4.6 /10 1 Votes
Directed by Norman Foster Music by Charles Maxwell Initial release 7 February 1941 (USA) Music director Charles Maxwell | 4.6/10 Produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Cinematography Virgil Miller Director Norman Foster Story by Peter B. Kyne | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Screenplay by William Conselman Jr.
Irving Cummings Jr. Starring Eugene Pallette
Marvin Stephens
Rita Quigley
Mary Healy
Richard Lane
Charles D. Brown Screenplay Irving Cummings Jr., William H. Conselman Jr. Cast Eugene Pallette, Mary Healy, Marvin Stephens, Rita Quigley, Chick Chandler Similar Manhattan Heartbeat, Viva Cisco Kid, Scotland Yard, She Had to Eat, 20 - 000 Men a Year |
Ride, Kelly, Ride is a 1941 American drama film directed by Norman Foster and written by William Conselman Jr. and Irving Cummings Jr.. The film stars Eugene Pallette, Marvin Stephens, Rita Quigley, Mary Healy, Richard Lane and Charles D. Brown. The film was released on February 7, 1941, by 20th Century Fox.
Contents
Plot
An owner of racehorses, Dan Thomas, and his trainer Duke Martin discover a young fellow called "Corn Cob" Kelly on their way west. He has a natural way with horses, so they quickly teach him to become a jockey.
As his career begins, Corn Cob befriends a fellow rider, Skeeziks O'Day, and antagonizes another, Tuffy Graves, whose rough tactics cause Corn Cob to fall from a mount and suffer a broken shoulder. While recuperating, he gets word that Dan has conspired with gangsters to fix a race. Knowing that honest trainer Bob Martin and daughter Ellen have all their money riding on the race, Corn Cob decides to ride their horse, injured shoulder notwithstanding. He wins the race, putting Dan in hot water with the crooks.