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 Christmas

 

The Lemon Drop Kid (1951)

Smalltime racetrack hustler, the Lemon Drop Kid (Bob Hope) must raise $10,000 before Christmas to pay back a gangster.  He tricks the lesser criminals of New York city into gathering the money for him as street-corner Santas.  

If there is a valid complaint against Bob Hope's comedy shtick, it's that it is repetitious.  He told more-or-less the same jokes as more-or-less the same character for over forty years.  A Bob Hope movie is just him doing his routine; plot falls by the wayside.  But The Lemon Drop Kid is an exception.  It puts Hope into Damon Runyon's world of good-natured petty thieves and conmen.  Sure, Hope is still doing Hope, but this time the rest of the film can stand up to him and even gives him a bit more depth.  Sidney Melbourne, aka The Lemon Drop Kid, is an actual character (OK, yes, with lots of Hope's normal behaviors) that I could care about. 

Supplying as much of the humor as Hope is an excellent supporting cast including Lloyd Nolan, Fred Clark, William Frawley (Fred Mertz on I love Lucy), and Tor Johnson (of Plan 9 From Outer Space fame).  Making this a Christmas tradition film is Hope and Marilyn Maxwell's introduction of the now classic Silver Bells.  Better still, it is first sung by the gravelly Frawley.  Comedy, a little sentiment, a touch of romance, and some Damon Runyon—I wouldn't let a December pass without The Lemon Drop Kid.

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Scale:

(see it)

 (matinee)

(wait for TV)

(skip it)

(toxic)

 

 


Copyright © 2004 Matthew M. Foster