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IMDbPro

Hell's Kitchen

  • 1939
  • Approved
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
466
YOUR RATING
Ronald Reagan, Frankie Burke, Gabriel Dell, Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Billy Halop, Bobby Jordan, Margaret Lindsay, Larry Nunn, Bernard Punsly, and The Dead End Kids in Hell's Kitchen (1939)
A group of tough city kids have 'graduated' from reform school and are assigned to a "Boy's Town" type of inmate self-government city shelter, run by Hiram Krispan, a crooked superintendent, assisted by Buck, an ex-racketeer on probation. Buck enjoys trying to straighten out the kids and joins with them and social workers Beth Avery and Jim Donahue, in getting Krispan removed from his job.
Play trailer2:21
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Group of former reform school kids assigned to corrupt-run shelter. They ally with social workers to oust crooked superintendent and ex-racketeer trying to reform them. Focuses on inmate sel... Read allGroup of former reform school kids assigned to corrupt-run shelter. They ally with social workers to oust crooked superintendent and ex-racketeer trying to reform them. Focuses on inmate self-governance dynamics and exposing corruption.Group of former reform school kids assigned to corrupt-run shelter. They ally with social workers to oust crooked superintendent and ex-racketeer trying to reform them. Focuses on inmate self-governance dynamics and exposing corruption.

  • Directors
    • Ewald André Dupont
    • Lewis Seiler
  • Writers
    • Crane Wilbur
    • Fred Niblo Jr.
  • Stars
    • The Dead End Kids
    • Margaret Lindsay
    • Ronald Reagan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    466
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Ewald André Dupont
      • Lewis Seiler
    • Writers
      • Crane Wilbur
      • Fred Niblo Jr.
    • Stars
      • The Dead End Kids
      • Margaret Lindsay
      • Ronald Reagan
    • 13User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:21
    Trailer

    Photos4

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    Top cast45

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    The Dead End Kids
    The Dead End Kids
      Margaret Lindsay
      Margaret Lindsay
      • Beth Avery
      Ronald Reagan
      Ronald Reagan
      • Jim Donahue
      Stanley Fields
      Stanley Fields
      • Buck Caesar
      Billy Halop
      Billy Halop
      • Tony Marco
      Bobby Jordan
      Bobby Jordan
      • Joey Richards
      Leo Gorcey
      Leo Gorcey
      • Gyp Haller
      Huntz Hall
      Huntz Hall
      • Bingo
      Gabriel Dell
      Gabriel Dell
      • Ace
      Bernard Punsly
      Bernard Punsly
      • Patrick Henry 'Ouch' Rosenbloom
      • (as Bernard Punsley)
      Frankie Burke
      Frankie Burke
      • Soap
      Grant Mitchell
      Grant Mitchell
      • Hiram Krispan
      Frederic Tozere
      • Mike Garvey
      • (as Fred Tozere)
      Arthur Loft
      Arthur Loft
      • Elmer Krispan
      Vera Lewis
      Vera Lewis
      • Sarah Krispan
      Robert Homans
      Robert Homans
      • Hardy
      Charley Foy
      Charley Foy
      • Floogie
      Raymond Bailey
      Raymond Bailey
      • Whitey
      • Directors
        • Ewald André Dupont
        • Lewis Seiler
      • Writers
        • Crane Wilbur
        • Fred Niblo Jr.
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews13

      6.5466
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      Featured reviews

      6stevenfallonnyc77

      "The Mayor of Hell" was better

      That doesn't mean "Hell's Kitchen" isn't worth a viewing though. The cast is fantastic, where you have the Dead End Kids, Ronald Reagan, the gorgeous Margaret Lindsey, and other familiar faces. Stanley Fields is a decent mug leaving the rackets, and Grant Mitchell also plays a fantastic evil head of the reform school.

      Fields plays Buck, who is on probation and wants to clean up the school. There are some decent curiosities, like hockey footage that resembles a 1939 version of "Slap Shot," and Frankie Burke, the Cagney lookalike (and soundalike) first seen as a young Rocky Sullivan in "Angels with Dirty Faces." His film career lasted only four years but he managed to appear in no less than eighteen films.

      As good as Stanley Fields is, it's tough to beat Cagney in "The Mayor of Hell," which also had the advantage of being pre-code. The Dead End Kids take over the movie, with Billy Halop and Leo Gorcey getting the most lines.

      Overall, a decent enough movie, but not one you'll be in a rush to view again. Still, decent.
      dougdoepke

      Well Done "Dead End" Entry

      Dead End kids may get the billing, but it's really Stanley Fields' (Buck) movie. A Wallace Beery look-a-like, his fractured English and Runyonesque manner hit the right notes for what is really a soft hearted gangster. Seems he's got to help out at a boy's home or he's off probation and into the slammer. Trouble is the boys' home is run by cruel supervisor Krispan (Grant Mitchell in a fine performance), who's also skimming money from donors. So Buck uses gang money to buy in and run the home in a more humane manner. But the scheming Krispan's got other ideas.

      The subplot here is interesting since it's the wayward boys and the soft-hearted gangster who come across as humane and just, while the politically connected, respectable guy is the real crook. It's sort of a reversal of what is usually expected, but perhaps not unusual for the restive 1930's.

      Anyway, Bobby Jordan (Tony) shows his chops in a nicely calibrated emotional scene, while Gorcey (Gyp) does his tough guy bit, and Halop shows leadership abilities. Surprisingly, Huntz Hall (Bingo) has a secondary, non-comedic role, unlike his later dominating role in the long- running series. Reagan fans may be disappointed since his is also a secondary role, but at least he gets the girl as played by the fetching Margaret Lindsey.

