A champion auto racer takes a job with a taxicab company being harassed by a gangster who wants to take over all the cab companies in town.A champion auto racer takes a job with a taxicab company being harassed by a gangster who wants to take over all the cab companies in town.A champion auto racer takes a job with a taxicab company being harassed by a gangster who wants to take over all the cab companies in town.
George Walcott
- Danny Horton
- (as George Wolcott)
Stanley Andrews
- Police Commissioner
- (uncredited)
Lon Chaney Jr.
- Garage Mechanic
- (uncredited)
Chick Collins
- Taxi Driver
- (uncredited)
Joyce Compton
- Dora - at the Race Track
- (uncredited)
Jimmie Dundee
- Martin's Mechanic
- (uncredited)
Eddie Dunn
- Garage Foreman
- (uncredited)
Oscar 'Dutch' Hendrian
- Taxi Driver
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Either cab driving was a violent business in the city, or someone from Warners slipped a script to someone at 20th Century Fox. "Born Reckless" from 1937 is a similar story to Warner Brothers' "Taxi."
Brian Donlevy plays Hurry Kane, a successful race car driver who isn't very good with money. After a huge win, he loses it all and ends up in a boxcar. He visits an old friend and takes a job driving a cab for his company.
It sounds like a good job for a race car driver, but taxi driving in those days seems to have been a job for a professional boxer. The cabbies are being brutally harassed by a local gangster (Barton MacLaine), who wants to take over the cab business in the city. As far as Hurry Kane is concerned, bring it on!
Rochelle Hudson plays the love interest, and she's lovely. Harry Carey Jr., also in the cast, turns in a good performance.
This movie kind of screams Warners, and the Cagney role screams for Jimmy Cagney. The acting is good, though, and even though Donlevy plays his role as a lighthearted, take life as it comes guy - this film is a lot tougher than "Taxi."
Brian Donlevy plays Hurry Kane, a successful race car driver who isn't very good with money. After a huge win, he loses it all and ends up in a boxcar. He visits an old friend and takes a job driving a cab for his company.
It sounds like a good job for a race car driver, but taxi driving in those days seems to have been a job for a professional boxer. The cabbies are being brutally harassed by a local gangster (Barton MacLaine), who wants to take over the cab business in the city. As far as Hurry Kane is concerned, bring it on!
Rochelle Hudson plays the love interest, and she's lovely. Harry Carey Jr., also in the cast, turns in a good performance.
This movie kind of screams Warners, and the Cagney role screams for Jimmy Cagney. The acting is good, though, and even though Donlevy plays his role as a lighthearted, take life as it comes guy - this film is a lot tougher than "Taxi."
... a fast-paced one hour B from 20th Century Fox, although with its quick pace and tough protagonist, this could easily have been a Warner Brothers film of the same era with Cagney or Bogart playing Donlevy's part. Interesting parallel to Warner Brothers here - Warner Brothers would recycle the same plot ad nauseum under various monikers, but Fox often would give a film the same name as a past successful one and give it a plot that had nothing to do with the first. "Born Reckless", for example, was a John Ford film from 1930 about a gangster ordered to join the army by a judge.
Here Donlevy plays Bob 'Hurry' Kane, an auto racer that, in the first 5 minutes of the film, wins a race with a sizable purse, loses it all on wine women and song, then penniless hitches a ride in a freight car with some other hobos to see an old friend. Now that first five minutes is just to show that Kane is a wild and unpredictable guy of questionable character, and the fact that you're really not sure about his motives or his loyalty all through this short film is part of what holds your interest. That old friend's cab business is under attack by the mob for holding out against joining their protection racket - the mob is constantly crashing into the taxis of the non-member cab companies and claiming they were accidents. The mob is run by that baddie of 30's B's, Barton McLane as Jim Barnes. Kane, being a great driver, offers to give the bad guys a taste of their own medicine, and you've got to wonder how Barnes ever got as far as he did in the mob with some of the bone-headed moves he makes.
This one is lots of fun and I recommend it if only to see Donlevy playing it reckless and with a smile for a change, very much like Cagney's roles when he was on the right side of the law in the 30's. It's just a shame that Harry Carey as the owner of the family cab company Kane is trying to help didn't get more lines.
Here Donlevy plays Bob 'Hurry' Kane, an auto racer that, in the first 5 minutes of the film, wins a race with a sizable purse, loses it all on wine women and song, then penniless hitches a ride in a freight car with some other hobos to see an old friend. Now that first five minutes is just to show that Kane is a wild and unpredictable guy of questionable character, and the fact that you're really not sure about his motives or his loyalty all through this short film is part of what holds your interest. That old friend's cab business is under attack by the mob for holding out against joining their protection racket - the mob is constantly crashing into the taxis of the non-member cab companies and claiming they were accidents. The mob is run by that baddie of 30's B's, Barton McLane as Jim Barnes. Kane, being a great driver, offers to give the bad guys a taste of their own medicine, and you've got to wonder how Barnes ever got as far as he did in the mob with some of the bone-headed moves he makes.
This one is lots of fun and I recommend it if only to see Donlevy playing it reckless and with a smile for a change, very much like Cagney's roles when he was on the right side of the law in the 30's. It's just a shame that Harry Carey as the owner of the family cab company Kane is trying to help didn't get more lines.
I agree with the last reviewer, this has that two fisted feel of a Warner Brothers B film.
