» » Old Mother Riley at Home (1945)

Old Mother Riley at Home (1945) Online

Old Mother Riley at Home (1945) Online
Original Title :
Old Mother Riley at Home
Genre :
Movie / Comedy
Year :
1945
Directror :
Oswald Mitchell
Cast :
Arthur Lucan,Kitty McShane,Freddie Forbes
Writer :
Joan Butler,George A. Cooper
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h 16min
Rating :
4.9/10
Old Mother Riley at Home (1945) Online

Credited cast:
Arthur Lucan Arthur Lucan - Mrs. Riley
Kitty McShane Kitty McShane - Kitty Riley
Freddie Forbes Freddie Forbes - Mr. Bumpton
Richard George Richard George - Dan
Willer Neal Willer Neal - Bill
Wally Patch Wally Patch - Bouncer
Kenneth Warrington Kenneth Warrington - Boss
Angela Barrie Angela Barrie - Duchess
Janet Morrison Janet Morrison - Mary
Elsie Wagstaff Elsie Wagstaff - Mrs. Ginochie
Henry B. Longhurst Henry B. Longhurst - Commissionaire
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Patricia Laffan Patricia Laffan - Bit Part


User reviews

Dusar

Dusar

11th in the series starring Arthur Lucan and his missus Kitty McShane. While certainly not the best in the series there are still a reasonable amount of genuine chuckles to be had and the film is very watchable. The version I have is not of the best quality and this always has to be taken into consideration when watching films of this ilk; sometimes they are far better than the actual film quality allows. Here we have Kitty getting sacked because of her mother (again!!) and ending up working at an illegal gambling joint because of her ne'er-do-well boyfriend, Bill. Incidentally, the boyfriend is played by Willer Neal who in real life was having affair with Kitty, and was an all round bad egg. The plot is practically non-existent, even for an OMR film and it wouldn't be unfair to say that this is a by-the-numbers Old Mother Riley but Lucan still manages to do his stuff successfully. Could easily do without Kitty's songs though.
Weiehan

Weiehan

Regular readers of my comments know that I take each movie as a special challenge. Some movies are rewarding in themselves, they intrinsically enrich or give value. Most are less than that and require work to make the experience valuable or at least interesting.

Sometimes the challenge is significant. Readers have been sending me movies to test my ability, sort of like audience members throwing chain saws to jugglers. There's a really challenging batch in my pouch right now, some Abbott and Costello nuisances, and ALL of the Mother Riley things.

Of them, this is the most challenging, which is to say that it has nothing in it that by itself is remotely interesting. There's none of the ordinary leverage you can get with bad movies: nothing in the badness is comically bad.

Its quite simply unsuccessful in its two goals.

The setup is Mrs Riley, played by a man and his on screen daughter played by his wife. She's so much younger that early in their careers they were advertised as father and daughter.

She's alarmingly unattractive. Mrs Riley is nauseatingly unfunny. Usually when jokes don't work, it is because there's a certain ticklish spot that some folks have and you just fall out of the demographic. So you can dismiss it as bad humor, but in doing so you acknowledge that it IS humor.

The funny bit with Mrs Riley is rooted in the Bristish class system and a specific niche. This is a lot like Eddie Murphy playing a fat black mama. We all know the type. We all recognize what Murphy is playing with. But in 50 years, that stereotype will be gone, the class structure will have mutated and the riff will be completely incomprehensible because its center will have evaporated.

Well, that's what happened here. The joke about a specific type of old bag may have had resonance in its time and place — it surely did. But now, it is fossilized humor.

The story is unique for the Riley serious, I think. It tries to have the old family lost and regained plot. Well, that I can be sure of is merely incompetent.

Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.