Deliver to Australia
IFor best experience Get the App
Frankie (Frankie Darro) and Jeff (Mantan Moreland) answer a newspaper advertisement looking for drivers, unaware that the trucking company is the target of ruthless saboteurs who will stop at nothing to kill them.This freewheeling adventure features the hilarious teamwork of Mantan Moreland and Frankie Darro and is notable for an appearance by Charlie Chan's number one son, Key Luke, who had just recently starred in Monogram's Phantom of Chinatown and co-starred as Kato in The Green Hornet serial (both 1940).
P**E
Moreland is what makes the movies
Moreland is what makes the movies
L**1
ALPHA EDITION!!!!!
One of the Darro/ Moreland films, we also get Jackie Moran, Marcia Mae Jones, and Keye Luke. Alpha's print has all original titles with only a couple scenes which were slightly dark. There is one splice in the first few minutes where it appears one or two words may be missing. Otherwise, an average print overall. No Alpha logo.
D**I
Not Carmen Miranda
This is the title of a Carmen Miranda, Alice Faye film but this is not the right one. It comes up with searches for the musical or the cast but this is not THAT one.
S**Y
Darro & Moreland always fun, but vehicle sometimes sputters
Frankie Darro's tough-kid adventures were a mainstay for low-budget Monogram Pictures in the late '30s and early '40s, and when two of Monogram's other series faltered, the studio lumped them into the indestructible Darro series. Thus Marcia Mae Jones and Jackie Moran (of Monogram's teen romances) and Keye Luke (late of "Mr. Wong") joined pop-eyed Mantan Moreland as Darro's co-stars, prompting the title "The Gang's All Here."The title suggests a genial comedy, but the new co-stars are dropped uneasily into a crime-melodrama plot: villainous truckers running a rival trucking company off the roads and out of business. Frankie and Mantan sign on as new drivers, and are targeted for death. Not as slow as some of the Monogram mellers, but a notch or two below Darro's best; the Darro gang would find more rewarding work in the musical-comedy format.The source appears to be a carefully edited composite of two vintage prints, resulting in a fully complete and well preserved film. But the picture quality is troubling; the image looks jerky in a few scenes, like a movie taken with a digital camera, as though the action is being "stretched." This is either Monogram tricking up the speed of the "truck" exteriors, or an inferior digital transfer (the Alpha Video series is generally excellent).It's nice to see Darro and Moreland in action, but B-movie fans might try Alpha's DVD of "Up in the Air" instead, in which the stars work with more assurance.
L**E
A +
A +
Trustpilot
4 days ago
3 days ago