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Baby Face Morgan
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Directed by Arthur Dreifuss.
This homey little comedy is predicated on the notion that bucolic country boy Morgan (Richard Cromwell) is the son of a notorious Roaring-Twenties racketeer. Morgan Senior's former gang, pining for their glory days, appoint "Baby Face" Morgan as their leader and resume their criminal activities. Their strategy is sublime: with the FBI busily beating the bushes for Nazi spies, who's going to pay attention to a bunch of middle-aged Prohibition gangsters? Unaware that he's being used as a figurehead, Morgan gets mixed up in a crooked insurance scheme, but by film's end he's figured out a way to clear himself and the mob, with everyone learning a lesson in the process. Reviewers in 1942 were amused by Baby Face Morgan but deplored its threadbare production values, noting that at one point the klieg lights could be seen reflecting on the bald dome of supporting player Vince Barnett! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
This still very amusing B-movie -- from Producers Releasing Corporation, no less, which wasn't known for its comedies -- is worth tracking down. An unassuming genial comedy set in the early days of the war on the home front, Baby Face Morgan is strongly reminiscent of Damon Runyon's best work and has a charm similar to that of Frank Capra's Lady for a Day, albeit from a much poorer, more threadbare production. Not surprisingly, there was a real writer behind the story in Oscar Brodney, a lawyer-turned-screenwriter with the common touch where humor was concerned, responsible for adapting Mexican Hayride (1948) for Abbott and Costello and Harvey (1950) as a screen vehicle for James Stewart. Here he steps into Damon Runyon territory, devising a fable about aging gangsters, a protection racket, and the wide-eyed innocent (Richard Cromwell) who sets things right with his own good nature, amid a string of comical misunderstandings and instances of mistaken identity -- the notion of gangsters being set at cross-purposes to themselves holds up even today as humorous. Cromwell is charming as the innocent hero, and Robert Armstrong is a hoot as the conniving gangster trying to manipulate his fellow mobsters. Director Arthur Dreifuss obviously had his hands full bringing this low-budget vehicle in on time (with a pretty big cast and lots of comic timing required), but he moves his actors well and even gets a convincingly (and necessarily) realistic performance out of Ralf Harolde as the quick-on-the-trigger would-be mob leader. And Warren Hymer and Vince Barnett are worth the price of admission as a pair of slow-on-the-uptake tough guys who look like they're auditioning for a road company production of Guys and Dolls. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
 

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