Two Knights from Brooklyn


1h 11m 1949

Brief Synopsis

The owners of a taxi company fight off gangsters and a sinister health guru.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Release Date
1949

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 11m

Synopsis

This film is a 1949 compilation from two films in the "McGuerin" streamliners series made by Hal Roach in 1942; "The McGuerins from Brooklyn" and "Taxi, Mister" which accounts for players Lew Kelly, Clyde Fillmore and Tyler Brooke being in a 1949 movie. The film opens with a clip from "The McGuerins From Brooklyn" in which Tim McGuerin (William Bendix) and Eddie Corbett (Joe Sawyer) are being honored for growing their cab fleet from one in 1928 to a current 300. Lucy Gibbs (Marjorie Woodworth) asks Corbett how they got to this point, and his explanation is a flashback to an edited version of "Taxi, Mister", where Tim is romancing his future wife, burlesque performer Sadie O'Brien (Grace Bradley), whose obvious charms have also caught the eye of gangster Louis Glorio (Sheldon Leonard), who is not too thrilled at the attention Tim is paying Sadie. Tim's romantic problems are solved when the police discover that Glorio is also the long-wanted and mysterious figure known as the Frisco Ghost. Fade back, with a lot better editing than found in most compilations, to "The McGuerins From Brooklyn" which has Sadie, listening on the intercom, suspecting that Tim and newly-hired secretary Lucy Gibbs are indulging in some hanky-panky in one of the most verbal-risque and double-entendre scenes ever to slip past the heavy-handed censors of that day. Corbett also has his own problems with a gold-digging Marcia Morrison (Aline Judge, who else?), that leads to all hands ending up at a health-spa resort ran by Mr. Samson (Max Baer), whose attentions and intents toward Sadie in no way reflect those of some modern-day weight-reduction gurus.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Release Date
1949

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 11m

Quotes

Trivia

This film was re-edited from two previous features, McGuerins from Brooklyn, The (1942) and _Taxi, Mister (1943)_ (qv.).