Un ex giocatore di baseball perde molti lavori a causa della sua passione di guardare le partite durante l'orario di lavoro, fino a quando decide di diventare lui stesso un arbitro.Un ex giocatore di baseball perde molti lavori a causa della sua passione di guardare le partite durante l'orario di lavoro, fino a quando decide di diventare lui stesso un arbitro.Un ex giocatore di baseball perde molti lavori a causa della sua passione di guardare le partite durante l'orario di lavoro, fino a quando decide di diventare lui stesso un arbitro.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Jeff Richards
- Bob Landon
- (as Richard Taylor)
Phil Adams
- Minor Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Murray Alper
- Fireman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Walter Bacon
- Umpire
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
William Bailey
- Minor Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Shirley Ballard
- Minor Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Sam Balter
- Television Announcer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jim Bannon
- Dusty
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Richard Bartell
- Hotel Guest
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Larry Barton
- Guard
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jim Baxes
- Third Baseman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIncluded among the American Film Institute's 2000 list of the 500 movies nominated for the Top 100 Funniest American Movies.
- BlooperWhen Bill Johnson (William Bendix) is bouncing around in the locker room of the umpire school, support wires are visible during the final bounce.
Recensione in evidenza
This is a really a funny movie, something Director Lloyd Bacon produced by the carload back in "the classic era." Bacon's movies were fast-moving and entertaining, and this was no exception. If you liked William Bendix in his mid-1950s TV show, "Life Of Riley," you'll like this film.
Bacon had an especially good year in comedies in 1950 with this movie, "The Fuller Brush Girl" with Lucille Ball, and "The Good Humor Man" with Jack Carson. The director must have been a baseball fan because the year before (1949), he directed Ray Milland in another absurd-but-hilarious movie called "It Happens Every Spring." Whether you enjoy baseball or, you'll get a lot of laughs out of it, too. It's just simply a goofy and likable comedy, filled with the kind of characters you'd see in a late '40s/early '50s comedy. What's nice about the older films, too, is that you actually see whole families: dad, mom and a couple of kids.
Actually, you more you know about baseball, the more you'll just shake your in disbelief at some of the things you'll see in this story because they could never happen today, or even back in 1950. (i.e. a fan coming out of the stands and punching an umpire several times over the course of a minute, and then ump slugging him....and nobody arrested?) Anyway, Bendix is very good and the supporting case, led by underrated actor Tom D'Andrea, is fun to watch, too. D'Andrea and Bendix reminded me almost of Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis in "Some Like It Hot." They worked well as a team and must have known that because they paired up in the aforementioned TV series, too, later in the decade.
This film also will remind older film buffs of silent movie comedies with a wild scene at the end you have to see to believe. (Hint: Bendix winds up "water skiing down city streets, being pulled by an ambulance).
It's sheer lunacy.
Bacon had an especially good year in comedies in 1950 with this movie, "The Fuller Brush Girl" with Lucille Ball, and "The Good Humor Man" with Jack Carson. The director must have been a baseball fan because the year before (1949), he directed Ray Milland in another absurd-but-hilarious movie called "It Happens Every Spring." Whether you enjoy baseball or, you'll get a lot of laughs out of it, too. It's just simply a goofy and likable comedy, filled with the kind of characters you'd see in a late '40s/early '50s comedy. What's nice about the older films, too, is that you actually see whole families: dad, mom and a couple of kids.
Actually, you more you know about baseball, the more you'll just shake your in disbelief at some of the things you'll see in this story because they could never happen today, or even back in 1950. (i.e. a fan coming out of the stands and punching an umpire several times over the course of a minute, and then ump slugging him....and nobody arrested?) Anyway, Bendix is very good and the supporting case, led by underrated actor Tom D'Andrea, is fun to watch, too. D'Andrea and Bendix reminded me almost of Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis in "Some Like It Hot." They worked well as a team and must have known that because they paired up in the aforementioned TV series, too, later in the decade.
This film also will remind older film buffs of silent movie comedies with a wild scene at the end you have to see to believe. (Hint: Bendix winds up "water skiing down city streets, being pulled by an ambulance).
It's sheer lunacy.
- ccthemovieman-1
- 21 ago 2008
- Permalink
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By what name was Kill the Umpire (1950) officially released in India in English?
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