Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuWell respected local good guy, Feet Samuels finds himself heavily in debt due to an uncharacteristic gambling binge. Feet decides the only way to settle the bill is by selling his body to an... Alles lesenWell respected local good guy, Feet Samuels finds himself heavily in debt due to an uncharacteristic gambling binge. Feet decides the only way to settle the bill is by selling his body to an ambitious doctor who agrees to allow him one last month to live life to the fullest, then... Alles lesenWell respected local good guy, Feet Samuels finds himself heavily in debt due to an uncharacteristic gambling binge. Feet decides the only way to settle the bill is by selling his body to an ambitious doctor who agrees to allow him one last month to live life to the fullest, then kill himself.
- Red Hendrickson
- (as George Pat Collins)
- Gambler
- (Nicht genannt)
- Donny Detroit
- (Nicht genannt)
- Man at Tea Party
- (Nicht genannt)
- Guard
- (Nicht genannt)
- Waiter
- (Nicht genannt)
- Farmer Parkins
- (Nicht genannt)
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Feet then repays his debt to the Brain and takes the balance to go on one last spree before he dies. Fate can be cruel, though, and suddenly Feet's gambling begins to pay off. Pretty soon Feet has run up his 500 dollars into a small fortune. This allows him to win back Hortense and begin to make wedding plans. There's just one problem. He's been having so much fun he forgot that his month is up the next day.
Alice White and Joe E. Brown were perfect together. White did seem to do better in these brassy supporting roles than as the lead in her earlier roles of 1929-1930 back when she was First National's answer to Clara Bow. You really feel that under all of that materialism - and there's a lot of it - that Hortense really does love Feet.
For a fun-filled film made just after the production code went into effect, with plenty of snappy dialogue and loaded with unique characters and atmosphere, this one really fits the bill.
Joe E. Brown brings some subtlety to his acting in this movie and that's unusual for Joe E. Brown. Normally, his acting hits you over the head. And if you don't get knocked unconscious then you laugh. So this one is quite interesting from that standpoint.
Remember I said this movie is about luck? It sure is. It's about a guy going from bad luck to good luck. That's the best way to go, from bad luck to good luck. You don't want to go from good luck to bad luck. That's a mean and sad road to follow. So always go the other direction if you can.
To sum up. I would rate this movie #2 on my list of Joe E. Brown movies. I enjoyed it quite a bit. And, who knows, it might even bring me some good luck. By the way, #1 on my Joe E. Brown list is "Bright Lights".
It's a ridiculous premise. Joe E. Brown is trying to make it breezy fun. It's not actually funny. The tone is light or more light than the material should allow. I am intrigued mostly wondering how this is getting resolved. It needs to end with a funny gag but it's not. Maybe that's why there is the final chicken gag. Honestly, I don't get the joke but it's the same light ridiculous non-sense that permeates this movie.
But they script has fun moments, enough to make this movie watchable, but it certainaly won't be one you will add to your list of favorites.
Some minor trivia on this movie, in the scene that shows a gossip column mention of Feet's attempt to sell his body to science, the by-line is by "Waldo Witchem", a sly take-off on real-life columnist Walter Winchell, who was a good friend of Damon Runyan, the man whos story this movie is based on. Winchell's name is mentioned in a few movies based on Runyon's stories. Alice White, who plays love interest Hortense was fresh from a major sex scandal that threatened her career. This movie was a come back attempt.
The story, as is the script is light. Feet Samuels is an honest man who loves to gamble. He ends of owing local mob boss, "The Brain" money and decides to sell his body to science to pay off his debt and also to impress his girl with material things. A mad doctor takes him up on the deal and in a month, Feet is to take a pill to end his life. Right after he makes the deal, his luck changes tremendously and he find himself in the predicament of going back on his word to the doctor and also the mob boss who underwrote his deal.
Again, this movie won't show up on any favorites list, but there are worse ways to waste an hour than by watching this.
It's the second movie adapted from Damon Runyon. Runyon was born out of wedlock, and by the 1910s he was one of the premiere sportswriters, and writers about Broadway, with Walter Winchell and Ed Sullivan his leg men. With the institution of the Production Code, his comic hoods speaking ridiculous English became an acceptable way of portraying gangsters without making them outright villains. He died in 1946 at the age of 66.
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- WissenswertesThis film makes mention of a restaurant named Mindy's and a night club called The Hot Box. Both of these places featured prominently in "Guys and Dolls", which was based on other stories by Damon Runyon.
- Zitate
'Feet' Samuels: Am I, am I losing you?
Hortense: Listen, Feet, you got nobody else to blame but yourself.
'Feet' Samuels: Well, what do you mean? Ain't you everything that I got in life?
Hortense: Yes, what have you got in life? Nothing!
'Feet' Samuels: Give me another chance. Just one more chance.
Hortense: From now on, things are gonna be different. When you get in a position to show me a material way that you love me and can bring up stockings and jewellery and stuff that other nice girls get, I might learn to like you again.
Hortense: [she open the door] I'm sorry, you have to hurry.
'Feet' Samuels: [he gets up reluctantly] You're right, Hortense. But you know what I'm gonna do? I'm going home and hock some of my personal things and get a bankroll. I never fought before because I always thought I had you, so I had nothing left to fight for. But now, watch me rip up that old street. I'm gonna break this run of tough luck and when I do I'll shower you so much with presents, you''ll have to wear a steel helmet to keep from getting knocked cuckoo.
Hortense: I hope you succeed, Feet.
'Feet' Samuels: I will. And if I do, and when I come to see you, can I, can I...?
Hortense: Can you, what?
'Feet' Samuels: Can I still call your Mother, Toodles?
- VerbindungenFeatured in Footlight Parade: Music for the Decades (2006)
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- A Very Honourable Guy
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 2 Minuten
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- 1.37 : 1
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