Dirty work is afoot in old Kentucky when a rival decides that his horse will have a better chance of winning if the son of the owner isn't around, so he has him shanghaied onto a tramp freig... Read allDirty work is afoot in old Kentucky when a rival decides that his horse will have a better chance of winning if the son of the owner isn't around, so he has him shanghaied onto a tramp freighter and gets the jockey in his debt through a crooked gambling game. Airplanes, ship-wrec... Read allDirty work is afoot in old Kentucky when a rival decides that his horse will have a better chance of winning if the son of the owner isn't around, so he has him shanghaied onto a tramp freighter and gets the jockey in his debt through a crooked gambling game. Airplanes, ship-wrecks, sea storms, kidnapping, frame-up and much skullduggery prior to the race.
- Mrs. Clancy
- (as Anna Hernandez)
- Little Girl
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
The shooting is lengthened by Churchill Downs locations which contribute to the jerky race climax. Denny emerges credibly and it's curious to see Lionel Belmore a decade before he became ubiquitous in horror movies.
Circulating copy appears to be missing small sections.
It's not a comedy, which may surprise people who know Denny in this period as a light comic actor. The production is eked out with shots of colts in pastures, a total of three servants in Blackface, and the big race thoroughly edited into reaction clips. Despite being a major production for Universal, it's a rather minor picture.
Given my utter lack of interest in horse racing and Kentucky-fried colonels, I haven't much to say about its excellence, except that it shows very little of character or story of interest, except for those who are fascinated by horse racing.
Did you know
- TriviaA Jewel Production. Universal, unlike many of its competitors, never owned a proprietary theater chain. This business decision would eventually pay off handsomely for the studio after the 1949 Supreme Court anti-trust decision that threaten to cripple its peers. However, it required the studio to carefully market its feature product to independent owners. Carl Laemmle devised a 3-tiered brand system: Red Feather (low-budget programmers), Bluebird (mainstream releases) and Jewel (prestige productions). Jewel releases were produced in hopes of drawing higher roadshow ticket prices, a ploy that sometimes misfired. This branding system would fade away in late 1929.
Details
- Release date
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- Also known as
- The Kentucky Derby
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- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1