East Side Kids Meet Gale Storm
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| Review Date: June 3, 2008 |
| Reviewer: Robert Walsdorff, |
| This is my personal favorite of all the East Side Kids films. Too many of them just highlight Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall. This one allows us to enjoy Bobby Jordan and Gabrielle Dell as well, both who are excellent. At the same time Gorcey and Hall have never been better. A good script that is serious and funny at the same time without being too much of either. The balance is nice. The film also has the bonus of the presence of a soon to be star: Gale Storm. She is lovely and charming, making the most out of her part and making her character (within the limits of the role) very appealing and memorable. |
GREAT EAST SIDE KIDS!!!!!
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| Review Date: June 28, 2009 |
| Reviewer: larryj1, AZ, USA |
| Another great East Side Kids film. The Alpha DVD quality is average. It's just great that this print is not full of splices. The only issue is the replacement of the Monogram title card with the Astor Pictures re-issue title. |
Calling all Slapsie Maxie Rosenbloom fans!
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| Review Date: December 23, 2008 |
| Reviewer: Craig Edwards, By the sea in NC |
| Smart Alecks (1942) After the Broadway play Dead End became a huge hit in 1935, the six teen stars (Leo Gorcey, his brother David, Huntz Hall, Billy Halop, Bobby Jordan, Charles Duncan and Gabriel Dell) were brought to Hollywood to make the film version for MGM, which premiered in 1937. The movie was also a big hit, but the young stars had run rampant on the lot, getting into mischief and tearing stuff up, so producer Sam Goldwyn sold their contracts to Warner Brothers, where they made six more movies with stars like John Garfield, James Cagney, and Humphrey Bogart. By this time other studios in Hollywood were noticing the popularity of these films and when the Warners contract ended, the boys split and some were snapped up by Universal for the Little Tough Guys series and others were grabbed by Monogram for the Dead End Kids movies. By the mid 40's the two groups had made more than 35 movies and 3 cliffhanger serials! In 1946 Leo Gorcey and his agent revamped the Dead End kids into The Bowery Boys, which lasted through 48 (!) more movies through 1958! This effort is one of the East Side Kids entries, which were a mix of comedy and melodrama. This time out the boys (including Gorcey, Hall, Dell, and original Our Gang star Sunshine Sammy Morrison) want to buy some baseball uniforms to give their sandlot team some oomph, but as usual have no money. Before long they are mixed up with a gang of bank robbers led by former boxing champ Slapsie Maxie Rosenbloom and have to save one of their own members and his comely nurse sister from Maxie's revenge plans. As usual, Gorcey mangles the English language, Hall gets in some funny shtick, Morrison tap dances for everybody, and the movie veers back and forth from light comedy to syrupy melodrama, but it's short (just over an hour) and Gorcey and Hall are always worth a look, so this one gets a recommendation for those so inclined. |
Gang must help Gabriel Dell. Gale Storm co-stars.
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| Review Date: April 30, 2004 |
| Reviewer: James McDonald, Southern California |
This is the ninth film for the East Side Kids (Leo Gorcey, Bobby Jordan, Huntz Hall, Gabriel Dell, Bobby Stone, Sunshine Sammy Morrison, David Gorcey). A new member is introduced as "Stash", Stanley Clements joins the gang. Since they helped the police in finding the crooks behind the magnesium ring operation in LET's GET TOUGH, now they are trying to help Gabriel Dell hide from the police. Gabriel wants to break away from the gang and swears he is never coming back. Just as he trys to go out the hide-out door, Officer Joe Reagan (Roger Pryor) is hot on Gabriel's trail. He looks around the hide-out. Nothing. When the boys think the coast is clear, Gabriel tells the gang again he is not coming back. He opens the door and Officer Reagan is right there and he overheard the boys clear their names. So Gabriel is off to jail for participation in a hold-up. Gale Storm plays Danny's (Bobby Jordan) sister. Notice the ad-lib Huntz Hall does at the end of the film. Leo Gorcey puts water on himself after kissing a nurse. Huntz Hall spits some water back at him. The next film in the series: 'NEATH BROOKLYN BRIDGE (1942). |
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