Jail Busters

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Jail Busters
Directed by William Beaudine
Produced by Ben Schwalb
Written by Edward Bernds (screenplay)
Elwood Ulman (screenplay)
Starring Leo Gorcey
Huntz Hall
David Gorcey
Bernard Gorcey
Bennie Bartlett
Music by Marlin Skiles
Cinematography Carl E. Guthrie
Editing by William Austin
Studio Allied Artists Pictures
Distributed by Allied Artists Pictures
Release dates
  • September 18, 1955 (1955-09-18)
Running time 61 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Jail Busters is a 1955 film starring the comedy team of The Bowery Boys. The film was released on September 18, 1955 by Allied Artists and is the thirty-ninth film in the series.

Plot

Chuck gets a job working for a newspaper. When promoted, he has to go under cover in the state prison to dig up some information on some of the inmates. When one of the inmates beats Chuck up and lands him in the hospital, it's up to Slip, Sach, and Butch to finish Chuck's job. Slip decides that he and the boys should commit a crime so that they can be sent to jail. Another reporter, Cy Bowman, agrees to inform the penitentiary that the boys are actually working under cover for the newspaper once they get arrested. However, Bowman does not actually keep his promise. Now the trio are forced to spend what they think is a short sentence in jail. While there, the boys dig up some information on Percival P. Lannigan and some other inmates who have been living it up in jail, unknown to the warden. Lannigan soon gets word that Slip and his pals are under cover for Chuck (whom Lannigan had beaten up earlier), and intends to have Chuck and Louie killed. The boys eventually expose the inmates scam and turn them over to the warden, who pardons them and arranges for their release.

Production

Jail Busters was filmed under the working title of Doing Time[1] and is the only film in the series with no females in the cast.

Cast

The Bowery Boys

  • Leo Gorcey as Terence Aloysius 'Slip' Mahoney
  • Huntz Hall as Horace Debussy 'Sach' Jones
  • David Gorcey as Charles 'Chuck' Anderson (Credited as David Condon)
  • Bennie Bartlett as Butch Williams

Remaining cast

Cast notes

After the death of Bernard Gorcey, just seven days before this film was released, Percy Helton, who played the warden in this film, was one of the choices for taking the place of Gorcey's character, Louie Dumbrowski. Two years later he would play the character of Mike Clancy, a character similar to Louie, in the film Spook Chasers.

References

  1. Hayes, David and Brent Walker (1984). The Films of The Bowery Boys. Secaucus, NJ: Citadel Press.

External links

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