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Walter Brennan, Mary Brian, and Lyle Talbot in Affairs of Cappy Ricks (1937)

User reviews

Affairs of Cappy Ricks

12 reviews
5/10

No, I'M in charge of this sinking ship!

A pretty lightweight comedy here. This stars Walter Brennan stars as Captain Ricks, a family patriarch who returns home after a long trip abroad to find his personal and business affairs all in a shambles! His daughter is getting married to a shlub he doesn't approve of, his business has been taken over by his future mother-in-law AND his ship, his pride and joy has become automated! Ricks takes matters into his own hands and literally tries to be captain of the ship again by taking them on a cruise where he can try to boss everyone around and be in control everyone again. But it doesn't work, so he takes matters into his own hands, he "shipwrecks" everyone so he can get everyone straightened out! Walter Brennan is great here as is the whole cast. And I love the whole 'Captain of the ship" motif that they have going on here. The one problem I have with this is that it goes on far too long, going into one madcap adventure after another. Some lengthening of scenes (as opposed to shorter subplot scenes) would have done the trick here.
  • Spuzzlightyear
  • Apr 22, 2006
  • Permalink
6/10

As primitive as can be

Walter Brennan in one of his few starring roles while he was winning all those Best Supporting Actor awards, stars in this amusing comedy for Republic. Brennan is in the title role of Cappy Ricks an old sea dog who's built up a nice business of ship building, but who feels that progress is too much of a good thing.

In a way the Affairs Of Cappy Ricks is a humorous version of The Flight Of The Phoenix where Brennan is a nautical version of what James Stewart was in the air. Automation and instruments are fine, but unless you can sail by stars and compass and I do mean sail because steam and diesel power boats can run out of fuel you are no kind of sailor.

And that's a lesson his family seems to have forgotten as one daughter is getting married to a confirmed landlubber and another daughter has dumped longtime boyfriend Lyle Talbot for the son of a man whose business is about to merge and takeover Brennan's.

So Brennan arranges a little south sea voyage for the whole lot of them and has a preplanned shipwreck on a deserted island that would seem like home to the Gilligan's Island castaways. And it's as primitive as can be.

Brennan has no leading players to steal scenes from, so he's given a full head of steam by the director. His only competition is that of Georgia Caine who is the wife of William Davidson whom Brennan's business was merging with. Mary Brian is good as Brennan's feisty daughter whom he'd like to get back together with Talbot.

Definitely for fans for Walter Brennan.
  • bkoganbing
  • Nov 3, 2012
  • Permalink
5/10

George Jetson meets his match

While not having heard of Cappy Ricks before this, I'm guessing after looking on ebay that he was a fairly well-known book character in the early 20th. Brennan goes full steam as the curmudgeonly "old salt shaker" who stubbornly resists the encroachment of technology and is horrified on returning home and finding his daughter's future mother-in-law running his house and business and poised to merge his company with rival Bottomley, a purveyor of all things automated! Cappy launches a counter plot to set things straight, giving the story the bulk of its humorous situations. The highlight is the segment aboard the ELECTRA, Bottomley's almost completely automated yacht, particularly the scene with the push-button spice dispensers. The silly plot is served well by nice performances by Brennan, Georgia Caine, Frank Shields, and perky, attractive Mary Brian as Frankie. And the film itself foreshadows The Jetsons and Gilligan's Island 25 years before those shows made us roar with laughter (?)

5 1/2 Stars, check it out.
  • Phil Reeder
  • Apr 25, 2008
  • Permalink
5/10

He'll make a man out of them even if it kills him, especially the women!

  • mark.waltz
  • Jan 15, 2016
  • Permalink
7/10

"You Mealy-Mouthed Button-Pushing Parasite!"

  • joebridge
  • Mar 19, 2006
  • Permalink
4/10

Cappy Ricks Returns

Cranky seafaring Walter Brennan (as "Cappy" Ricks) returns from a voyage to find his San Francisco household has become "slovenly and shiftless." He doesn't approve of pretty daughter Mary O'Brian (as Frankie) being engaged to "lily-livered" Frank Shields (as Waldo), the son of a rival. Betting pal Lyle Talbot (as Bill Peck) he can whip everyone into shape, Mr. Brennan takes them on a cruise. He wants to fake a marooning, and "shake off civilization for awhile." But the plan threatens to backfire when they become stranded for real. Brennan isn't his usually lovable old salt, in this plot and situation retread. Trying to boss Brennan around, Georgia Caine (as Amanda Peasely) has some good moments.

**** Affairs of Cappy Ricks (5/24/37) Ralph Staub ~ Walter Brennan, Mary Brian, Georgia Caine, Lyle Talbot
  • wes-connors
  • Jan 14, 2012
  • Permalink
5/10

Some Salty, But Code-Compliant Language

Walter Brennan has a rare title role. He returns from his latest voyage to discover that Georgia Caine has bought 51% of his shipping company, installed buttons instead of sailors everywhere, and is about to marry Brennan's daughter, Mary Brian, to her son, Frank Melton, instead of the manly Lyle Talbot. So Brennan insists they all go for a cruise and strands them on a desert island.

It's all a by-the-numbers effort, little more than a decent time-waster, from a series of stories by Peter Kyne. Kyne was a prolific writer in several genres, and more than a hundred movies were made from his works. He died in 1957 at the age of 77.
  • boblipton
  • Jul 10, 2021
  • Permalink
1/10

Perfect movie to play while you murder someone

I recently watched this movie on a stream before an oscer special and it was ok. Didn't have any of the real actors I really love like Tom Cruz, John Depp, Brad Pitts, but it was still ok.

Ok until the person streaming the movie murdered someone on the livestream. Ran over a true American patriette.

LaRue was one of the members of DKR and will be missed.

1 bag for this movie.
  • equiles-26077
  • Apr 27, 2021
  • Permalink
10/10

It's Movie Time!

I loved the VFA's professional re-release of this film and especially Gregg's commentary! It was funny and insightful! I had no idea that costume designers could have one name like Madonna!

5 bags of popcorn and 5 sodas.
  • tcoogan15
  • Oct 23, 2019
  • Permalink
5/10

Silly B-movie fun...

  • planktonrules
  • Dec 28, 2010
  • Permalink
5/10

No fun

A simple and basic comedy of manners.

Old Captain Ricks returns home to see it transformed into a home automation experiment and his daughter engaged to the avant-garde partner's son. He then decides to take the whole family on a long trip across the Pacific, on his ship, which works in the old fashioned way, to make them awaken to the old values of his time, forgotten by the perks of city life.

Despite the apparent conservatism of the script, neither Captain Ricks is as old fashioned as he seems, nor is the lesson irrational or ineffective.

However, it is a weak film, without humor, without plot, without flame. A simple, somewhat silly idea for a comedy, not funny at all.
  • ricardojorgeramalho
  • Apr 5, 2025
  • Permalink
10/10

Five bags of Popcorn and two barnacles

This is the movie of it's era, truly. Great acting all around and a no-nonsense plot that keeps you engaged the entire time Cappy and everyone is on screen. He makes many references to shipboard things that I cannot comprehend, but I think I got the meat and potatoes on what he was talking about.

He really lays down the law to his stupid family when he returns, and that is a blessing as they are all slovenly and shiftless as the day is long.

Ralph Staub is a visionary, and truly deserves all the credit here, though Walter Brennan made the most of a stellar script, as expected. I hope we see more of this duo in the years to come!
  • johnfritz-85229
  • Mar 5, 2024
  • Permalink

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