The Lemon Drop Kid

1951

Action / Comedy / Crime / Music / Romance

8
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 80% · 5 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 75% · 1K ratings
IMDb Rating 7.0/10 10 2512 2.5K

Top cast

John Indrisano as Oxford Charlie's Henchman
Gene Roth as Oxford Charlie's Butler
Robert Foulk as Victim
Anthony Warde as Thoughtful Man
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
842.08 MB
956*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 31 min
Seeds 4
1.53 GB
1424*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 31 min
Seeds 9

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by jamesrupert2014 8 / 10

Enjoyable Hope Christmas romp

Bob Hope is the Lemon Drop Kid, a race-track tout who incurs the wrath of gangster Moose Moran when he convinces Moose's ditsy mistress to bet on what turns out to be the slowest horse in the race. Given until Christmas to raise the ten grand, the conniving kid sets up a fake 'Old Dolls Home' as part of a fake Santa Claus charity scam. This is a Christmas movie, so needless to say the larceny and gangland shenanigans of the first half gives way to a sentimental final reel. The film is loosely based on the eponymous Damon Runyon story but, other than character names like 'Gloomy Willie' and the frequent use of the term 'dolls', lacks a real 'Runyonesque' feel. As always, Hope's impeccable timing and delivery gets the most out of the material and the film is pretty funny at times (including the obligatory meta-reference to Bing Crosby, Hope's usually comedic foil). All in all, a fun family Christmas-film that introduced the classic seasonal charmer 'Silver Bells'. One additional plus: the film features the great Tor Johnson of 'Plan 9 from Outer Space' (1957) and 'The Beast of Yucca Flats' (1961) fame.
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Reviewed by mark.waltz 7 / 10

There is Hope For the Holidays.....

The silver bells are clinking down on Fifth Avenue here in New York City as I write this review, and what movie is more appropriate to write about than the one that famous Christmas song came from? I find this to be Bob Hope's best non-Road movie; funny, touching, and filled with the joy of the season. This is not a remake of the 1934 Lee Tracy movie, although it does surround a character addicted to lemon drops who happens to hang out at a race track. That was a sentimental tale about a ne'er-do-well father who does all he can to get his kid back. This movie is a lot lighter and instead of a father missing his child, it is about a con man who learns something about giving when he decides to help out a group of old ladies. Of course, he has his own selfish motives, but when gangsters threaten to take over what he has come to see as the right thing to do, Hope takes action and reforms himself, winning the heroine (the lovely Marilyn Maxwell) in the process.

The leading old lady is a street newspaper seller played by the Academy Award Winning Jane Darwell who is absolutely lovely here and will steal your heart, much like she did as the birdseed seller in London years later in "Mary Poppins". William Frawley is Hope's crusty sidekick, whose gravely voiced singing introduces a more cynical "Silver Bells" ("Chunk it in, Chunk it in, or Santy will give you a mickey"). Fifth Avenue and the surrounding snowy streets become a Christmas wonderland, a vision that has made New York one of the most romantic Christmas getaways for years. Maxwell and Hope also sing the delightful "It Only Costs a Dime to Dream" to the old ladies in the redecorated gambling home (where the ladies sleep on moving crap tables). Hope even ends up in drag, looking like Ray Bolger in "Where's Charley?", and has a delightful exchange with another old lady (the wonderful Ida Moore) about his hour glass figure. Fred Clark, that delightful sourpuss, is great as the gangster and Lloyd Nolan is also amusing as another racketeer who tries to get his hands on all the old dolls so he can take over Hope's racket.

Future "Ed Wood" veteran Tor Johnson ("Night of the Ghouls", "Plan Nine From Outer Space") is instantly recognizable as the Swedish wrestler whom Hope involves in his scheme while other typical Damon Runyeon style characters are played by such familiar faces as Harry Bellaver and Jay C. Flippen. The lovely Andrea King is all Southern charm as Clark's mistress whom Hope mistakenly passes on a fake tip to at the race track to his imminent regret. Veteran diminutive character actor Francis Pierlot has an amusing cameo as Darwell's recently prison released husband who has an act for cracking safes.

This is a must for the holiday season that will charm everybody and make you feel good about the true spirit of the holidays.

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