Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaSlip and Sach mistakenly enlist in the Air Force where Sach is mistakenly assigned to the WACs.Slip and Sach mistakenly enlist in the Air Force where Sach is mistakenly assigned to the WACs.Slip and Sach mistakenly enlist in the Air Force where Sach is mistakenly assigned to the WACs.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
David Gorcey
- Chuck
- (as David Condon)
Benny Bartlett
- Butch
- (as Bennie Bartlett)
John Breen
- Man in Office
- (não creditado)
Conrad Brooks
- Recruit
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Sach is pretending to be a flyboy. Neighborhood friend Dave Moreno is a real flyboy. Only he's stealing rocket secrets and gets caught. Slip and Sach are sure that he's innocent. They go to the base to support him, but they mistakenly end up in the recruitment office. They stupidly sign up for the Air Force. Sach has the same name as a female recruit and gets wrongly sent to the WACs.
This one has Sach with a bunch of beautiful babes. Let the comedic chaos begin. It's all low hanging fruits and they are too happy to pick them. WAC is the Army. WAF for the Air Force was formed in 1948. I want more with the babes and less of the espionage. They could have given more lines to the girls. There are planes and the guys get to fly one. I guess that's funny.
This one has Sach with a bunch of beautiful babes. Let the comedic chaos begin. It's all low hanging fruits and they are too happy to pick them. WAC is the Army. WAF for the Air Force was formed in 1948. I want more with the babes and less of the espionage. They could have given more lines to the girls. There are planes and the guys get to fly one. I guess that's funny.
Positively INSANE.
This was the second episode directed by Edward Bernds, who was brought in as "new blood" to see how he could upgrade the series, as opposed to long time director William Beaudine. Bernds also wrote material for the series, and with many funny ideas, associated with the THREE STOOGES. In fact, as the last reviewer noted, you'll see a lot of typical Stooge antics (tailored for Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall) in subsequent episodes.
As a result, CLIPPED WINGS has been regarded as one of the funniest Bowery Boys films. It received many positive reviews, more than likely because it was fast-paced and loaded with terrific dialogue, if not more of Gorcey's classic malprops.
This time around, the guys join the Air Force --accidentally-- because their old pal Dave Moreno is being held for treason?
Writers Charles Marion and Elwood Ullman may have originally written the role for Gabe Dell, who had left the series a few years earlier. Perhaps it was wishful thinking. Gabe had moved on to serious stage work on Broadway, later to return in tv and movies.
The big gag here is a case of mistaken identity, which was a familiar occurance for Sach. In this case, a female cadet called H Jones is confused with Sach (Horace Jones) and he's immediately assigned to the all female WAF barracks! There he meets NO nonsense, by the book Sergeant Anderson (played to the hilt by Renie Riano). Renie was a veteran actress, appearing in scores of popular films, later with ABBOTT AND COSTELLO.
It turns out Dave Moreno is actually being used by the military as bait to lure and expose a nest of spies. Between the drama, it also shows what a great comedy team Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall made. Best of the best has them flying a runaway plane while Sach reads a wacky book called, "How to Face Death in the Air." The final chapter is entitled, "Now That You're DEAD?"
Sach asks Slip, "How come we don't carry guns?" To which Slip replies, "Because with you around, I'd wind up in the electric chair!"
Sach also puts in his two cents (after having been injected with truth serum!), and yells at Slip, "Chief, you're an egotistical, ignorant egomaniac. And that's the truth!" The serum is also used on the crooks who spill the beans! CASE CLOSED.
Behind the series, it was not all laughs. Leo Gorcey clashed with Ed Bernds. Bernds wanted him to follow his direction and Gorcey outright refused. He preferred lots of adlibs, and in the end was right. Bernds many years later admitted had Leo followed the script word by word, the comedy impact would have been less.
Look for bad guy (often with the Three Stooges) Philip Van Zandt, Jean Dean (from ANGELS IN DISGUISE) returns as Hilda. Also Lyle Talbot, as the target plane operator, Henry Kulky as Sgt. Broski and Arthur Space as a federal agent.
