Two yokels are framed and sent to prison, but wind up playing football on the warden's championship team.Two yokels are framed and sent to prison, but wind up playing football on the warden's championship team.Two yokels are framed and sent to prison, but wind up playing football on the warden's championship team.
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Hold 'Em Jail finds Wheeler&Woolsey neatly framed and sent to prison for something they didn't do. Never mind though, they make jail seem like fun, except for all around them.
Though Bert and Bob have the spotlight and do their usual monkeyshines, what I like best about Hold 'Em Jail is the incredibly good cast that RKO and director Norman Taurog assembled in support of them. When you've got such scene stealers as warden Edgar Kennedy and his wife Edna May Oliver and convicts like Paul Hurst and Warren Hymer doing their usual thing, Wheeler&Woolsey would have been hard pressed to keep up. Pay close attention to Edgar Kennedy in his scenes with the boys, he really makes them work.
I also liked the fact that the script got Bert and Bob to star on the prison football team giving the film a great opportunity to satirize two genres, prison films and college rah-rah football games. Edgar Kennedy has a $1000.00 bet with the warden of another prison team and he's depending on these two to win it for him. The football game at the climax is even funnier than what the Marx Brothers did in Horsefeathers.
Betty Grable is also in Hold 'Em Jail as Kennedy and Oliver's daughter if you can believe she sprung from that gene pool. She would have an decade long climb to top box office in the Forties as America's girl next door with the million dollar legs. Robert Armstrong also has a nice bit as the radio announcer of the inter prison football game.
This is one of Wheeler&Woolsey's best films and holds up very well for today's audience.
Though Bert and Bob have the spotlight and do their usual monkeyshines, what I like best about Hold 'Em Jail is the incredibly good cast that RKO and director Norman Taurog assembled in support of them. When you've got such scene stealers as warden Edgar Kennedy and his wife Edna May Oliver and convicts like Paul Hurst and Warren Hymer doing their usual thing, Wheeler&Woolsey would have been hard pressed to keep up. Pay close attention to Edgar Kennedy in his scenes with the boys, he really makes them work.
I also liked the fact that the script got Bert and Bob to star on the prison football team giving the film a great opportunity to satirize two genres, prison films and college rah-rah football games. Edgar Kennedy has a $1000.00 bet with the warden of another prison team and he's depending on these two to win it for him. The football game at the climax is even funnier than what the Marx Brothers did in Horsefeathers.
Betty Grable is also in Hold 'Em Jail as Kennedy and Oliver's daughter if you can believe she sprung from that gene pool. She would have an decade long climb to top box office in the Forties as America's girl next door with the million dollar legs. Robert Armstrong also has a nice bit as the radio announcer of the inter prison football game.
This is one of Wheeler&Woolsey's best films and holds up very well for today's audience.
The humour of Wheeler and Woolsey takes some getting used to. As a comedy team, they are like the proverbial marmite: you either love them or loathe them. I'm split between the two. "Hold 'Em Jail" has a few mildly amusing moments and it's good to see comic Edgar Kennedy. He plays the decidedly cantankerous prison warden, which makes him a sympathetic character when you think about it. Wheeler and Woolsey are sentenced to his prison, where they undermine Kennedy's authority, cause general chaos and somehow are made trustees. I'm glad the film is brief. 60 to 75 minutes goes a long way with this particular comedy team! The climactic football scene is quite a lively affair, featuring some impressive stuntwork. From the same year, "Horse Feathers" with the Marx Brothers also featured a football sequence for their climax. It is far superior to that of "Hold 'Em Jail." Another plus for the film, is the absence of any musical interludes.
This film really displays the differences in style between Wheeler and Woolsey and Laurel and Hardy. In "Pardon Us", Stan and Oliver are sent to prison, and in every situation where they try to be helpful, they end up with the short end of the stick. When Bert and Bob are sent to prison, they end up running the place after a short time. Wheeler and Woolsey certainly did not possess Stan Laurel's comic genius, but they are optimistic and make us feel that the underdog can triumph. We do not sympathize with Bert and Bob the way we do with Stan and Oliver. Bert and Bob are too arrogant and too aggressive for our sympathy, but we do get a special delight in seeing them triumph.
