AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,7/10
913
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaWhen Pa wins a jingle-writing contest, he and Ma head for New York City. They get in trouble with gangsters when they lose some stolen money which they had already agreed to deliver to one o... Ler tudoWhen Pa wins a jingle-writing contest, he and Ma head for New York City. They get in trouble with gangsters when they lose some stolen money which they had already agreed to deliver to one of the thugs.When Pa wins a jingle-writing contest, he and Ma head for New York City. They get in trouble with gangsters when they lose some stolen money which they had already agreed to deliver to one of the thugs.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Barbara Brown
- Elizabeth Parker
- (cenas deletadas)
Ray Collins
- Jonathan Parker
- (cenas deletadas)
Lester Allen
- Geoduck
- (não creditado)
Leon Belasco
- Beauty Salon Manager
- (não creditado)
Dale Belding
- Danny Kettle
- (não creditado)
Stanley Blystone
- Train Conductor
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Also released on April Fools Day, this next Ma & Pa Kettle flick has most of the same cast as the first. At the very end of first one, Pa had won a trip to the big city as part of a contest, and that's where this one picks up. It opens with Ma making breakfast, and there's a great joke with popcorn and pancakes... another funny is the Native American's plan to buy back Manhattan.... keep an eye out for Jim Backus as a thug in a smallish part, YEARS before he was Thurston Howell III, and Richard Long (Nanny & the Professor, died quite young). Dan Yowlachie, plays the neighbor "Crowbar" in this one as well; he was a Yakima Native American who was probably glad to do something other than Westerns, and was also an opera singer. In this picture, we flash back and forth between the Kettles chasing after those disappearing bags in NYC, then back to the crook babysitting the children back at the house. The plot is a little more complicated and disjointed than the first Kettle movie, but it all works out in the clothes-wringer! Good, clean cut fun with jokes and gags thrown into the cops and robbers story.
Ma and Pa Kettle Go To Town seamlessly picks up where The Further Adventures of Ma and Pa Kettle leaves off. This is good and bad.
For someone familiar with the first two movie appearances of the Kettles the continuity is perfect. There are just enough recycled gags to reestablish the unique house the Kettles won in the prior film, but the majority of laughs come from the new situation of Ma and Pa unknowingly smuggling $100,000 in stolen money to New York. There is more development in the subplot of Tom Kettle and his efforts to develop a new incubator for chicken farmers, but it really takes a back burner in this movie.
I expected Jim Backus to be more comedic, but he played one of the crooks fairly straight. The situation was meant to be more funny than the actors.
There is still a fresh feeling to the Ma and Pa Kettle series in Ma and Pa Kettle Go To Town. Had I not seen the previous movie I may not have been able to understand why Ma and Pa Kettle lived in their futuristic house or why the kids were such devils. Go To Town was obviously meant for the audiences that had seen Further Adventures. As much as I liked this movie I would not suggest it as the first movie to see in the Ma and Pa Kettle series.
For someone familiar with the first two movie appearances of the Kettles the continuity is perfect. There are just enough recycled gags to reestablish the unique house the Kettles won in the prior film, but the majority of laughs come from the new situation of Ma and Pa unknowingly smuggling $100,000 in stolen money to New York. There is more development in the subplot of Tom Kettle and his efforts to develop a new incubator for chicken farmers, but it really takes a back burner in this movie.
I expected Jim Backus to be more comedic, but he played one of the crooks fairly straight. The situation was meant to be more funny than the actors.
There is still a fresh feeling to the Ma and Pa Kettle series in Ma and Pa Kettle Go To Town. Had I not seen the previous movie I may not have been able to understand why Ma and Pa Kettle lived in their futuristic house or why the kids were such devils. Go To Town was obviously meant for the audiences that had seen Further Adventures. As much as I liked this movie I would not suggest it as the first movie to see in the Ma and Pa Kettle series.
