The Tip-Off (1931) Poster

(1931)

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5/10
A gangster comedy-drama with some good moments and Ginger Rogers in any early role.
Art-2215 February 1999
A moderately funny crime comedy I found pretty satisfying, mostly from seeing Ginger Rogers in such an early role. The stars, however, are Eddie Quillan and Robert Armstrong, both billed above the title, with Quillan playing a radio repairman and Armstrong playing a boxer with an upcoming middleweight championship fight. Seeing Eddie Quillan billed first surprised me, since I never knew he attained that measure of stardom. But he does have a good rapport with the camera and I enjoyed his performance. Although my focus was on Rogers, playing Armstrong's sweetie and a flirt, the film's focus was on Quillan. This performance provides the suspense and drama which is sustained nicely through the last half of the film. All in all, the movie is somewhat enjoyable.
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6/10
Early Ginger in a Crime Comedy
atlasmb16 July 2014
Ginger Rogers was quite young when she acted in this film, but she already had two years of film experience under her belt. Here, she plays Babyface, girlfriend of a boxer named Kayo (played by Robert Armstrong) who is the extremely jealous type.

The film's protagonist is Tommy Jordan (Eddie Quillan), a likable guy who repairs radios for a living. Babyface seems interested in Tommy, but he wants to steer clear of her, fearing Kayo's wrath. Kayo actually takes him under his wing in a protective sense.

Tommy has the questionable luck to fall in love with Edna (Joan Peers) who is the reluctant object of Nick Vatalle's (Ralf Harolde) affection. Nick is a fight manager and all-around thug.

Near the end of the film, when you think they are going to lay a moral on you about the big city or crime and prohibition, everything turns out jake. But we kind of knew that, because this film is more comedy than crime.

This group of actors is fun to watch. Recommended viewing for fans of Ginger Rogers especially.
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7/10
Likable every-man stumbles into drama, danger, and romance
AlsExGal20 March 2010
This is a solid little gangster film with various ingredients you've probably seen before, but it's still lots of fun, mainly because the central player is not a gangster, but an accidental participant who is leading an ordinary life until extraordinary circumstances cause him to rise to the occasion.

Tommy Jordan (Eddie Quillan) is a radio repairman that gets a call to repair a radio owned by a boxer in hiding, Kayo McClure (Robert Armstrong). The boxer is hiding from gangster Nick Vatelli, who wants Kayo to fight for him, or else. The gangster and his henchmen burst in on Kayo while Tommy is in another room of the apartment. Seeing that there's about to be trouble, Tommy uses an old radio trick to make the gangster think he's surrounded by the police, and the gang leaves peaceably. This ingenious rescue makes Kayo instant friends with young Tommy, and Kayo promises Tommy a favor if he ever needs one. That favor is soon needed, because Tommy becomes friendly with a girl at a dance (Joan Peers) who turns out to be the object of gangster Vatelli's affection, although she does not return the sentiment. Now young Tommy has two black marks against him in Vatelli's book - making him look foolish at Kayo's apartment, and now going after someone he considers to be his girl.

This sounds like it could be heavy stuff, but by the placing of comic bits in the film at strategic points, and also due to the fact that actor Ralf Harolde's Nick Vatelli comes across as more of an angry little weasel than someone actually capable of James Cagney-style mayhem, there isn't an excess of tension in this one - it's more of a fun romp. Only when Vatelli has his muscle men to back him up does he seem the least bit threatening. The comedy is really helped along by a very young Ginger Rogers as Kayo's girl who looks gorgeous here and really has some great lines. Robert Armstrong was a versatile actor of the early talkie era, playing the kind of hard-boiled yet likable mugs in the early 1930's that make him very comparable to Wallace Beery. Armstrong and Rogers have great chemistry in this one as two people who really love each other and yet wouldn't know how to behave if they didn't have some kind of argument going.

If you like good little action/comedy/romance films from the precode era, this one is worth a look if you can deal with the fact that the vast majority of players in this one will likely be unfamiliar to you.
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6/10
Slight But Fun
utgard1417 July 2014
Radio repairman Tommy Jordan (Eddie Quillan) finds himself in all kinds of hot water. First he saves dim-witted boxer Kayo (Robert Armstrong) from gangster Nick Vatelli (Ralf Harolde), endearing him to Kayo but making an enemy of Nick. He further enrages Nick when he moves in on the gangster's girl (Joan Peers). Now Tommy's life is in danger and he must turn to Kayo and his spunky girlfriend Baby Face (Ginger Rogers) for help.

Nice little gangster comedy with a likable cast. Quillan's good but Armstrong and Rogers steal every scene they're in. The movie loses steam when they aren't around.
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7/10
Lively and fun
vert00122 January 2016
Radio repairman Eddie Quillan finds himself in the bedroom of flirtatious 'Baby Face' (Ginger Rogers), the girl of quick-tempered middleweight boxer Robert Armstrong. Trying to fend off the charms of Baby Face, Quillan is soon in real trouble as he inadvertently steals away the reluctant fiancée of a real mob boss, one Nick Vitelli. Ironically, this comedy of errors proves completely unnecessary as we learn that Baby Face and her boxing boyfriend really do love one another in their bickering way while, with considerably less amusement, Quillan and his new girl also discover true love.

