A ghost helps the Bowery Boys capture a gang of crooks led by a mad doctor.A ghost helps the Bowery Boys capture a gang of crooks led by a mad doctor.A ghost helps the Bowery Boys capture a gang of crooks led by a mad doctor.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
William 'Billy' Benedict
- Whitmore 'Whitey' Williams
- (as William Benedict)
Al Bain
- Sweetshop Patron
- (uncredited)
Paul Bryar
- Reporter
- (uncredited)
James Conaty
- Seance Participant
- (uncredited)
Bess Flowers
- Seance Participant
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The boys get mixed up with a gang of phony spiritualists, at the same time Sach gets some special help.
What a hoot when Slip gives elocution lessons "how now brown cow" to coarse-talking Cynthia (Kayne). That's like Attila the Hun giving nice-nice lessons to Ghengis Khan. The pace really picks up once the boys invade Margo the phony Medium's house. Along the way, Sach picks up an impish ghost Edgar (Corrigan) that only he can see. It's a funny schtick since Edgar does all kinds of magic that confounds the disbelieving gang. Then too, catch that fractured Shakespeare Sach starts speaking after listening to the high-brow Edgar. Corrigan and Hall really work well together and Hall is livelier than in many of the other entries.
In fact, there are several centers of comedy, including Slip and the gang, and pint-sized Louie (B. Gorcey) doing his midget brand. And I hope they paid the boys extra for holding those frozen poses as well as they did, especially when they get lifted up. Also, I like the way Edgar "breaks character" and talks to the audience. Here, it's a rather charming touch. Of course, no one expects high-brow humor from these grade school drop-outs, but this entry is more imaginative and livelier than most.
What a hoot when Slip gives elocution lessons "how now brown cow" to coarse-talking Cynthia (Kayne). That's like Attila the Hun giving nice-nice lessons to Ghengis Khan. The pace really picks up once the boys invade Margo the phony Medium's house. Along the way, Sach picks up an impish ghost Edgar (Corrigan) that only he can see. It's a funny schtick since Edgar does all kinds of magic that confounds the disbelieving gang. Then too, catch that fractured Shakespeare Sach starts speaking after listening to the high-brow Edgar. Corrigan and Hall really work well together and Hall is livelier than in many of the other entries.
In fact, there are several centers of comedy, including Slip and the gang, and pint-sized Louie (B. Gorcey) doing his midget brand. And I hope they paid the boys extra for holding those frozen poses as well as they did, especially when they get lifted up. Also, I like the way Edgar "breaks character" and talks to the audience. Here, it's a rather charming touch. Of course, no one expects high-brow humor from these grade school drop-outs, but this entry is more imaginative and livelier than most.
The Bowery Boys get involved with spiritualism. Uncle Louie is desperate to contact Jake on the other side. Slip smells a con with his mother is being tricked by a spiritualist. It turns out to be a vast network of con people headed by famous spiritualist Margo the Medium. Sach meets an actual ghost and only he can see it.
It's another Scooby-Doo adventure with The Bowery Boys. It would be more compelling if Slip's mom is being tricked directly by Margo the Medium. It would make their revenge more delicious. It's set to be a fine adventure and then it adds a fun little twist, Edgar. I like Edgar and the premise that only Sach can see him. It has lots of potential fun. It's a bit of a mess but it's The Bowery Boys.
It's another Scooby-Doo adventure with The Bowery Boys. It would be more compelling if Slip's mom is being tricked directly by Margo the Medium. It would make their revenge more delicious. It's set to be a fine adventure and then it adds a fun little twist, Edgar. I like Edgar and the premise that only Sach can see him. It has lots of potential fun. It's a bit of a mess but it's The Bowery Boys.
I've seen a few of these "Bowery Boys" romps by now, and they all seem to follow a similar pattern: no matter what the plot or the (supposed) setting, they ultimately end up in a single set (after all, they were made by the infamously cost-conscious Monogram studios), where the boys chase, and are chased around, by crooks. "Ghost Chasers" is no different, except that there is a rare - if brief - dramatic component, with a mother trying to get in contact with her dead son. The film is padded and overlong (even at 69 minutes), though there is the occasional funny line, and "Edgar", the one real, friendly ghost, is amusingly played by Lloyd Corrigan. ** out of 4.
GHOST CHASERS is a whole lot of fun when the guys expose a fake spiritualist racket, headed by Margo the Medium? You may notice the bad guys mansion (complete with sliding doors and hidden rooms) is the same old dark house used in SMUGGLERS COVE a few years earlier.
