Boots Malone (1952) Poster

(1952)

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8/10
Makes you feel like you're there
racliff6 March 2008
I was actually amazed how much I enjoyed this movie. William Holden makes most people think about "The Bridge on the River Kwai", for me I think of "Stalag 17" -- but this was a great fit.

If you have ever spent any time at the track, you will love this movie. The work out back, being with the horses and the people, the training and the thrill of the races, every part of the this movie brought back great memories and a smile to my face.

The supporting characters all felt perfect, and even the run-away boy being a natural rider idea is pure fun. Highly recommended for everyone.
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8/10
So much better than I'd expected.
planktonrules2 April 2021
I only watched "Boots Malone" because it was one of William Holden's early starring roles. However, I was not excited about having to watch a film that seemed like a B-movie about horse racing...a topic I couldn't care less about in the first place. However, I was shocked....despite a relatively low budget and a no-name actor in one of the leads, it was terribly entertaining.

Boots Malone (Holden) is a down and out agent for jockeys. He apparently lost his big money jockey and has hit upon hard times...and is forced to sleep in the stables with his buddy, Stash (Stanley Clements). Their fortunes change when a rich runaway teen (Billy Pearson) joins up with him and wants to learn the business.

The movie is like a behind the scenes look at the folks who are often overlooked in the horse racing industry and it never failed to keep my interest. Very well written and a nice film with heart...an excellent film and one which shocked me in so many positive ways.

By the way, it's odd that newcomer Pearson was billed around 8th in the movie...he was clearly the co-star of the picture.
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8/10
Honest film with superb Holden perfornance, Dieterle direction
adrianovasconcelos18 September 2023
I had never heard of the film, BOOTS MALONE, but William Holden has always stood as one of my all time favorite actors, so I decided to watch it - and, boy, am I glad I did!, because in the process I hit upon a superlative example of unpretentions filmmaking and peerless direction.

In addition, I had the great pleasure of watching one of Holden's career-best shows. Here, he is a near-bum horseracing jock agent, moneyless and ready to steal candy from the comparative babe that is Johnny Stewart, a boy who lost his father and is on the run from his Paris, France-based business-running dictatorial mother, and just wants to realize a personal dream of running as jockey.

Holden is a gray hero. He takes a beating for causing racetrack bet losses to a heavy, seemingly does not have the moral force to get even, and instead trains the opportunity spotlight on the youngster... but Holden is the one who gets taught a lesson.

In keeping with his two- or three-timing character, at the end Holden is on the run from the mob for failing to throw the race, and he catches the train of opportunity - his American Dream may yet be in Paris, France... even if Stewart's mother looks a bit too shrewish for comfort!

Fitting, realistic cinematography, strong dialogue, solid acting across the board make this a must-see. 8/10.
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6/10
The Goose is Home
ksf-216 September 2023
Stars bill holden. The 1950s were HUGE for him; he had just made sunset boulevard, and would go on to make sabrina and stalag 17. Won the oscar for stalag. Here, he's a washed up jockey's agent. His star jockey died, so now he's sleeping in the back room. Until a kid (johnny stewart) shows up who wants to be a rider. And that keeps malone around for a while. The gangsters show up and want to control the outcome. It's pretty contrived, but i'm sure stuff like this actually did happen. There's always someone looking to make a buck! Small roles for harry morgan (from dragnet and MASH), and stan clements. It's all cute, and silly, and over the top. The kid has kind of run away from home. Will they ever contact his mother? Can he learn to ride? Directed by william dieterle. Clement died young at 55. He was married to beautiful gloria grahame for three years! Grahame also died young at 57. The kid (stewart) seems to have had about ten roles in the 1950s, and then disappeared. The film is okay, if the story is a bit silly. P.s. The goose is home is a line from the movie!
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7/10
Call him Boots.
mark.waltz21 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The title character of Boots Malone, played by William Holden, is a jockey trainer with his hands full with pupil Johnny Stewart, a rich kid desperate to make a life on the track. Mixed with tough talk and sentiment, this takes the favorite world of uninvolved veteran writer Damon Runyeon to a different level, showing Stewart go from naive newcomer to tough talking show-off, taking it on the chin, literally. To get his hands on the reins, he buys his own horse, claims Holden to be his father (mainly to hide his identity), and has to learn how to deal with young jockey hopefuls tougher than him.

At times, the mood of this film seems a bit like an A list Bowery Boys film (Stanley Clements, one of the vets of that series, appears in this), and at others, it's overly dramatic with the Elmer Bernstein music dominating the action. But it is a film that manages to get better as it goes along, and it's easy to see why it attracted Holden, then one of the biggest stars in films after a decade of not being taken as seriously as he would be after "Sunset Blvd." and "Born Yesterday". Stewart gets better too as the film goes along, developing from overly enthusiastic to fully fleshed out and likeable.