In the driver seat is Brian Donlevy, famous for tough guys, ready for anything. A whole lotta' fun, produced by 20th Century Fox, cranking out the Charlie Chan films at the time.
Donlevy plays "Hurry" Kane, a race car driver whose at the top of his game one day, then at rock bottom. He visits old pal Harry Carey, known as Dad, who runs a cab company and gets a quick job as a cabbie. Not so fast... Seems Dad is being pushed around by big shot slickster Barton MacLane (as Jim), who wants all the cab companies under his thumb --or else.
Reminiscent of TAXI (1932), an early James Cagney film all about a taxi war, and is there ever. Plenty of high speed adventure, and some romance with Rochelle Hudson, playing Sybil. See if you can spot the famous faces; Joseph Crehan as the district attorney and Lon Chaney, Jr., in a bit role as a garage mechanic. Silent and sound film star Jack Mulhall also has a bit.
Directed with style by Malcolm St. Clair. One of the original Keystone Cops. Toted as being the tallest (6 foot 7) director in the biz, and held a record, of sorts, for being fired a lot, in the early days of his long career, then re-hired, because nobody could handle a cast and crew as good as he.
See this for Brian Donlevy at his best, remembered for BEAU GESTE and the GLASS KEY. PS; Rochelle Hudson is just beautiful, love the 30s hat. Her final scene with MacLane is a gem.
10 Stars. Finally released on dvd, also as a double bill remastered dvd box set. Thanks much to MOVIES Net for running this diamond in the rough.
In the driver seat is Brian Donlevy, famous for tough guys, ready for anything. A whole lotta' fun, produced by 20th Century Fox, cranking out the Charlie Chan films at the time.
Donlevy plays "Hurry" Kane, a race car driver whose at the top of his game one day, then at rock bottom. He visits old pal Harry Carey, known as Dad, who runs a cab company and gets a quick job as a cabbie. Not so fast... Seems Dad is being pushed around by big shot slickster Barton MacLane (as Jim), who wants all the cab companies under his thumb --or else.
Reminiscent of TAXI (1932), an early James Cagney film all about a taxi war, and is there ever. Plenty of high speed adventure, and some romance with Rochelle Hudson, playing Sybil. See if you can spot the famous faces; Joseph Crehan as the district attorney and Lon Chaney, Jr., in a bit role as a garage mechanic. Silent and sound film star Jack Mulhall also has a bit.
Directed with style by Malcolm St. Clair. One of the original Keystone Cops. Toted as being the tallest (6 foot 7) director in the biz, and held a record, of sorts, for being fired a lot, in the early days of his long career, then re-hired, because nobody could handle a cast and crew as good as he.
See this for Brian Donlevy at his best, remembered for BEAU GESTE and the GLASS KEY. PS; Rochelle Hudson is just beautiful, love the 30s hat. Her final scene with MacLane is a gem.
10 Stars. Finally released on dvd, also as a double bill remastered dvd box set. Thanks much to MOVIES Net for running this diamond in the rough.
An extremely lively, well-acted programmer, credited to director Mal St Clair, a top man in the silent period, but now working in Fox's "B" unit. As usual for Fox, the budget looks extremely generous for a "B"-grader, with lots of extras, attractive sets, and Miss Hudson modeling a stunning series of winning costumes. But most important ingredient of all: scads of action! Indeed perhaps too much action and too over the top. The script is credited to John Patrick, plus Fox's top writing team, Robert Ellis and Helen Logan. Unfortunately, "Born Reckless" was a troubled production. Donlevy injured his left hand, other writers were brought in, and director Gustav Machaty shot some footage – possibly all of the more spirited scenes with Donlevy which do not seem typical of credited director Mal St Clair's usual, far more leisurely style. The action spots are certainly most vigorously staged but rather far-fetched for what is supposed to be a realistic exposé of graft and corruption in the taxi industry.
This was an interesting film in which gangsters running a taxi service are trying to run those not paying them out of business. They don't seem to be above using some pretty heinous tactics...but the primary one seems to be running other cabs off the road and they have purchase an armored taxi to do so.
One of the good taxi companies left hires friend and famous race car driver Bob "Hurry" Cane to help save their company.
Bob gets to know the gangsters mol...who in a bit of a twist is also trying to tie one over on the gangster as he put her brother in prison.
Interesting conclusion, weird bumper car like chases...I had no idea that taxi cabs could be flipped over so easily, great costumes on the girls...and an inevitable romance.
I have to say, I think this film was worth the watch.
One of the good taxi companies left hires friend and famous race car driver Bob "Hurry" Cane to help save their company.
Bob gets to know the gangsters mol...who in a bit of a twist is also trying to tie one over on the gangster as he put her brother in prison.
Interesting conclusion, weird bumper car like chases...I had no idea that taxi cabs could be flipped over so easily, great costumes on the girls...and an inevitable romance.
I have to say, I think this film was worth the watch.
Did you know
- TriviaDue to an accident during filming in which he injured two fingers of his left hand, Brian Donlevy spends almost the entire film with the hand in in his pocket, heavily gloved, or otherwise out of sight. His bandaged hand is finally revealed late in the final sequence.
- GoofsWhen "Hurry" Kane drops Sybil off at the county jail, there is only minimal damage to the taxi. In the next scene, the taxi pulls into the garage with substantial damage.
Details
- Runtime
- 59m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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