The Tip-Off is a nice, unpretentious comedy that makes good use of the gangster film that had come into vogue in the early thirties. Eddie Quillen is the star and gives a fine performance as our innocent yet courageous hero. Robert Armstrong also plays his usual lovable lug well. This was Ginger Rogers' first Hollywood movie (she'd already made five in New York) and it's probably the first time we can see her as her recognizable self (also the first time she uses her true voice, having stuck to the 'Betty Boop' vocal style to this point). With a lot of funny lines impeccably delivered, she gave clear indication of the great things to come.
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5/10
Inconsistent
view_and_review7 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
"The Tip Off" is one of those movies that changed colors towards the end. What was generally a funny movie for most of it became sappy and serious at the end.

The movie stars Eddie Quillan as Thomas 'Tommy' Jordan, an energetic radio repairman. The course of his life changed when he went to repair a prizefighter's radio.

A series of events happened which led to Tommy falling in love with a gangster's girlfriend named Edna Moreno (Joan Peters). The events included Kayo McClure (Robert Armstrong), the prizefighter, and his girl Baby Face (Ginger Rogers), a girl Tommy didn't want any part of for fear of Kayo. Edna Moreno "belonged" to Nick Vatelli (Ralf Harolde), the gangster, though she didn't like him at all.

"The Tip Off" was quite funny and lighthearted for a time, then it got serious. The scrawny, street dumb Tommy became a fearless fighter when it came to Edna. He was willing to risk life and limb just to prevent her from marrying Nick Vatelli (Ralf Harolde). Had they done it more comedically I think the movie would've been so much better.

I guess in their efforts to make Tommy more heroic they had to make Nick Vatelli more sinister and cutthroat. The problem is, gangsters like Nick don't get to prominence by being careless and dumb. There's no way he would've been outdone by a clueless kid unless that kid had significant help.

Hollywood was really fickle when it came to gangsters. They'd prop them up in the beginning by making them seem smart and ruthless, then by the end they'd have the gangsters do something idiotic or clumsy to cause their demise. It's not consistent. And "The Tip Off" wasn't consistent. If you're a comedy with a silly protagonist, remain a comedy with a silly protagonist, but make sure everything else fits as well.

Free on Odnoklassniki.
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6/10
Hard to imagine Robert Armstrong as a boxer and Eddie Quillan as a tough guy!
planktonrules12 August 2018
I'm not really sure why, but Eddie Quillan was a reasonably popular leading man back in the day. While he didn't make too many pictures for big-time studios, he had steady work for years...even though he seemed like a likable pipsqueak and not exactly leading man material. And, while none of his films were great, they were, for the most part, agreeable.

In "The Tip-Off", Tommy (Quillan) is a radio repairman who becomes good friends with a nice but dopey boxer, Kayo (Robert Armstrong). Kayo's girlfriend is Baby Face (Ginger Rogers) and the pair have taken Tommy under their wings. Because of that, when some gangsters have it out for Tommy because he was seen with a hood's girlfriend, Kayo wants to help. And, if someone doesn't do something, Tommy's about to become an ex-radio repairman!

This film ends very well and it surprised me. The savageness of the big fight scene was a bit shocking but well done. Overall, an enjoyable if slight movie.
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4/10
A puppy always needs protection from the pack by an old hand.
mark.waltz29 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
In this case, the puppy is Eddie Quillan, popular juvenile lead of the early 1930's, and the wise old hound is Robert Armstrong, pre-"King Kong". Quillan has the knack of falling for the wrong girl, and in two cases, with a young Ginger Rogers and Joan Peers, those attractions could cost him his life. Peers is engaged to gangster Ralf Harolde, and Quillan wants to save her from a violent future. It's up to Armstrong to not only save Quillan from the mob, but from himself.

This mixture of light comedy and gangster drama is typical depression era, pre-code fluff with an opportunity to see the young Ginger Rogers before she made it big on screen. Quillan and Armstrong give strong performances, but I also wanted to point out the amusing performance by the hefty Helen Ainsworth as Quillan's rather butch payroll manager who takes a shine to him simply for amusing her.
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8/10
The Tip-Off review
JoeytheBrit16 April 2020
A radio repair man becomes involved with gangsters when he repairs the set of a championship boxer. Enjoyable comedy starring baby-faced Eddie Quillan and a very young Ginger Rogers. Quillan was being built up to become a major star when this was made, but it never happened for him, even though he's likeable enough. It's Robert Armstrong as the nice but not too bright boxer who constantly needs his long-suffering girlfriend Rogers to find the right word he struggling for who makes the biggest impression. Joan Peers is also enjoyable to watch as Quillan's love interest
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