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The Jones Family in Hollywood (1939) Online

The Jones Family in Hollywood (1939) Online
Original Title :
The Jones Family in Hollywood
Genre :
Movie / Adventure / Comedy / Romance
Year :
1939
Directror :
Malcolm St. Clair
Cast :
Jed Prouty,Spring Byington,Kenneth Howell
Writer :
Harold Tarshis,Joseph Hoffman
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h
Rating :
6.5/10
The Jones Family in Hollywood (1939) Online

John Jones (Jed Prouty) attends an American Legion convention in Hollywood and the whole family, minus the married daughter, goes with him. A minor movie actor, Danny Regan (William Tracy) picks up Lucy Jones (June Carlson) and gets her a screen test, which proves disastrous. The family takes a studio tour and they create havoc by stumbling onto movie sets and disturbing filming.
Complete credited cast:
Jed Prouty Jed Prouty - John Jones
Spring Byington Spring Byington - Mrs. John Jones
Kenneth Howell Kenneth Howell - Jack Jones (as Ken Howell)
George Ernest George Ernest - Roger Jones
June Carlson June Carlson - Lucy Jones
Florence Roberts Florence Roberts - Granny Jones
Billy Mahan Billy Mahan - Bobby Jones
William Tracy William Tracy - Danny Regan
June Gale June Gale - Alice Morley
Marvin Stephens Marvin Stephens - Tommy McGuire
Hamilton MacFadden Hamilton MacFadden - Townsend - Director
Matt McHugh Matt McHugh - Charlie
Caroline Rankin Caroline Rankin - Spinster (as Spike Rankin)

William Beaudine began the screenplay but withdrew from the project, leaving it unfinished. Harold Tarshis finished the screenplay and received credit for it. Beaudine did not.


User reviews

Morad

Morad

The 'reviewer' above states that The Jones Family in Hollywood was the only 'entry' in the Jones Family saga. Not so-not even close. According to the IMDb, there were 17 Jones Family films, and all were made in the span of 3 or 4 years, which is astounding! Jed Prouty always played the Dad, and though I haven't seen more than a couple of these fun but silly films, I believe that most of the films starred the same cast. Wish more were available on the rental market!

I recently met Sid Kibrick, who not only played the youngest son in the Jones sagas, he was WOIM, Butch's sidekick in fourteen episodes of the Our Gang shorts.
Wal

Wal

The Jones family were supposed to be 20th Century-Fox's low-budget response to MGM's popular Andy Hardy films, but the aspirations of the series never got any higher than the semi-pleasant "The Jones Family in Hollywood". This film is most interesting because the original story was co-written by Buster Keaton, and Buster makes a very brief uncredited appearance on screen, with no lines. Watch for the scene in which a whole squadron of hotel porters invade the Jones family's hotel suite. The porter in the front has all the dialogue. The porter standing directly behind him, with his hat pulled down over his eyes, is Buster Keaton.

Every year, Dad Jones (Jed Prouty) goes off to his American Legion convention, and every year the rest of the family refuse to accompany him to his boring convention. But this year the convention is in Hollywood, so the whole family come along. Poor old Dad spends the whole convention weekend marching in parades, carrying a heavy tuba and tooting his lungs out. Meanwhile, the rest of the family are looking for movie stars.

The film places fairly equal emphasis on each member of the Jones family, although some of the subplots are more successful than others. Most interesting is what happens to Junior Jones. The boy strikes up a friendship with a Hollywood cameraman who brings Junior into the studio and shows him the workings of a cinema camera, encouraging him to become a photographer. Of all the sequences in this film, I suspect that this scene was the dearest to Buster Keaton's heart.

"The Jones Family in Hollywood" was directed by Malcolm St Clair, a prolific comedy director who is generally regarded as a no-talent hack, and his credits bear this out. (He directed Laurel and Hardy in some of their worst, least funny films near the end of their career.) There are some good moments in "The Jones Family in Hollywood", but it's obvious why this series never took off. I'll rate this film 3 out of 10, mostly for the cameraman's scenes.