Two fast-talking insurance salesmen meet Mary, who is running away from her wealthy mother, and they agree to help her run a hotel that she owns. When they find out that the hotel is run dow... Read allTwo fast-talking insurance salesmen meet Mary, who is running away from her wealthy mother, and they agree to help her run a hotel that she owns. When they find out that the hotel is run down and nearly abandoned, they launch a phony PR campaign that presents the hotel as a resor... Read allTwo fast-talking insurance salesmen meet Mary, who is running away from her wealthy mother, and they agree to help her run a hotel that she owns. When they find out that the hotel is run down and nearly abandoned, they launch a phony PR campaign that presents the hotel as a resort favored by the rich. Their advertising succeeds too well, and many complications soon ar... Read all
- Frank Dukette
- (as William Davidson)
- Gangster
- (uncredited)
- Motorcycle Cop
- (uncredited)
- Spudoni
- (uncredited)
- Gangster
- (uncredited)
- Gangster
- (uncredited)
- Detective
- (uncredited)
- Gangster
- (uncredited)
- Gangster
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Here the pair end up helping, and romancing, a runaway fom a rich family. She's inherited a hotel and the boys decide to help her turn it into THE hot spot. Using their way with words they manage to have newspapers write the place up---mentioning how safe their safe is. This of course brings a steady stream of crooks all of which want to be the one to crack the safe.
Extremely well written, the film suffers from a few slow spots where the fast and furious dialog stop for a silent shot or moment. Normally it wouldn't be bad, but here it off sets the pacing of the film, which for the most part is fast moving, even if it seems not to have a direction.
If you want to see a good comedy you haven't seen before, by all means pick this up, its 75 minutes well spent.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film, along with Amos 'n' Andy's "Check and Double Check (1930)," were the most successful of "RKO"'s 1930 productions.
- GoofsWhen Ganzy calls in the article about the hotel to the newspaper and a full screenshot of the headline and the first paragraph of the story is shown; the following shot shows Rebecca Marsh reading the article out loud to her attorney. However, what she is saying is not printed on the paper.
- SoundtracksThree Little Words
(uncredited)
Music by Harry Ruby
[Played by the hotel band just prior to the rainstorm.]
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $287,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 15 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.20 : 1