The direction of William Dieterle helps this film develop its mood in spite of starting out with some odd silliness and unnecessary melodrama. A great supporting cast includes Harry Morgan, Ed Begley, Basil Ruysdael, Carl Benton Reid and in the only substantial female role Texas theater/restaurant owner Ann Lee (not Anna) as Stewart's mother. The film gains tension as Stewart's identity threatens to be exposed as an underage runway, threatening to get Holden in trouble legally. This really could have been great if the beginning had been set up with the consistency of the last three quarters.
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9/10
Realistic Racetrack movie
bkoganbing7 May 2004
Personally, I enjoy two atmospheres in life. Ballparks and racetracks. Baseball movies are usually about individual efforts, I've never seen one that captures the atmosphere of the game itself. But Boots Malone better than any other film I've seen about racing until last year's Seabiscuit, captures the whole flavor of the track itself.

You can literally smell the manure (and I don't mean that as a comment on the film) when you watch this thing. The characters in and around the track are Damon Runyon like, but not romanticized in the way he usually did.

There just the everyday folk you find there, working hard at something they love.

A lot of the movie depends on the chemistry of the four principal players. That this film has in abundance. Bill Holden as the cynical jockey's agent, Stanley Clements as the over the hill jockey who's now an exercise rider, Basil Ruysdael as the owner of a claiming horse with hidden promise and finally Johnny Stewart as the naive teenage kid who runs away from boarding school to hang around the track, all of them work very well in the scenes they have that's about half the film.

Bill Holden had three years earlier established himself as an actor to be reckoned with in Sunset Boulevard. No more nice guy parts, he's a tough cynical character. His Boots Malone is like Joe Gillis, a cynical survivor, also like Sefton in Stalag 17. Unlike those other two characters, we're shown the reason for Malone's cynicism and alienation, his wife and kid were killed several years earlier in a car crash.

The kid, Tommy Gibson played by Johnny Stewart, get to Malone. Bit by bit as Holden shows him the ropes around the racetrack community they develop a strong bond. Some of the best scenes in the film are those with Holden teaching Stewart the fundamentals of the jockey trade.

Johnny Stewart should have had a major film career. He had charisma and good acting skills in abundance. After this he made one more film and then left Hollywood to resume acting on the Broadway stage. I would love to know whatever happened to him.

I love this film very much and if you love the racetrack this film is a must.
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10/10
Super depiction of life at the racetrack
sleeper03200216 November 2006
I have lived and worked with thoroughbred racehorses for over thirty years and "thoroughly" enjoy re-watching and recommending "Boots Malone." It is an actual "Hollywood Classic" because it tells a story and tells it well. It is distressing to read the many poor synopses of the movie and the "I'm-a-cineaste-and-you'll-never-be" attitude of the reviewers. Boots is charging Tommy for "jockey" lessons after Tommy reveals that he has a lot of money. Boots is also considering "selling" Tommy back to his mother. This is the exact same character which he portrays in the also excellent Stalag 17 (scum of the earth with lots of class).

The film has everything you could possibly want to tell your friends about the racetrack. From organized gambling, win-mad owners, touts, corner-cutting sharpies (that's Boots), claiming races, auctions, the joke with the muck sack (Tommy falls in the pit), the Stewards review of the objection, and especially the scene in the Jock's Room where Tommy calls a rider "rail-shy." The man really is a jockey and beats the snot out of the kid.

Just a few things wrong, though, and it's almost like the mistakes were made deliberately. First, jockey agents are not permitted in the saddling paddock before a race. This is a rule. Second, the racetrack, Dellington, is on the East Coast, north of Baltimore according to the train destination board. Since the movie appears to have been made at Del Mar, there are palm trees in the background. Third, I've never been to an auction where there are drunken men in tuxedos and women in evening gowns. These things are strictly business. If you think you're smarter than the rest of the people there, you'd better be prepared to prove it.

Oh, and one more thing. Had I been a Steward, "White Cargo" would have been disqualified for interference. The objection was that Tommy hit the other horse with his whip, which he did not do because he is whipping with his left hand. But the horse is "getting out" badly precisely because the rider is whipping left-handed and pulling the horse to the right with the hand holding the reins. Watch for it when you go to the races, it is a frequent occurrence.
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9/10
The Ride of Their Lives
wes-connors25 August 2007
William Holden (he's Boots) is an agent for jockeys (horse, not disc); he's in debt, and out-of-luck. Along comes young Johnny Stewart (he's Tommy) - skipping school during Easter vacation, he wants to ride the horses. Mr. Holden senses the Kid has money, and decides to take him for a ride. He allows the runaway to stay with himself and pal Stanley Clements (he's Stash). Unbeknownst to Holden, the Kid takes him for the ride of his life.

An indispensable film, for several reasons, chief among them:

#1 -- The amazing performance of Johnny Stewart, mainly; though, everyone is fine. I did wonder, though, what Holden was thinking in some of the emotional scenes with Stewart - Holden looked, perhaps, a little dumbfounded at the younger actor's flawless performance. Production cast and crew should be credited; and, obviously, director William Dieterle.

