Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0

Burleigh Sullivan

Polly Pringle

Susie Sullivan

Speed McFarlane

Ann Westly

Gabby Sloan

Spider Schultz

Mrs. E. Winthrop LeMoyne

Mr. Austin

Photographer

Willard

Fight Announcer

Radio Announcer

Radio Announcer

Matron

Master of Ceremonies

Referee #1 (uncredited)

Newsboy (uncredited)

Reporter (uncredited)

Fight Spectator (uncredited)

Goldwyn Girl (uncredited)

Dancer (uncredited)

Dancer (uncredited)

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-07-07
This is very much a vehicle for Danny Kaye, and I was never his greatest fan. That said, he does a decent job holding this together. When his sister "Susie" (Vera-Ellen) is facing some unwanted attention from Steve Cochran's boxer "Speed McFarlane", he floors the man. Next thing he knows, he is in the ring, professionally - and winning too. All of this initially impresses nightclub singer "Polly" (Virgina Mayo) but as his victories begin to go to his head, he becomes a bit of an ass. His slightly dodgy manager "Sloan" (Walter Abel) has an ultimate goal - a prize fight against "Speed" but can "Tiger" make the grade and keep his gal? Kaye is on good form, he delivers effortlessly and stylishly throughout. I thought the humour a little too predictable, but this light-hearted spoof on the boxing industry is at times still quite amusing. What let's it down most, isn't anything to do with the stars - it's the unremarkable musical sequences. Jule Styne and Sammy Khan were well off the best when they wrote the songs and neither Mayo nor Vera-Ellen did any of their own singing. The best song by a country mile isn't their's at all - but Sylvia Fine & Max Liebman's "Pavlova" - the only song delivered by Kaye, himself. The film is also rather long. The premiss is fun for some of this, but after a while wears a bit thin and as I, personally, didn't much care for the lead character's character, I started to feel just a little bit bored in the end.