Although THE EGG AND I, which came before, introduced Ma and Pa Kettle (Marjorie Main/Percy Kilbride) to film audiences, this is the second of their series as principals. While residing in the modern home that the pair had won in their first solo adventure, Pa wins a trip for both to New York City, with their apparent only problem the locating of a babysitter for the 15 Kettle children, solved when Shotgun Mike Munger (Charles McGraw), a bank robber in search of a hideout is willing to take on this formidable assignment. The Kettles agree to deliver an empty bag belonging to Munger to his "brother" Louie (Gregg Martell) in Gotham, not realizing it contains $100,000 in stolen cash and the fun begins with gangsters tailing Pa and the police keeping a watch on the thugs, all while Shotgun Mike discovers the tribulations of dealing with a surfeit of wild Kettle offspring on the homestead. Veteran Charles Lamont, who wears the director's hat for most of the Kettle titles, is also at the helm of other series efforts for Universal, including several Abbott and Costello larks, and shows a sure hand at briskly moving this type of material. The reactions of the pair to big city life, widely different from their Pacific Northwest roots, forms the core of the comic scenes which comprise the bulk of this feature. Despite the defined character of the scenario, a string of episodic set pieces is primary, some of which are wonderfully funny, while nearly all work well in vaudeville fashion, especially for Kilbride and Main, with their portrayals and timing often borrowing from Laurel and Hardy. Sight gags are in generous supply, frequently presented apace so that the viewer must be alert for them amid the general hilarity. Richard Long acts as Tom Kettle, eldest of the brood, and he and his fiancee Kim (Meg Randall), both regulars of the series, are of particular assistance to their elders in this affair. The cast is well stocked with excellent character performers, notable among them being Martell as the leader of Munger's henchmen, along with Jim Backus as another bandit, and also present are Ray Collins, Bert Freed, Ellen Corby, Emory Parnell and Olan Soule. Special photography by David Horsley adds impact to a comedy that is completely light-hearted, one of the best of the Kettle series.
I purchased the DVD which contained "Ma and Pa Kettle Go To Town" on deep discount. I have very fond memories of seeing the "Ma and Pa Kettle" movies on Television when I was a child. Of course, the things which make a seven year old laugh and the things which make a 37 year old laugh are often very different. When I watched this movie, though, I was surprised to see that I still found it quite enjoyable. In particular, I was quite impressed at Percy Kilbride's comic skills as Pa Kettle. He had a wonderful deadpan delivery. Marjorie Main gives the same robust performance which she brought to almost all her roles as a character actress, and, as always, it is fun.
In general, don't look at this film for great plot, or production values, but its got wonderful comic acting, and some genuine laughs.
In general, don't look at this film for great plot, or production values, but its got wonderful comic acting, and some genuine laughs.
Happily ensconced in their luxurious push-button home of the future, Marjorie Main and Percy Kilbride (as Ma and Pa Kettle) receive further good fortune. Mr. Kilbride has won an all-expenses paid trip to New York City, courtesy of the "Bubble-Ola" soda pop company. Hoping to turn the trip into a "second honeymoon," the Kettles leave their fourteen youngest "childrun" in the care of crooked Charles McGraw (as Mike "Shotgun" Munger), mistaking him for a kindly stranger.
The Kettles promise to deliver Mr. McGraw's black bag to his Gotham City brother, unaware it contains $100,000 in stolen cash. In the big city, Pa lose the bag, but find eldest son Richard Long (as Tom) trying to finance his incubator.
"Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town" is not only one of the best of the series, but also a funny film on its own. Making pancake popcorn, and eagerly accepting her invitation to the "Beauty Saloon," Ms. Main is in her element. Milking the cow to music, and testing the height of an Empire State Building, Mr. Kilbride shows perfect timing. Credit must be shared with Martin Ragaway and Leonard Stern, who contribute a consistently funny and finely fashioned script.
******** Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town (4/1/50) Charles Lamont ~ Marjorie Main, Percy Kilbride, Charles McGraw, Richard Long
The Kettles promise to deliver Mr. McGraw's black bag to his Gotham City brother, unaware it contains $100,000 in stolen cash. In the big city, Pa lose the bag, but find eldest son Richard Long (as Tom) trying to finance his incubator.
"Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town" is not only one of the best of the series, but also a funny film on its own. Making pancake popcorn, and eagerly accepting her invitation to the "Beauty Saloon," Ms. Main is in her element. Milking the cow to music, and testing the height of an Empire State Building, Mr. Kilbride shows perfect timing. Credit must be shared with Martin Ragaway and Leonard Stern, who contribute a consistently funny and finely fashioned script.
******** Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town (4/1/50) Charles Lamont ~ Marjorie Main, Percy Kilbride, Charles McGraw, Richard Long
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThird of eight films in which Marjorie Main and Percy Kilbride portrayed Ma and Pa Kettle.
- Erros de gravaçãoIn the first film, "Ma and Pa Kettle," Pa says there are five bathrooms in their new house. In "Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town'" Pa says that there are only three bathrooms in the new house.
- ConexõesFeatured in Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter (1982)
- Trilhas sonorasTiger Rag
(uncredited)
Written by Nick LaRocca, Edwin B. Edwards, Henry Ragas, Tony Sbarbaro, and Larry Shields
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 19 min(79 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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