There's a super gag running through the film where Sach (and only Sach) can see and hear Edgar the ghost, who is just hanging around the mansion. Edgar is played by none other than character actor and director Lloyd Corrigan. A scene stealer.
This episode also features some familiar supporting actors; Philip Van Zandt as a phony doctor (often seen with the Three Stooges) and Robert Coogan (Jackie's brother) as goofy detective Jack Eagen.
Argentina Brunetti plays Mama Parelli (Slip's neighbor who is being duped by the ghost racket) and Lela Bliss plays Margo.
*** Best line; The guys are locked in a room that is flooded, to which Slip yells, "I think the walls are sweating!" Safe to say one of Leo Gorcey's famous ad libs.
One of the first Bowery Boys to be released on vhs in 1992. Remastered via Warner Brothers dvd box set in 2012. The sets generally contain eight episodes each. Classic color covers and movie posters.
There's a super gag running through the film where Sach (and only Sach) can see and hear Edgar the ghost, who is just hanging around the mansion. Edgar is played by none other than character actor and director Lloyd Corrigan. A scene stealer.
This episode also features some familiar supporting actors; Philip Van Zandt as a phony doctor (often seen with the Three Stooges) and Robert Coogan (Jackie's brother) as goofy detective Jack Eagen.
Argentina Brunetti plays Mama Parelli (Slip's neighbor who is being duped by the ghost racket) and Lela Bliss plays Margo.
*** Best line; The guys are locked in a room that is flooded, to which Slip yells, "I think the walls are sweating!" Safe to say one of Leo Gorcey's famous ad libs.
One of the first Bowery Boys to be released on vhs in 1992. Remastered via Warner Brothers dvd box set in 2012. The sets generally contain eight episodes each. Classic color covers and movie posters.
I watched Ghost Chasers (1951) on TCM this morning. Whitey takes Sach to a meeting of mediums at a mansion and they watch a seance. Meanwhile, Slip learns that Mama Parelli is being billed out of $100 by a phony medium. Mama wants to contact her son, who was killed in the war. Slip decides to use Louie as bait to trap these crooks. Louie wants to contact his dead uncle to,find out wheee he hid all the money that he owed Louie before he died. When the BBs converge on the mansion, Sach meets a friendly ghost named Edgar who only he can see. Edgar is able to perform all types of supernatural tricks. Eventually, the Boys confront the phony mediums, but Routine 5 is stoped cold by mass hypnotism. It's up to Sach and Edgar to save the day, with help from Louie's new counter girl, Cynthia, and her private detective boyfriend, Jack Eagen.
This Bowery Boys entry is pretty dull. There's little action and the script is mostly unfunny. Not much slapstick, either. Whitey, Chuck, and Butch are much more prominent in Ghost Chasers than they have been in the recent movies. But Sach and Slip are in very few scenes together. At first, it's Sach and Whitey, and then Sach and Edgar interacting. Slip operates mostly on his own. This BB movie is disjointed from the start and it doesn't improve as it goes along.
This Bowery Boys entry is pretty dull. There's little action and the script is mostly unfunny. Not much slapstick, either. Whitey, Chuck, and Butch are much more prominent in Ghost Chasers than they have been in the recent movies. But Sach and Slip are in very few scenes together. At first, it's Sach and Whitey, and then Sach and Edgar interacting. Slip operates mostly on his own. This BB movie is disjointed from the start and it doesn't improve as it goes along.
Did you know
- TriviaEarly in the film, Lloyd Corrigan makes a comment that Sach's nose reminds him of Cyrano. Corrigan played the title character's best friend in Cyrano de Bergerac (1950) the previous year.
- GoofsAfter he snookers Louie out of the hundred bucks during the first séance routine to help out Mrs. Parelli, Slip winds up collecting two hundred dollars from Madame Zola. If you watch the scene, you'll see that he got his own hundred bucks back for Louie, and Mrs. Parelli got her hundred dollars too. (The second $100 was for Mrs. Parelli's previous visit.)
- Quotes
Horace Debussy 'Sach' Jones: What about me?
Terence Aloysius 'Slip' Mahoney: You stay here. If ya get in any trouble, whistle.
Horace Debussy 'Sach' Jones: How do you whistle?
Terence Aloysius 'Slip' Mahoney: Just pucker your lips and... I'll bash dem in.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Let's Go Navy! (1951)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Cazando fantasmas
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 9m(69 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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