Edgar Kennedy is very funny as the warden and teen-age Betty Grable is as cute as can be as the warden's daughter. The football sequence is not as funny as the Marx Brothers' "Horse Feathers", but it is amusing. Edna May Oliver and Roscoe Ates add their brands of insanity to the mixture. I only wish there were some musical numbers to spotlight the abilities of Bert, Bob, and Betty Grable. For low comedy fans, this film is certainly worth viewing.
Edgar Kennedy is very funny as the warden and teen-age Betty Grable is as cute as can be as the warden's daughter. The football sequence is not as funny as the Marx Brothers' "Horse Feathers", but it is amusing. Edna May Oliver and Roscoe Ates add their brands of insanity to the mixture. I only wish there were some musical numbers to spotlight the abilities of Bert, Bob, and Betty Grable. For low comedy fans, this film is certainly worth viewing.
When the warden needs a couple bigger, better players for his football team, he recruits Harris and Robbins (Wheeler and Woolsey). They are tricked into committing a crime, and hauled into jail ! It starts pretty slow and awkward... Peach O Reno was so much better! Wheeler and Woolsey had started in vaudeville, and made two dozen films together. This one was about halfway through the list. Edna Oliver is in here as the straight laced aunty. And a very YOUNG Betty Grable, in one of her earlier roles. A couple of the bits they do are like three-stooges bits. Lots of slapstick, physical comedy. All leading up to the big football game. This one is pretty good. Some funny bits along the way. Directed by Norman Taurog, who had just won the oscar for Skippy. The beautiful Betty G will die young at 56, but she was amazing in How to Marry a Millionaire.. catch that one for sure.
In this Wheeler & Woolsey comedy from RKO and director Norman Taurog, the duo play novelty salesmen who get sent to prison just in time to participate in the big inter-prison football match. But before game day arrives, they cause all sorts of mayhem, especially for the harried warden (Edgar Kennedy). Also featuring Edna May Oliver, Betty Grable, Robert Armstrong, Paul Hurst, Roscoe Ates, Warren Hymer, G. Pat Collins, Jed Prouty, Spencer Charters, Jim Thorpe, and Ward Bond.
There are a few cute moments in this, but not enough. I enjoyed Hymer's role as a dim-witted convict always trying and failing to escape. Oliver is always good, but seeing Grable as a pseudo love interest for Wheeler was a tad uncomfortable, seeing as he was 37 and she was 15 at the time. The title was apparently a play on "Hold 'Em, Yale", a well-known college football chant. I guess I at least learned something new.
There are a few cute moments in this, but not enough. I enjoyed Hymer's role as a dim-witted convict always trying and failing to escape. Oliver is always good, but seeing Grable as a pseudo love interest for Wheeler was a tad uncomfortable, seeing as he was 37 and she was 15 at the time. The title was apparently a play on "Hold 'Em, Yale", a well-known college football chant. I guess I at least learned something new.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film did poorly at the box office, resulting in a loss to "RKO" of $55,000 according to studio records.
- GoofsNear the beginning Warden Jones gets a letter from the warden of Lynwood Prison that their scheduled football game is to be played on the 29th. Later in the picture, after the quarterback has been pardoned, Barbara exclaims the game is on the 14th.
- Quotes
Violet Jones: That's funny - I can't seem to hit that top note.
Spider Robbins: Perhaps it's just as well. Where did you learn to sing, anyway?
Violet Jones: I spent four years in Paris. Of course, I'm not a virtuoso.
Spider Robbins: Not after four years in Paris, no.
Violet Jones: I trust we're both talking about the same thing?
- Crazy creditsOpening credits are shown on a prison wall.
- ConnectionsReferences Moan & Groan, Inc. (1929)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Prisioneros jugadores
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $408,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 6 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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