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East Side Kids - Bowery Blitzkrieg by Wallace Fox
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DVD Cover InformationActor: Bobby Jordan, Huntz Hall, Keye Luke, Leo Gorcey, Warren Hull Director: Wallace Fox Cinematographer: Marcel Le Picard Producer: Pete Mayer Producer: Sam Katzman Writer: Brendan Wood Writer: Carl Foreman Writer: Donn Mullahy Writer: Sam Robins DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, NTSC, Subtitled Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 62 minutes DVD Release Date: 2002-08-27 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Studio: Alpha Video
Movie Reviews of East Side Kids - Bowery BlitzkriegMovie Review: For What It Is . . . Not Bad Summary: 4 Stars
Before there were the Bowery Boys, there were the East Side Kids, and if you thought the Bowery Boys was a low budget series, wait until you catch the East Side Kids. Compared with the production values in the East Side Kids Series, the later Bowery Boys semeed like MGM.A note of difference: though both were released by the same studio, Monogram, the 22 pictures of the East Side Kids were independently produced by Sam Katzman and his Banner Films company. Once the popularity of the series was established, the Boys wanted more money and so Katzman gladly turned the series over to Monogram, who renemd it "The Bowery Boys.For the 60 or so films that would come out, each was a money maker for this "B" studio and helped finance some of their stabs at "A" billing and the respect it brings.)For students of film, Katzman has a defined niche in history as one of the giants of the exploitation movie. Consider the title of this movie, "Bowery Blitzkreig." One would assume that somewhere along the line Nazis and other bad guys of WWII would be added. Nope, this is a film about Golden Gloves boxing as Muggs (Leo Gorcey) fights the crooked racketeers of the game while still finding time to donate blood to pal Danny (Bobby Jordan), shot while resisting crime. The performances are nothing new: Gorcey and company simply honed their roles from their previous stint as the Dead End Kids for Warner Bros., but they are entertaining. The transfer is not the greatest, but we must keep in mind that prints of this movie were probably treated with benign neglect at the best. (I wonder how many of the 22 movies actually survived.) Even so, the movie is clear with only a few glitches and actually lacks the darkness that distinguished most of the series on television. All in all, it's a little slice of nostalgia (How many of us remember whiling away our Saturday or Sunday afternoons watching these on a local channel?) at just the right price.
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