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Sweepstakes Winner

  • 1939
  • Approved
  • 59m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
166
YOUR RATING
Jerry Colonna, Johnnie Davis, Charley Foy, Allen Jenkins, and Marie Wilson in Sweepstakes Winner (1939)
A naive girl has $1,000 and is told to have two broke bookies bet it for her. They lose the money and she gets a job as a waitress. They come into the cafe and convince her to buy an Irish Sweepstake ticket.
Play trailer1:38
1 Video
3 Photos
Comedy

A naive girl has $1,000 and is told to have two broke bookies bet it for her. They lose the money and she gets a job as a waitress. They come into the cafe and convince her to buy an Irish S... Read allA naive girl has $1,000 and is told to have two broke bookies bet it for her. They lose the money and she gets a job as a waitress. They come into the cafe and convince her to buy an Irish Sweepstake ticket.A naive girl has $1,000 and is told to have two broke bookies bet it for her. They lose the money and she gets a job as a waitress. They come into the cafe and convince her to buy an Irish Sweepstake ticket.

  • Director
    • William C. McGann
  • Writers
    • John W. Krafft
    • Albert DeMond
    • Hugh Cummings
  • Stars
    • Marie Wilson
    • Johnnie Davis
    • Allen Jenkins
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    166
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William C. McGann
    • Writers
      • John W. Krafft
      • Albert DeMond
      • Hugh Cummings
    • Stars
      • Marie Wilson
      • Johnnie Davis
      • Allen Jenkins
    • 8User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:38
    Official Trailer

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast24

    Edit
    Marie Wilson
    Marie Wilson
    • Jennie Jones
    Johnnie Davis
    Johnnie Davis
    • Mark Downey
    Allen Jenkins
    Allen Jenkins
    • 'Tip' Bailey
    Charley Foy
    Charley Foy
    • 'Jinx' Donovan
    Jerry Colonna
    Jerry Colonna
    • Nick
    Frankie Burke
    Frankie Burke
    • Chalky Williams
    Vera Lewis
    Vera Lewis
    • Mrs. McCarthy
    Granville Bates
    Granville Bates
    • Pop Reynolds
    Eddie Kane
    Eddie Kane
    • Mr. Blake
    Bert Hanlon
    • Poolroom Guard
    George Lloyd
    George Lloyd
    • Dutch
    Sidney Bracey
    Sidney Bracey
    • Mr. Simpkins
    • (as Sidney Bracy)
    Charles Irwin
    Charles Irwin
    • English Radio Announcer
    Jack A. Goodrich
    • Betting Teller
    • (uncredited)
    Sol Gorss
    Sol Gorss
    • Racetrack Policeman
    • (uncredited)
    John Harron
    John Harron
    • Tote Board Announcer
    • (uncredited)
    Reid Kilpatrick
    Reid Kilpatrick
    • Track Announcer
    • (uncredited)
    Al Lloyd
    • Cigar Man
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William C. McGann
    • Writers
      • John W. Krafft
      • Albert DeMond
      • Hugh Cummings
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    5.1166
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    Featured reviews

    3planktonrules

    A comedy with two huge strikes against it.

    In the 1930s-50s, Marie Wilson essentially played the same character again and again...a ditzy blonde who made Gracie Allen seem like a Nobel Prize winner! Occasionally, this sort of thing can work but often she just comes off as annoying when you see her films today....and she's incredibly annoying in "Sweepstakes Winner".

    The story begins with Jennie arriving in the big city and she's looking for Jinx and Tip (Charley Foy and Allen Jenkins). They think she's with the law...but someone ill-advisedly suggested to her that she find the two gamblers so they can help her locate and buy a specific horse, Firefly. Unfortunately, the pair are not only hapless gamblers but really unsavory jerks who repeatedly do things which could get them sent to prison. But Jennie is so brainless that she never notices as they rob her again and again and again.

    In addition to Wilson being tiresome, the film also has a major problem when it comes to Jinx and Tip. At times, they seemed to be comic relief...there for fun and silliness. But other times the pair are downright evil....to the point where you cannot like them and you only want to see them in prison. The characters clearly were poorly written and should have just been comic relief...but they wanted them to be silly AND sympathetic AND evil...a combination that just didn't work.

    Overall, a very difficult film to watch, as it just is hard to keep watching. My wife kept hoping I'd give up...but I apparently like pain and kept watching up to the ending. And, at least the final scene...well, it worked VERY well and gave me exactly what I wanted!
    8sambase-38773

    Funny And Adorable

    I'm not a big fan of horse racing movies. They're just too predictable. Guess who wins? Haha. Besides, I've been bitten by horses and kicked by horses and let me tell you horses can really bite hard and they can really kick hard, too. Luckily, the horse racing is kept to a minimum in this movie. That's just fine with me, but if you want to watch this movie mainly to see a bunch of horse racing you're going to be disappointed.

