Mr. Muggs Rides Again (1945) Poster

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5/10
Trouble at the racetrack in average East Side Kids entry
BrianDanaCamp16 February 2010
MR. MUGGS RIDES AGAIN (1945) is not the first film in the East Side Kids series to cast the group's leader, Muggs McGinnis (Leo Gorcey), as a jockey. Here he runs afoul of Dollar Davis (George Meeker), a local gambler/horse owner, by winning a race he wasn't supposed to and winds up getting disqualified and then suspended from the track when an illegal "buzzer," a device designed to spur a horse to run faster, is planted on his saddle. The rest of the film follows the characters in little slice-of-life neighborhood/racetrack vignettes as the boys rescue a beloved horse from the glue factory and keep him illegally in their tenement basement clubhouse, leading to a confrontation with the police. Eventually, Muggs has find a way to clear his name.

The boys' mentor, Mrs. Brown (Minerva Urecal), a middle-aged horse-and-stable owner, is helped by the boys at crucial moments and she helps them in turn at other crucial moments. Her pretty niece, Elsie (Nancy Brinckman), is befriended by the boys, but is viewed with concern when she dates a local gambler, Gaby O'Neill (Bernard Thomas), who works for Dollar Davis. Gaby was the one who planted the buzzer in Muggs' saddle and Muggs has not forgotten. A key scene takes place at a carnival midway when Muggs' sidekick Glimpy (Huntz Hall) takes the place of a drunken fortune teller, dons his disguise, and reads the future for Elsie and Gaby, making up a grim on-the-spot premonition. This leads to a heart-to-heart talk between Elsie and Gaby and a change in moral direction, resulting in a battle with would-be killers in a hospital room and a last-minute session with the racetrack stewards just before the big race.

The plot is never terribly suspenseful or compelling, but the film is only an hour long and gives plenty of good scenes to Gorcey and Hall. Gorcey's later Bowery Boys character, Slip Mahoney, would adopt a trademark habit of mangling big words ("This was the pinochle of my career"), but Muggs, at least in this film, throws a large vocabulary around quite skillfully. At one point, he describes the harm done to Elsie's "mental equilibrium" by falling for Gaby. Hall's Glimpy is a goofball like his later Sach character in the Bowery Boys, but he's no dummy. He's crafty, streetsmart and a bit of a ladies' man. The East Side Kids, in general, were more defiant than the Bowery Boys, more inclined to mouth off to local beat cops, and more inclined to confront local tough guys.

None of the other original Dead End Kids, aside from Gorcey and Hall, are in the cast, not even Bobby Jordan or Gabe Dell, who were in several of the other East Side Kids movies. Black actor Ernest "Sunshine Sammy" Morrison, who played Scruno in previous movies in the series, is missing in action as well, although a character named Scruno, a racetrack worker, is introduced to the boys at one point and it's clear that he's new to them. He's played by another black actor, John H. Allen, who played the role just this once. The character of Gaby is listed as Gaby Dell in the cast list at the beginning, yet a newspaper headline about the character appears in the film and identifies him as Gaby O'Neill. Perhaps Gabe Dell, a series regular, was set to play the part, which is similar to the characters he generally played in the series, but pulled out at the last minute for some reason. The actor playing Gaby is listed in the cast list as Bernerd Thomas, a misspelling of Bernard. The other East Side Kids are played by a rather nondescript bunch, without much effort to differentiate them. Leo's father, Bernard Gorcey, turns up in a bit part as the driver of the horse truck sent by the glue factory. The elder Gorcey would, of course, become an important series regular in the Bowery Boys films, playing soda shop owner Louie Dumbrowsky.
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6/10
The East Side Kids at the Race Track
lugonian20 March 2024
MR. MUGGS RIDES AGAIN (Monogram, 1945), directed by Wallace Fox, the 21st installment of "The East Side Kids" series, reverts back to early formula by which the title character, Ethelbert Aloysius "Mugs" Maginnis (Leo Gorcey) becomes a horse racing jockey as he did in THAT GANG OF MINE (1940). With this not being a rehash nor a remake, the material gears towards a brighter function allowing formula material of some originality. Huntz Hall and Billy Benedict are back in their recognizable roles as Glimpy and Skinny, while unfamilar faces and actor names of the other East Side Kids such as Mende Koenig (Danny); Buddy Gorman (Sammy) and Johnny Duncan ("Squeegie" Robinson). For a change, Gabriel Dell does not appear, though the actor who fills in for Dell's formula territory, Bernard Brown, interestingly plays a character (according to opening cast credits) called Gaby Dell. (Any connection?) There's also another character in the story named Scruno, a stablemate played by John H. Allen, bearing no connection to the East Side Kids member earlier enacted by Sunshine Sammy Morrison from 1940 to 1943. Other than being more drama than comedy, MR. MUGGS RIDES AGAIN is Leo Gorcey's movie from start to finish.