      All in all, the movie's an entertaining combo of serious themes seasoned with humor. However that hokey hockey game looked anything but real since there was neither officiating nor penalties for roughhousing. But that's a relatively minor point in an otherwise well executed production.
      5bkoganbing

      Cashing In On Boys Town

      The first of two films in which Ronald Reagan was featured with the Dead End Kids was Hell's Kitchen where after one stint of time in reform school in Crime School, the boys are back in the juvenile joint. The adult players take a distinct back seat to the boys in both these films.

      Crime School was an out and out remake of the James Cagney classic The Mayor Of Hell and this one also has aspects of those films in it as well. We've got a self righteous warden of the school in Grant Mitchell who's once again skimming off the tops and treating the kids like dirt. His infamous cooler is an old meat locker where he locks the kids in to 'cool' them off. When one of them dies, it all hits the fan.

      Challenging him for control of the institution is paroled racketeer, Stanley Fields who is playing his role like a cut rate Wallace Beery. Ronald Reagan is his nephew and Margaret Lindsay is the secretary of the school under Mitchell and who is ready to quit when Caesar arrives on the scene.

      Jack Warner must have really been in a bind here because he even acknowledges a hit film from another studio. One of the reforms that Fields wants to bring in is a kind of self governing institution by the kids like Father Flanagan's Boys Town. In fact I'm sure that's why this film was made, to cash in on the success of Boys Town.

      No Oscar winning performances here though like Spencer Tracy's. Still it's entertaining enough.
      5Doylenf

      Warner crime melodrama is similar to "Angels Wash Their Faces"...

      Once again RONALD REAGAN is involved with The Dead End Kids, only this time the romantic interest is supplied by MARGARET LINDSAY rather than ANN SHERIDAN. Otherwise, the plot here resembles the studio's other Dead End Kids entry, ANGELS WASH THEIR FACES produced the same year, in that the Kids put the bad man on trial and eventually put him out of business.

      GRANT WITHERS is the corrupt principal of a reform school who uses dirty tactics to keep his kids in line, even to the point of punishing a sick kid who fails to survive solitary confinement. It's up to Ronald Reagan, on the good side of the law with Margaret Lindsay, to urge the boys not to take vigilante justice.

      Warner Bros. apparently intended this to be a showcase, not for Reagan or Lindsay, but The Dead End Kids who get all the prominence in the script. It's all got a familiar ring, but is directed in brisk style by Lewis Seiler and is lively enough to hold the interest.

      Nevertheless, it never rises above the ordinary and the overall impression is that of a formula crime melodrama, the kind that Warners churned out pretty frequently in the late '30s and early '40s.
      10tcchelsey

      THE TOUGH KIDS OUT TO NAIL A TOUGH GUY

      When you come down to it, THE DEAD END KIDS were a teenage version of OUR GANG/THE LITTLE RASCALS, only with more trouble on their hands! These guys were a phenom when they all made their debut in the iconic DEAD END (1937) for Warner Brothers. And it's not to say, as I have mentioned in my last review, that they didn't drive ole Jack Warner and company bonkers with their antics, both on and off the screen! That said, the kids had an immense amount of talent, of course lead by the outrageous Leo Gorcey! Gorcey admitted in a 1960s radio interview (on YOUTUBE) that they did a lot of crazy stuff on the lot and were very lucky. No one in Hollywood had ever seen their likes before, and perhaps that was made them so original. Here, the gang goes after distinguished Grant Mitchell, who runs a reformatory like a prison. This scenario is not new by any means, but it makes for some dynamic confrontations, including poor Bobby Jordon being locked in a freezer by Mitchell and eventually dying.

      The kids are aided by Stanley Fields (as Buck) a Runyanesque character if there ever was one, playing a reformed gangster himself who steals a lot of scenes here! Fields was in high demand throughout the 1930s up until his sudden death in 1941. This film marks Ronald Reagan's first appearance with the Dead End Kids, portraying Jim, a social worker who is watching over the boys. It was either Gorcey or Huntz Hall, in later years, that said Reagan (behind the scenes) was originally a bit scared of them and kept his distance! At least in this film. Beautiful Margaret Lindsay plays Beth, the other social worker and, of course, love interest for Reagan. There are some publicity shots of Lindsay and Gorcey kidding around and look like they are genuinely enjoying each others company (she was not married at the time!), so there are two sides to a story! Gorcey also said he had a crush on Ann Sheridan, who he worked with at WB. Also the great Vera Lewis is in the cast as Sarah, who majored in matronly roles for decades, later to appear in the Bowery Boys SPOOK BUSTERS as a mean old lady! She was in many classics. Note the cool names the guys have; Gorcey plays Gyp, Hall plays Bingo and Gabe Dell as Ace. This was directed by veteran German silent film director EA DuPont, who did a superb job, especially with the powerful ending. Always on Warner Brothers box set dvd.

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        As a result of a PTA complaint, this was the last gangster angle picture made by The Dead End Kids.
      • Goofs
        At 11:50 min Tony (Billy Halop) is rustled out of the back of the shelter's car from under a dusty tarp, his clothes dusty and his hair disheveled; seconds later outside the car his clothes and hair are neat.
      • Quotes

        Bingo: You can slap me around all you want, but Joey here can't be missing any meals, can't you see he's sick?

        Hiram Krispan: If Joey weren't a bad boy he'd get better quicker.

      • Connections
        Featured in Public Enemies: The Golden Age of the Gangster Film (2008)
      • Soundtracks
        Auld Lang Syne
        (1788) (uncredited)

        Traditional

        Lyrics by Robert Burns

        Sung a cappella by Stanley Fields and the boys

        Played during the end credits

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      FAQ1

      • Chicago Opening Happened When?

      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • July 8, 1939 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Samhällets unga rebeller
      • Filming locations
        • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
      • Production company
        • Warner Bros.
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 21m(81 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1

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