Almost a Gentleman (1939) Poster

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5/10
Nice programmer about a dog unjustly accused of murder...
Doylenf18 October 2006
I tuned into this shortly after it started so I missed a few things at the start, but I could see that this was an appealing story about a man's devotion to a dog that is severely tested when the dog is unjustly accused of attacking a local man on the night of a bloody murder where the victim's throat was torn.

JAMES ELLISON is the man who must prove that his dog is not vicious and would never have committed the crime. A subplot involving a kidnapping is also solved by the dog, but that seemed more like an added ingredient tacked onto the screenplay and comes after the dog has been acquitted of the murder.

HELEN WOOD is the leading lady, a pretty brunette who evidently retired early from the screen, and ROBERT KENT is the man who charges the man's dog with the crime.

Nicely done, very dated in many respects and clearly a product of its time, but not bad for a little programmer that probably played the bottom half of double bills back in 1939.

Ellison is the kind of sturdy looking, solid kind of low-key actor who reminds me somewhat of JAMES CRAIG, without the mustache. Apparently he spent most of his career in westerns and B-films, although he did have a big film to his credit when he starred opposite Alice Faye in THE GANG'S ALL HERE ('45).
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5/10
Clearing Himself of Murder
boblipton18 October 2006
Ace the Wonder Dog stars in his third movie, assisted by embittered James Ellison. Ace is accused of murder -- although it is Mr. Ellison who is accused of harboring a vicious animal which needs to be destroyed.

Although there is considerable talent in this RKO programmer -- and Ace the Wonder Dog is a handsome animal -- it doesn't quite work. Leslie Goodwin, the director, was working his way out of the short subjects department and does his best. But the inherent difficulty of producing an interesting animal star and fitting it into a sound feature makes unreasonable demands on the plot to the point of occasionally disruptive silliness. Nor are the actors the best of RKO's players, producing a certain amount of untoward emotional reticence about the humans. These factors make the movie less than good.
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6/10
Love me, love my dog. Even if it is a mongrel.
mark.waltz23 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This is definitely a movie for those who like dogs, regardless of their breed or their pedigree. The handsome James Ellison owns a big house in the country and has been away for quite a while, and returning, discovers that there is a woman (Helen Wood) residing there. She has been renting the home through the caretaker and does not know who Ellison is. He ends up in jail overnight, and upon being recognized is cleared and released. He discovers that there are a bunch of dogs about to be killed and decides to take custody of one of them, Ace, once owned by his arch enemy, Robert Kent, the brother of the woman that Ellison was once engaged to marry. Ellison and Wood hit it off and everything is going fine until Ace is accused of killing a man who had constantly harassed him, with Ellison responsible because he had taken in a dog rumored to be mad.

Now Ellison must prove that Ace did not attack the man and is not administer the community, and in a great trial sequence (which includes an adorable scene between Ace and the judge), Ellison sets out to prove that mongrels can be just as loyal and lovable (and more so in this viewer's opinion) than pedigrees. Certainly it looks at first that Ace was guilty, but it's only set up to show that Ace is in the area.

Ace the Wonderdog certainly is beautifully trained, friendly and protective. It's obvious that they used some standing sets from the big A pictures (I seem to recognize a set from the Astaire/Rogers musical "Carefree", so it doesn't look like your average B picture. Ellison is handsome and charming, yet imperfect as he gets to display in a Christmas sequence where his character gets drunk. Wood gets a chance as a young ingenue to display her talents, and she's quite enjoyable in this film. But, as W. C. Fields said, never work with children or dogs because they'll steal the scene every time, and Ace indeed does that.
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10/10
compelling "bitter hero" story
CatTales13 March 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Young lawyer Dan Preston (James Ellison) holds a bitter grudge against the affluent family which prevented his marriage with their daughter because he didn't meet their standards. He adopts a dog they were going to have killed, feeling a kinship to it, and is adversarial to the family whenever he gets the chance. His bitterness is encouraged by the son who insists both class and breeding are all that matter. He visits the family and in an awkward moment realizes his life is passing him by. Though he starts a promising romance, he still cant let go of his anger.

Two events take place - a murder and kidnapping, which allows Dan to both defend his dog as well as justify his existence and ideals. While the kidnapping is a contrived plot device, it provides the shared goal for two antagonists to make amends.

It is not often you see an embittered character study on this scale - Bright Leaf, In A Lonely Place, and Ben-Hur come to mind. Actor James Ellison usually starred in Westerns (and one of the first werewolf movies, "Undying Monster"), but here plays a contemporary character, and is quite good. Ace the dog is protectively vicious - that is, he isn't playing cute, so he matches the emotional grimness of the main character.
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