    What this movie does have, thank goodness, is lots of comedy and an absolutely adorable main actress, Marie Wilson. She is one of a kind. 100 percent pure adorability. She puts the "bumpkin" in country bumpkin in this movie. She wins some money in the sweepstakes and there's nothing funnier than a country bumpkin winning money. The comedy is easy to achieve from there. Don't we all love country bumpkins? Especially when they're pretty and adorable? I should say so. And of course with her money she wants to buy a horse. A race horse. Uh-oh, here we go. Country bumpkin. Pretty girl. Money. Race horse. Sounds like the recipe for a movie to me!

    The actor who plays the jockey who rides the big horse in the big race is a look-a-like and sound-a-like for Jimmy Cagney. I don't know if that was on purpose or just an accident. Now that I think about it I think it was on purpose. At least I hope it was because it works beautifully. It kept making me laugh.

    Not much more to say I guess without spoiling the movie. It's fun. It's funny. And it's adorable. 8 stars.
    3AlsExGal

    Manages to be both inane and boring

    Jenny Jones (Marie Wilson) comes to town looking for Tip Bailey (Allen Jenkins) and Jinx Donovan. She has a one thousand dollar inheritance and wants to buy Firefly, a broken down nag descended from one of her grandfather's horses, and she's been told these two guys can help. Well, yes they can, if you mean they can help themselves.

    At this point these two guys use this young girl to get money for themselves. Then Jenny buys the winning Irish Sweepstakes ticket and ends up with 150 thousand dollars, which is about three million today. She buys firefly and a nice house with grounds for the horse, but still Tip and Jinx are always trying to scam this woman, even out of her last ten thousand dollars. Should she have been more prudent with her money? For sure. But that doesn't give these two the right to continually victimize her and then say that they are her pals.

    Along for the ride is Johnny Davis as one of the most unappealing leading men in the history of the world, who wants to marry Jenny but also does not want to be considered a fortune hunter by others. So this movie's characters are either unlikeable thieves (Tip and Jinx), terminally dense (Jenny), or seemingly without purpose to the entire plot (Jenny's boss/boyfriend). It's hard to like a movie without anybody to root for.

    This is very much a second feature, something probably made to fill out the evening's bill that people were hardly going to watch in the first place, and that's a good thing.
    2boblipton

    Nitwits Cheating Halfwits

    Marie Wilson shows up with $1000 to buy the grandson of the horse her grandfather trained. Racetrack touts Allen Jenkins and Charlie Foy cheat her of the money, but are too dumb to hold onto it. Instead, they sell Miss Wilson a Sweepstakes ticket which wins, and they sell her the horse she wanted at an obscene price, but are too dumb to hold onto the money. This pattern repeats several times until she marries Johnnie Davis, and the audience can go onto something more pleasant, like jabbing rusty ice picks into their private parts.

    Miss Wilson excelled at playing the comic dumb blonde. With a good cast and crew, she was hilarious. Here, with a script that just does the same thing four or five times and ends, she's just annoying. Like many of the Warner Brothers B comedies of this period, it's frantic rather than funny. Even the score by Howard Jackson is frantic and unamusing, unaware of what's happening onscreen. Other performers wasted in this movies include Vera Lewis, Jerry Colonna, Granville Bates, and Eddie Kane.
    4Art-22

    A silly horseracing comedy.

    Marie Wilson is toplined in this horseracing comedy, which depends a great deal on her "dumb blonde" character she had in all her roles, and which culminated in her Irma character in the My Friend Irma (1949) movie and the My Friend Irma (1952) TV series. It's the type of comedy I never did like. If it weren't for the ever-reliable Allen Jenkins and his savvy comedy, this movie would be a total bust. I did enjoy Jerry Colonna in his all-too-small role as a chef, and Frankie Burke, mostly because his normal way of talking sounds like James Cagney in all his roles.

    Perhaps Marie Wilson was not putting on an act. According to the AFI Catalogue, studio records state that because she couldn't pronounce Jenkins' character name "Xerxes," often saying "Jerky," the writers gave Jenkins the nickname of "Tip." In any case, I'm sure she didn't cry all the way to the bank.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The fire engines seen going to the race track were from Los Angeles Fire Department Station 66, that was located at 1715 W. Florence Avenue from 1929 to 1989. That building still stands as of this writing. The new Station 66 is located at 1909 W. Slauson Blvd. and serves the Hyde Park - South LA - Vermont Harbor area.
    • Goofs
      When Jennie looks at the sweepstakes ticket after first returning to her room, in close-up the hands holding the ticket have nail polish. However in longer shots of Jennie she doesn't have nail polish on her fingernails.
    • Quotes

      Horseplayer: [after horse they bet on loses] You call yourself a tipster. "Play Corned Beef. Corned Beef can't lose." You were talking to the jockey's Aunt Minnie. And me with 10 bucks on these whiskers. I oughta take it outta your hide.

      'Tip' Bailey: All right, all right! Take it easy, will ya? I'm only human.

      Horseplayer: Who told ya that?

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 20, 1939 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • 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
      • 59m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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