Followed by PRIVATE EYES. Remastered on dvd via Warner Brothers. 6 to 8 episodes per box set. Thanks to TCM for running these classics.
This was the second episode directed by Edward Bernds, who was brought in as "new blood" to see how he could upgrade the series, as opposed to long time director William Beaudine. Bernds also wrote material for the series, and with many funny ideas, associated with the THREE STOOGES. In fact, as the last reviewer noted, you'll see a lot of typical Stooge antics (tailored for Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall) in subsequent episodes.
As a result, CLIPPED WINGS has been regarded as one of the funniest Bowery Boys films. It received many positive reviews, more than likely because it was fast-paced and loaded with terrific dialogue, if not more of Gorcey's classic malprops.
This time around, the guys join the Air Force --accidentally-- because their old pal Dave Moreno is being held for treason?
Writers Charles Marion and Elwood Ullman may have originally written the role for Gabe Dell, who had left the series a few years earlier. Perhaps it was wishful thinking. Gabe had moved on to serious stage work on Broadway, later to return in tv and movies.
The big gag here is a case of mistaken identity, which was a familiar occurance for Sach. In this case, a female cadet called H Jones is confused with Sach (Horace Jones) and he's immediately assigned to the all female WAF barracks! There he meets NO nonsense, by the book Sergeant Anderson (played to the hilt by Renie Riano). Renie was a veteran actress, appearing in scores of popular films, later with ABBOTT AND COSTELLO.
It turns out Dave Moreno is actually being used by the military as bait to lure and expose a nest of spies. Between the drama, it also shows what a great comedy team Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall made. Best of the best has them flying a runaway plane while Sach reads a wacky book called, "How to Face Death in the Air." The final chapter is entitled, "Now That You're DEAD?"
Sach asks Slip, "How come we don't carry guns?" To which Slip replies, "Because with you around, I'd wind up in the electric chair!"
Sach also puts in his two cents (after having been injected with truth serum!), and yells at Slip, "Chief, you're an egotistical, ignorant egomaniac. And that's the truth!" The serum is also used on the crooks who spill the beans! CASE CLOSED.
Behind the series, it was not all laughs. Leo Gorcey clashed with Ed Bernds. Bernds wanted him to follow his direction and Gorcey outright refused. He preferred lots of adlibs, and in the end was right. Bernds many years later admitted had Leo followed the script word by word, the comedy impact would have been less.
Look for bad guy (often with the Three Stooges) Philip Van Zandt, Jean Dean (from ANGELS IN DISGUISE) returns as Hilda. Also Lyle Talbot, as the target plane operator, Henry Kulky as Sgt. Broski and Arthur Space as a federal agent.
Followed by PRIVATE EYES. Remastered on dvd via Warner Brothers. 6 to 8 episodes per box set. Thanks to TCM for running these classics.
By the early 50's, The Bowery Boys post-WWII formula had become a well-oiled machine. The "Boys" consisted of stars Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall, along with group members David Gorcey (here billed as "Condon") and Bennie Bartlett for reaction shots. And of course Leo's father Bernard Gorcey, as Louie, owner of Louie's Sweet Shop, where the gang hangs out. Comedy pros such as Elwood Ullman and Edward Bernds were working their magic with the series, and Monogram/Allied Artists usually surrounded the boys with talented casts of lesser-known players (such as Renie Riano, hilarious as the hatchet-faced WAC leader who orders Huntz Hall around) and old favorites (such as Lyle Talbot, and unbilled, Tris Coffin and Arthur "Canadian Mounties VS Atomic Invaders" Space). Basically, by this time in the series, the Boys were put into a certain situation or locale or profession, and they were let loose. Here they are in the air force (by accident, of course), with Huntz Hall mistakenly assigned to the female WAC unit, and they help a friend in the air force catch some spies (by accident, of course!). If you like Gorcey's constant malapropisms, Hall's rubber-faced, Shemp Howard-style maniacal antics, and the wonderful physical comedy of both, you will enjoy this film. I enjoyed these as a child, and now my children are enjoying them just as much. Gorcey and Hall left a wonderful body of work, and they were still on a roll in 1953 when this was released. They did three or four films a year and were favorites among exhibitors as they brought in regular crowds who couldn't wait for the next entry. Classic slapstick never ages, and this film should bring a smile to any slapstick lover's face --whether you are seven or seventy.
