He Could Have Been A Contender, Oops, Champion Of The
World-Bette Davis, Edward G. Robinson and Humphrey Bogart’s “Kid Galahad” (1937)-
A Film Review
DVD Review
By Lance Lawrence
Kid Galahad, starring Bette Davis, Edward G. Robinson,
Humphrey Bogart, Warren Morris, Jane Bryan, 1937
A guy I used to work for when I was a kid, when I was
looking for a little spending money to escort whatever flame I was pursuing at
the moment was fond of saying “some guys are born to be lovers, some fighters.”
That comment directed at me since in those days I was as prone to fight
somebody over some now misty and silly slight, maybe someone said something
about some gal I was interested before I got wise to the fact that I wasn’t much
of a fighter at a skinny 140 pounds taking on guys much bigger and stronger.
That guy I worked for had me tagged though as a lover not a fighter if you had
to choose between the two. Especially when at sixteen I mixed it up with a guy
much bigger than I over a girl and got nothing but the worst of it. This
cutting up old touches had resulted from viewing the film under review, Kid Galahad, where the fighter, a guy
who would turn professional fighter before the film is half over, was both a lover
and a fighter. Some mean feat which would have garnered much respect in the old
neighborhood if such a person existed in those days. My growing up time employer
would have gladly tipped his hat to that duel prowess. Would probably too note
this big exception to the rule, and exception which would not have included me
in any shape or form.
I can’t say that as a kid I was very interested in pugilism,
the art of fighting, fighting in the ring although I never then had qualms
about guys who did try for the brass ring. Guys who would start out young at
the local police station gym, club fighters, and move up or out, mostly out.
These were mostly “from hunger” Irish and Italian guys looking to break out of
the heavy labor which would be their fate if they didn’t make it out. They were
never a big part of the local scene and I don’t’ remember much talk about
anybody but Irish Johnny Mangone (playing the Irish mother, Italian father
card) who was some kind of Golden Gloves champion although how far up I don’t
remember. I do know, because my father Boyo was a ringleader, that the fathers,
uncles, older brothers used to populate the local gin mill, The Tam, every
Friday night to watch, and presumably bet on the profession fights on
television from maybe the old Madison Square Garden in New York City sponsored
by Gillette Razor Company in those beardless days.
But enough of old touches and let’s get to why this Warren
Gooseberry, played by Wayne Morris, or whatever his name was from down on the
farm and nothing but a blonde hick and rube who would have lasted about two
minutes in my neighborhood except he had a deadly right hook before somebody
got wise and christened him Kid Galahad to make the women wet as a songwriter
wrote about Elvis one time. This kid was trying to make his way, trying to make
enough money in the big city to buy a farm and get married. This guy was
strictly from nowhere because he believed he could make the nut on tips or
whatever as a bellboy in an upscale hotel. Fat chance.
Fat chance except as part of his duties the Kid (I refuse to
further use his given moniker) winds up
serving them off the arm, serving drinks, hard liquor for a boxing promoter,
Nick Donati, played by tough guy
gangster type Edward G. Robinson and his significant other (although no
way they called such arrangements that back then in the time frame of this film
the 1930s but more like mistress or kept woman, whore in some quarters), Fluff
played by Bette Davis.
(By the way according to fellow reviewer Seth Garth the last
time Robinson was seen in this space was as famous Chi town gangster Johnny
Rocco, he of the tough guy racketeers who dominated urban life back then, maybe
now too, bleeding like a sieve after a character played by Humphrey Bogart who
will be mentioned below popped him full of lead for being ugly. No, for
roughing up his flame down in the Keys in Key
Largo. Come to think of it that was the last time Bogie made this space as
well as a good guy (in the end) who after seeing hard service in the European
Theater in World War II at first claimed that “one more Johnny Rocco, more or
less, was not worth dying for.” Until Johnny roughed up his honey. To complete
the triad the last time Bette Davis was seen in this space according to fellow
reviewer Will Bradley she was being stalked by an enraged Pacific islander
woman whose paramour had been murdered by an enraged Ms. Davis who thought she
was his lover in The Letter.)
Yeah you read it right Nick Donati, the famous fight manager
who had many a contender but never seemed to have guy who could have or wanted
to go all the way. Nick a guy who worked
the newspaper scribes like a violin whenever he had a prospect. Of course in
those days the fight game, the way out for many a young guy who faced the soup
kitchen or hard labor lugging stuff to and fro had many illustrious promoters
ready to see what they were made of-contenders or tankers, mostly the latter.
Like Nick’s nemesis Turkey Morgan, Bogie’s role, a gangster trying to get his
cut in the fight racket who had through fair means or foul, mostly foul the
hottest property in the game-the heavyweight champion of the world. The whole
thing gathers steam when rube from nowhere Kid takes umbrage when that vaunted
heavyweight champion of the world roughs up Fluff. Bang Nick Donati, how he did
it nobody knows, had another fighter in his stable. And for playing Sir Galahad
Fluff was ready to ditch sullen neglectful Nick for the young stud, for
somebody who treated her like a lady. One conquest and the Kid hasn’t even
gotten into the ring to make the Garden women audiences get funny
thoughts.
On the basis of knocking the champ for a loop Nick sent the
Kid into the ring to get a little bloodied on his way up. Except to the chagrin
of Nick and the deadly anger of Turkey the Kid bounces the prelim guy on the
floor. The Kid had to blow town for a while so Fluff stashed him upstate at
Nick’s mother’s farm. The Kid was right at home too just like he had left
before seeking the bright lights of the city. Oh yeah except Ma was not alone for
there is a virginal Nick younger sister, Marie, played by Jane Bryan, who winds
up being crazy about the Kid-and he her. Problem, big problem, maybe two big
problems really. That Fluff hunger for him and Nick’s fervent attempt to keep
the mugs, the sawdust bums, the punching bag stiffs away from her. The Fluff
part got taken care of by her taking a powder on Nick once she knew the
freaking score with the Kid and Nick’s sister. She had been around enough to
know things were hopeless especially when the Kid and Marie showed up at the
nightclub where she was warbling, and Marie knew how she Fluff felt before all
hell broke loose when Turkey and the champ tried to provoke the Kid.
Once Nick caught onto the romance between Marie and the Kid
though he went wild, tried to do serious damage to the mug, to the Kid. Pushed
the Kid into fighting the champ too soon and with the purposefully wrong
strategy. Wrong approach, wrong once Fluff and Marie who were in attendance
begged for mercy for the Kid. Bang-bang new strategy and the Kid takes the
crown. Unfortunately, Nick, as was not usual for him, left a few loose ends
like welshing on the underhanded deal he had made with gangster angry Turkey
and as things worked out rather than a post-fight victory party there was a
mutual shoot-out where both contestants were mortally wounded. Too bad. But
good was the Kid winning the championship-and Marie. My employer would have
scratched his head in approval.
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