Opening not of the traditional sky view of New York's Bowery district, but at the horse race where the East Side Kids cheer on their leader, Mugs" (Leo Gorcey) as he rides his horse to victory, only to be called in and disqualified by judges when an electrical device is discovered under the saddle of his horse. Although innocent, Mugs suspects the big fix done by gambler "Dollar" Davis (George Meeker) and his accomplice, Gaby Dell (Bernard Brown), but cannot prove it. Suspended from further horse racing, Mugs and his pals assist Nora "Ma" Brown (Minerva Urecal) by gathering the $163.79 needed for her to keep stable and horses, Storm Cloud and Sweet Alice, from being taken away to the glue factory. As a friendly gesture, Mugs takes Sweet Alice, the horse he admires, for security and placed in the basement of the East Side Club. As Mrs. Brown tries to lift the suspension of Mugs to ride her horse in the upcoming handicap, Mugs attempts on keeping Brown's niece, Elsie (Nancy Brinckman) from getting romantically involved with Gaby. Others in the cast include Pierre Watkin (Doctor Fletcher); Milton Kibbee (The Veterinarian) and Betty Sinclair (The Nurse). Leo's father, Bernard Gorcey, appears briefly as "Pop," the man hired to take Mrs. Brown's horse away. Minerva Urecal, making her sixth appearance in the series, and never playing the same character, is always an added pleasure to these films no matter what roles she plays.

With more drama than comedy, Huntz Hall gets his chance of amusements set at the Midway amusement park filling in for the unavailable soothsayer, The Great Swami, by telling bogus fortunes to unsuspected patrons. Racing scenes using close-ups on Gorcey is obviously done in rear projection screen with production values obviously on low-budget scale. MR. MUGGS RIDES AGAIN may not win any world cups for its 60 minutes presentation but enough satisfaction for fans of the series.

Not as well-known nor revived as the earlier editions of the series, MR. MUGGS RIDES AGAIN is available for viewing DVD. Next and last in the series: COME OUT FIGHTING (1945). (** horseshoes)
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5/10
About what you'd expect when the East Side Kids go to the races.
planktonrules11 October 2020
One weird thing about the East Side Kid and Bowery Boys movies is that a plot can come from out of no where AND never be mentioned again in subsequent films. A great example is "Mr. Muggs Rides Again".

Muggs (Leo Gorcey) is a jockey and he wins the race at the beginning of the story. But he's soon disqualified when a cheating device is found under his saddle. Of course Muggs wasn't cheating...but someone planted it there to throw the race. And, as a result, Muggs is banned from being a jockey. The rest of the film is about him regaining his job and finding the folks responsible. In the middle are a few other things...but it's all incidental.

This film is okay...just okay. Rarely is the ending in doubt and the story is pretty much what you'd expect...with Muggs being a tough guy and Glimpy (Huntz Hall) a complete idiot. Not a bad film but also not one that is particularly distinguished...with the obligatory rear projection since I can only assume Gorcey never rode a horse before or after. A time-passer and not much more.
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6/10
Big hearts on the east side.
mark.waltz9 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Someone at Monogram must have like Minerva Urecal, casting her in at least 9 of the East Side Kids/Bowery Boys films, going from a picklepuss in one to mother figure in this, and a judge and a Nazi spy in others. She's a scene stealer who could go from being warm hearted to cold blooded, no matter what the situation. In this one she's the struggling horse owner whom the boys rescue by getting along for her so she doesn't have to lose her stable space, and seemingly hard as nails Leo Gorcey refers to her as the gang's adopted mother.

This is one of the first films to focus mainly on Gorcey and Huntz Hall as characters, as they would soon be dominating the Bowery Boys boys series, starting the following year. The other gang members have little to do and are basically there just to take on lines to flesh out the group of friends. Bernard Gorcey pops up briefly, .entioning a word that will have movie fans yelling out a famous line from a popular Mel Brooks movie at the screen.

It's a mixture of delightful comedy at the beginning and touching pathos later on as they discover corruption at the racetrack Involving attempts to sabotage Urecal's horse. Nancy Brinckman plays her niece, unknowingly involved with the bad guys, and John H. Allen plays Scruno, perhaps the same character played by Sammy Morrison in the other films but never confirmed. Pretty predictable but good.
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7/10
One of the better entries!
JohnHowardReid1 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Producers: Jack Dietz, Sam Katzman. A Banner Production. Copyright 4 June 1945 by Monogram Pictures Corp. No New York opening. U.S. release: 15 July 1945. U.K. release through Pathé Pictures, Ltd.: 7 January 1946. Never theatrically released in Australia. 6 reels. 63 minutes. Alternative U.K. release title: MUGGS RIDES AGAIN.

SYNOPSIS: Jockey is framed by crooked gamblers.

NOTES: The above technical and cast credits are taken from the film itself. They differ slightly from credits published elsewhere. Number 40 of the 41 pictures in the combined Dead End Kids, Dead End Kids and Little Tough Guys, East Side Kids series.

COMMENT: A reasonably entertaining entry. The script provides not only some clever cracks for Leo Gorcey but some sympathetic philosophy as well. However, fans may object to the fact that aside from a scene in which he impersonates a carnival swami, Huntz Hall has so little to do, but frankly I enjoyed the accent on Gorcey who to my mind is far the more winning performer. The other Kids just hover around in the background.

Nancy Brinckman is a cute heroine, though she lets go with her Bronx accent once or twice before the director can rein her in. The other support players are equally equal to their tasks. Stanford Jolley has an unusual role as a vicious thug.

Naturally, the racing sequences are made up mostly of stock footage, but they provide a few thrills nonetheless. By the humble standards of this series, production values are actually not bad at all. The direction of course is capably routine, but Ira Morgan's superlative photography is a real stand-out.
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