The usual hi-jinks ensue when "Bowery Boys" leader Leo Gorcey (as "Slip" Mahoney) and hapless sidekick Huntz Hall (as "Sach" Jones) accidentally join the Air Force, in an effort to help a friend. The rehashed plot includes spies and such. Still, it's more fun than "Flying Wild" (1941). Regular viewers will pick up on the fact that "The Bowery Boys" lieutenant friend Todd Karns (as David "Dave" Moreno) is a stand-in for former series regular Gabriel Dell, who had appeared with the Bowery groups from 1937-1950. Mr. Dell's Gabriel "Gabe" Moreno character is closely related to the one played by Mr. Karns. Telling Mr. Hall, "You may not be an idiot, but you'll do until a real one comes along," Renie Riano plays an amusing female sergeant.
**** Clipped Wings (8/14/53) Edward Bernds ~ Huntz Hall, Leo Gorcey, Todd Karns, Renie Riano
**** Clipped Wings (8/14/53) Edward Bernds ~ Huntz Hall, Leo Gorcey, Todd Karns, Renie Riano
A fast, loose, sloppy and uninspired story incorporating slapstick for its own sake that does not hold together well. Its depiction of man-hungry women sorely dates the story most of all. Sach (a.k.a. Horace Debussy Jones) joins the Air Force, which misassigns him to a women's barrack, where attractive females are so unbelievably starved for men that they accept his presence eagerly and hungrily, hanging onto his every word despite his physical weakness and quite less than handsome looks. The misassignment is due to his being mistaken for another "H. Jones," a WAC rookie who never shows up in the story.
Now seventy years after its original release, this seems a missed opportunity to introduce a strong female character, a woman who wants equal treatment and the chance to prove herself equal to it (believing she's been barracked among men as a deterrent rather than by mistake and keeps her sex on the down-low), and who might later figure in helping Horace in some way. That would be interesting. That would be screwball comedy. That would be modern. As is, though, it's a character whose physical presence never shows up to straighten things out, which adds to other story details that make the day-to-day functions of the U. S. Air Force -- known for recruiting among the highest IQs -- appear stupid and desperate for an overhaul.
Now seventy years after its original release, this seems a missed opportunity to introduce a strong female character, a woman who wants equal treatment and the chance to prove herself equal to it (believing she's been barracked among men as a deterrent rather than by mistake and keeps her sex on the down-low), and who might later figure in helping Horace in some way. That would be interesting. That would be screwball comedy. That would be modern. As is, though, it's a character whose physical presence never shows up to straighten things out, which adds to other story details that make the day-to-day functions of the U. S. Air Force -- known for recruiting among the highest IQs -- appear stupid and desperate for an overhaul.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe 31st of 48 Bowery Boys movies released from 1946 to 1958.
- Erros de gravaçãoIn 1950, Air Force leadership moved away from the rank identifications of the Army, therefore, an Air Force member wearing two stripes would have been generally addressed as "Airman" not Corporal. The rank formally would have been Airman Second Class.
- Citações
Terence Aloysius 'Slip' Mahoney: [as Sach sits in a children's airplane ride machine] Dhat thing will not circumnavigate unless you put a dime in it.
- ConexõesFollowed by Private Eyes (1953)
- Trilhas sonorasThe Gangs All Here
(uncredited)
Music by Arthur Sullivan
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Flying Fools
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 5 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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