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Fisherman's Wharf

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Fisherman's Wharf (1939)

February. 03,1939
|
5.6
|
NR
| Adventure Drama Music
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Carlo Roma and his foster-son, Toma, and their friend Beppo, are living a happy fisherman's life in San Francisco until Carlo's widowed sister-in-law, Stella, shows up with her brat-son, Rudolph, and takes over. Poor Toma gets his feelings hurt and the idea he "isn't wanted" and runs away

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Scanialara
1939/02/03

You won't be disappointed!

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SnoReptilePlenty
1939/02/04

Memorable, crazy movie

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Erica Derrick
1939/02/05

By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.

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Geraldine
1939/02/06

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

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MartinHafer
1939/02/07

Bobby Breen was one of the more unusual stars of the late 1930s. While he only made 9 films, this boy was the star in most of them due to his incredible voice. It didn't hurt that he also seemed very natural on screen and quite likable. "Fisherman's Wharf" is one of his films that you can find on YouTube...and it's worth seeing as are all his movies.This story finds Bobby playing Tony Roma, a young boy who works with his family and their fishing business. It is a bit strange that Henry Armetta and Leo Carillo play members of his family as these two adults played some of the broadest sterotypical immigrants in movie history. Not brilliant casting but hey...it is Hollywood and they explain it away by saying he's a foster kid.Apart from the seaside setting and the pet sealion, in many ways the story that follows is like the great Shirley Temple film, "Bright Eyes". Like "Bright Eyes", the boy's life is made miserable when a bratty kid and his mother come to live with Tony and his guardian. Unfortunately, the guardian (Leo Carillo) is blind to his vicious sister-in-law and her brat. Overall, a decent film and a chance to see Breen in a slightly better film...one that has a bit less singing and a bit more plot than usual. Worth seeing. By the way, for you fishermen and women out there, watch Tony catching the big fish at the beginning of the movie. They use footage of a billfish on the line (a marlin or sailfish) but when they bring it into port it's become a tuna!

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SimonJack
1939/02/08

"Fisherman's Wharf" is the sixth of nine films that young singing star Bobby Breen made from 1936 to 1942. These were mostly B musicals put out by RKO. His earliest films were the best, before his voice began to change. This film was toward the end. The songs aren't quite as good as his earlier ones. The production quality of this film is quite rough. But, it's worth viewing for Breen's singing and for its shooting location. The film depicts the Italian immigrant fishing fleet that had developed in San Francisco Bay over the previous decades. While commercial fishing still operates out of the wharf area in the early 21st century, the boats are larger and of more recent vintage than the smaller boats common back then. I've visited San Francisco a number of times, and always go to Fisherman's Wharf. What struck me as odd in this movie was the arrival of a car that the locals noted were tourists. Apparently, the wharf was not yet widely visited or established as a tourist place in the 1930s. Surely, by the end of WW II, it began to attract tourists as much as fishermen.

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bkoganbing
1939/02/09

Fisherman's Wharf is a fine family film which showcases the singing talents of young Bobby Breen. Young Breen works on a fishing boat with his father Leo Carrillo and family friend Henry Armetta. In fact the film begins and ends with Breen leading a chorus of San Francisco fishermen from Fisherman's Wharf with Come Back To Sorrento. Such other Italian traditional works like Funniculi Funnicula and Santa Lucia are among other songs Breen wrapping his soprano pipes around.Into their lives come Carrillo's newly widowed sister-in-law Lee Patrick and her spoiled brat of a son Tommy Bupp. My biggest problem with the film was the fact that Patrick's sister could marry a fisherman like Carrillo and Patrick could marry some Boston blue blood. Nevertheless she did and now she's having trouble making ends meet so the good hearted Carrillo invites them to stay with him.No sooner does she get there in that she starts rearranging Carrillo's life which upsets Armetta and housekeeper Rosina Galli. And Bupp who's the kind of a kid you'd like to smack on general principles makes life for Breen miserable especially after he reveals a family secret. Everyone in this film including Bobby Breen have done better work, but Bobby sang well in the film. Fisherman's Wharf was on a lot of people's minds as another Italian from San Francisco whose father was a fisherman there was having one of his greatest seasons as a baseball player. Giuseppe DiMaggio could well have been in that fisherman chorus accompanying Bobby Breen.Wonder if Giuseppe could carry a tune? In any event Fisherman's Wharf is a nice family picture that's a bit old fashioned for some tastes, but I rather liked it.

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mark.waltz
1939/02/10

And it's Lee Patrick and bratty Tommy Bupp as the aunt and cousin of San Francisco wharf child Bobby Breen. The adopted son of fisherman Leo Carrillo, Breen is unaware that Patrick's late sister and Carrillo adopted him. At first, everything seems nice with the arrival of Ms. Patrick and well-dressed Bupp, but it is soon revealed that the lovely sister-in-law is not the kindly broke widow she comes off initially. It's soon clear to housekeeper Rosina Galli that Patrick intends to take over. But nephew Bupp too isn't keen on being the poor relation, so he breaks the news very nastily to Breen that he's an orphan. That causes Breen to run away with a beloved pet, giving the unrealized possibility of the question being asked, "Have you seen a boy with a seal"? This melodramatic drama with songs (sung by the high pitched Breen) is overly sweet in spots, and it is easy to see why Breen is not as well remembered, even with a voice higher than Deanna Durbin's. Carillo is fine as the dad, and Patrick is really good as the manipulative aunt with passive/aggressive behavior. Rosina Galli and Henry Armetta add Italian humour to Carillo's pals, and Bupp plays the nastiest child on screen since Jane Withers. Slicker the Seal is cute too, but I can't find evidence proving he was the seal used as a stamp by the Marxx Brothers or used to push Eddie Anderson off a pier in "Topper Returns".

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