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Hide-Out

Farmers take in an injured racketeer and try to reform him.

  • Released August 24, 1934
  •   1 hr 21 mins  

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mr fluffy
Needs 5 more ratings
  • 6.8 out of 10
    164 votes

Nominated for 1 Oscar.   See all awards »

Cast & Crew

Director

W.S. Van Dyke

Producers

Hunt Stromberg producer
W.S. Van Dyke producer

Writers

Frances Goodrich screenplay
Mauri Grashin screenplay contributor, uncredited

Cast

Robert Montgomery Jonathan 'Lucky' Wilson
Maureen O'Sullivan Pauline Miller
Edward Arnold Det. Lt. 'Mac' MacCarthy
Elizabeth Patterson 'Ma' Miller
Whitford Kane Henry Miller
Mickey Rooney William 'Willie' Miller
C. Henry Gordon Tony Berrelli (the Boss)
Muriel Evans 'Baby'
Edward Brophy Det. Britt
Henry Armetta Shuman

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Reviews

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Other Reviews

 

Ken Peters (wireshock) wrote on IMDB:

This sentimental M-G-M "gangster" film works like a "Tarzan" in reverse: here the seemingly incorrigible hood played by Montgomery, urbane and a touch cynical, finds his cold heart surely melting in the warm embrace of a simple farm family and their soothing workaday life.

In "Tarzan" Maureen O'Sullivan is the "outsider", and although she must adjust to life in the jungle the thrust of that story is that she "domesticates" the "ape man" even as she learns to accept the simpler pleasures of living "close to nature". Here Montgomery is the one out of his element and we find him mystified by the sounds of crickets in the evening--something almost as strange and foreign to him as the unpretentious caring ways of the Miller family. When Mom and Pop and little "don't call me" Willy (played by young Mickey Rooney) conveniently leave the farm for a day, Montgomery and O'Sullivan get to play "farm" (baling the hay, splitting wood) the same way Tarzan and Jane get to play "house" together. In both cases O'Sullivan has "tamed" the wild beast.   [ show more ]

Written on IMDB a long time ago.
 

jotix100 wrote on IMDB:

"Hide Out" starts out focusing on a group of racketeers operating in Manhattan. We are introduced to Jonathan Wilson, who seems to be a key man to the organization. Jonathan is clearly a ladies' man, but his luck is about to change after he is seen pursuing the glamorous Baby. In a hilarious scene, Jonathan, has secured a ring side table to watch the beautiful Baby singing, as part of a night club act. He proceeds to ask her for a date that same night, without the singer missing a beat while she accepts his invitation. That also proves to be his own undoing because the police is closing after him.

The second part of this comedy, directed with style by W. S. Van Dyke, concentrates in how Jonathan, who has been wounded when he tried to flee his pursuers, is found on the side of the road by a Connecticutt farmer, Henry Miller. He takes him home, where the whole family takes an interest in making him well. The lovely Pauline Miller, a young teacher, likes "Lucky", as Jonathan calls himself. Life in the farm works its magic in this man and transform him when he falls in love with the beautiful Pauline.   [ show more ]

Written on IMDB a long time ago.
 

Arne Andersen (aandersen@landmarkcollege.org) wrote on IMDB:

With this title I expected a Warners Bros. crime melodrama but seeing the producing studio was MGM, I was wary. It starts out like a WB production but shifts gears and becomes a warm and winning romantic comedy. Lucky Wilson (Montgomery) is a two-bit, womanizing extortionist. He's shot by the police in a getaway attempt and escapes to the country where he is nursed back to health by a warm, loving farm family. He of course falls for the daughter and completely reforms. When the police arrive to take him back, she promises to wait for him. Both leads do well with Montgomery giving one of his best performances, worthy of an Oscar nom. Equally good is the screenplay, which makes its moralizing point without a heavy hand (the Original Story was deservedly Oscar nominated). The direction by W.S. Van Dyke (whose superb work on THE THIN MAN that same year would be Oscar nommed) is breezy, witty and effervescent. A surprisingly enjoyable film well worth a watch.

Written on IMDB a long time ago.

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