing the name, sheepishly answers] Oh! What a terrible t'ing. Uhh... I'm... Ethelbert.
Glimpy Stone: [stunned] You? Now I'm completely disillusioned!
Jed Miller - Abusive Reformatory Guard: So you're Ethelbert McGinnis.
Ethelbert 'Muggs' McGinnis: It's kind of a... name, you know? It's been in the family for a long time. Uh, you might call it a skeleton in the family closet. It'd kinda make me very happy if we just kind o'... left it dere and forgot about it.
Jed Miller - Abusive Reformatory Guard: [slowly and cruelly] All right, Ethelbert.
Ethelbert 'Muggs' McGinnis: I wouldn't use that name if I was you. Because my fadda made a mistake don't mean you have to do de same thing.
Jed Miller - Abusive Reformatory Guard: Oh, a little wise guy, ay?
Ethelbert 'Muggs' McGinnis: "Wise Guy." That's it. Call me Mr. Wise Guy.
- ConexõesFollowed by Os Anjos Contra o Dragão (1942)
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração1 hora 10 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1