Hattie Leonard sets out to break a criminal gang controlling the dry cleaning business.
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Don't underestimate this spunky old last (Fay Bainter) when it comes to fighting crime. Disgusted by a quarter protection fee added to her laundry Bill, granny gets her gun. The rich eccentric hires former New York backwaters to take on the ones in her city, and before long, she's got the criminals shaking in their boots as she threatens to take on city hall. She pulls a gun on them, threatens to the expose the corrupt mayor, kidnaps one of the top criminals and dares to escape from the local jail. This feisty granny without the tweety bird is as brave as Jimmy Stewart was as the junior senator framed in "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington", released the same year. In fact, this is so clues to the types of films that Columbia studios had been putting out ever since Mr. Deeds had gone to town that this could definitely be called Capra- corn with a feminine twist. Just coming off her Oscar winning performance in "Jezebel", Bainter is a delight, funny and feisty and seemingly without fear. She gets a moving monologue that with what was going on over in Europe was certainly timely. Rackateer bullies are as dangerous as Hitler, Mussolini and other dictators, she insinuates without mentioning any names, and it us better to die fighting for your liberty than be living in fear under the thumb of brutality.Not quite a major star yet, Ida Lupino is featured as Bainter's future daughter in law. Lee Bowman is barely adequate as her son, but Warren Hymer adds laughs as the chauffeur with a criminal past whose chums are a cross between Curly from the Three Stooges and various classic cartoon characters. It is obvious how this will pan out, but it is fun getting there.
****SPOILERS**** It's when grandmotherly and bank president Hattie Leonard, Fay Baitner, is charged $2.00 instead of her usual weekly $1.75 fee for dry cleaning that she decides to investigate why all of a sudden her dry cleaning bill rose some 15%! This in 1939 when inflation was on the way down due to the economic downturn in prices & wages of the ravages Great 1930's Depression! Discovering from the person who's been doing and laundry & dry cleaning for the last 15 years Zambrogio, Henry Armetta, that there's a protection racket going on in the little town of Macklin City for years Hattie decides to take matters or the law into her own hands! And thus do the job that the city's Mayor Jones, Brandon Tynan. and the police refuse or can't do. Run the hoods running this protection racket out of town and behind bars!Hilarious crime comedy with Hattie and her cabbie and ex-con friend Frankie Fallon, Warren Hymer, organize a mob of their own to put an end to the laundry and dry cleaning racket in Macklin City. Not quite realizing what he's up against, the little old lady who lives in the big house up the hill, mobster George Watson, George Meeker, send his collectors like Harry the Lug, Harold Huber, out to shake down the local laundry and dry cleaning businesses in town. Harry the Lug instead f collecting protection money ends up getting kidnapped by Hattie's mob and by being threatened, when nothing else would work, with gulping down an entire bottle of yucky & smelly Castor Oil finally spilled the beans. Not only his boss George Watson but the boss of bosses of the entire dry cleaning and laundry protection operation the chief executive of the town of Macklin City the honorable Mayor Jones Himself!***SPOILERS**** With Hattie framed arrested and put behind bars on a phony kidnapping charge, against Harry the Lug, she in turn got the goods on Mayor Jones in having his pay off or protection money marked and put in his personal safety deposit box at her bank! Not realizing that he had unknowingly implicated himself in this city wide protection racket Mayor Jones ends up arrested and put behind bars as the movie comes to an end. That's not after in him being the chief justice officially marrying Hattie grandson Fred, Lee Bowman, and his fiancée Lila Thorne, Ida Lupino, before he's relives of his duties as mayor and driven to jail in a police paddy wagon.
Lady and the Mob, The (1939) ** 1/2 (out of 4) Slight but mildly entertaining comedy about an elderly woman (Fay Bainter) who grows sick and tired of the gangsters taking over her city so she forms her own gang to run them out of town. This film runs just 65-minutes and for the most part it moves along pretty good, although the ending gets dragged out longer than it should have. Bainter is good in her role but a young Ida Lupino seems out of place and fails at all of her comedy scenes. Seeing as when this film was released, there's some big speeches about standing up for your country, taking down dictators and other things to that nature. Joe Sawyer plays one of the woman's gang members. Another interesting tidbit is that this Columbia picture also shows off another one of their films, You Can't Take It With You, during one scene.
Ida Lupino is one of my favorite actresses. I'd watch her in anything. That's how I happened to watch this moronic comic gangster movie.Ida's mother-in-law to-be is the title character. She's a wealthy woman who sets out to outfox the protection racket that's hitting on businesses she frequents.Lupino has a reasonably good role. Of course she is wasted but she looks OK and isn't put through anything embarrassing.Fay Bainter, on the other hand -- what a crime! This lovely looking, gentle woman is trashed in the title role. I will grant that she appears to be having fun with it.But Bainter had the warmest eyes of any actress in movies I can think of. She gave many superb character performances and is marvelous as the title character in the unduly maligned "Mother Carey's Chickens." (She is Mother Carey, not a chicken.) Here she is done up to look like May Robson. Robson was also a delightful actress but a very different type.The whole thing is truly painful. If you're a die-hard Lupino fan and you want to see her entire oeuvre, watch it. If not, do yourself a favor and don't.