#2 -- The apparently realistic backdrop of horse-racing, jockeys, and Dellington Park. If this isn't accurate, it sure seems close enough. To top that off, the movie uses the setting to effectively tell a bigger story. It's not that difficult to figure out, but you'll get the full picture in a brief scene between Tommy the Kid and the crusty old trainer Preacher (Basil Ruysdael).

The film takes some relieving trips off the beaten track. For example, the "Big Race" at the end is tremendous because you aren't sure what Stewart is going to do; and, the whole "mother falls in love with the boy's hero…" solution is dispensed with.

Highly recommended.

********* Boots Malone (1/11/52) William Dieterle ~ William Holden, Johnny Stewart, Stanley Clements, Basil Ruysdael
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5/10
Very little stands out in this film except the soundtrack.
dhoffman25 February 2001
Here is a film of stereotypes-an innocent, wide-eyed lad who wants to become a jockey (Johnny Stewart); a cynical manager who is down on his luck (William Holden); an avaricious owner of horses (Ed Begley). The script is incompetent with unbelievable responses to situations, with solutions that are too easy. The direction is pedestrian and the camera work uninspired. This is typical 50s escapist fare that fails to look at the underlying problems of the leads. A great cast of character actors is wasted-Harry Morgan, Ralph Dumke, Ed Begley and Basil Ruysdael (who does the most with his role as Preacher). However, listen to this early score by Elmer Bernstein, an indication of greater soundtracks to come. The movie, however, is watchable but with no scene memorable.
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9/10
This film is one of Holden's best.
denscul19 April 2007
I couldn't give this film a 10 primarily because I didn't know how accurately this film captured its subject. For example, I never knew that jockey's had Agents, although I suspected the more successful ones had someone to represent and manage their contracts. I enjoyed watching this film recently on TCM for the first time. It was a very enjoyable film, and I thought one of William Holden's best acting performances, which means credit should also go to the Director.

Unlike nearly ever sports film I have ever seen, I wasn't certain who was going to win the race. In most other films about sport, there never seems to be a doubt as to who will finish first or win, whether its Rocky or Seabiscuit. Seabiscuit was based on a real and famous horse. Obviously it was going to win most of his races. I purchased Seabiscuit on a DVD and was disappointed, because I doubt I will ever watch it again.

Boots Malone was one of the few films about sports that I could not guess the outcome. Wining the race, was not central to the film's theme,which was about the friendship that developed between a young, naive, rich kid, who had every material thing, but lacked something that money can't buy.

Holden's character is a cynical, far from lovable cad who tries to steal the kid's money the first time they meet. I thought his character was a little like Robert Louis Stevenson's Long John Silver, a cad by any measure, but someone that the kid couldn't hate. Like Long John, Malone continually acts in his own interests. In the last moments of the film, he tries to talk the kid into throwing the race, and one has to wonder whether the kid will, because of his devotion to Holden. The viewer really doesn't know who to root for because a win means serious trouble for Holden from the gamblers. Gamblers are a pox to any sport because they make their living with fixes and threats to anyone who can give them an edge in betting and profits. I do know something about that problem.

This film was one of Holden's best. David Lean didn't get as good a performance from Holden in Bridge on the River Kwai

This film reminds me of Holden's early performance in Rachel and the Stranger in which Holden demonstrates his ability as an actor capable of moving his role from one position to another.

For the critics who didn't like this film, I would offer the comment that this film made in 1952 and bad year for the movies, and was not high budget film. Holden was not a big star, and the film had to rely on some great number of familiar character actors. The "kid" was also a tough role to play, and he didn't measure up to star quality as evidence by his quick disappearance from film. A movie without sex, or violence that couldn't be shown on TV was not likely to make a splash, considering that Holden's career didn't get jump started until Stalag 17. I thought Holden, as an actor, was better in this relatively obscure film. The Oscar's have a spotty record of picking out the best performances. Making up for past mistakes seems to be a tradition on Oscar night.

Perhaps this was the case in 1952 and 1953.
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9/10
Great Horse Racing film - Great Xmas Day Family Film.
ewleeds3 March 2021
One of the best horse, jockey and racing stable films ever made. An enjoyable Lassie Comes Home film with racehorses instead of dogs. It illustrates with great accuracy the thoroughbred race horse-world with what appears to be authentic been there- done that background talk and which transports the viewer into the somewhat risky world of the small County Fairs travelling race horses trainers, hired on the spot track-jockeys and conscientious track officials. Apart from the star Wm Holden the casting was superb, Holden's acting and city-gent physical-appearance did not fit the horse-trainer role he played. In my view the actor who played the blacksmith role a Mr Basil Ruysdael was by far the best actor for this Boots Malone role (a likeable, friendly and honest horse trainer) Holden should have played the winning horses wealthy upmarket owner with the champion to be boy-jockeys screen mother playing the part of Holden loveable wife and the wannabe -jockey boys mother. This is a 9 star film, and I award a Golden Horse Shoes to all the cast. Johnny Stewart the boy actor/newcomer was exceptional. With very few script changes you have here a Classic Box Office Winner here. Thank you to the producers and the 'gamblers' who financed this 1952 Boys Town with Horses Film. Watch it and shut up and escape the dreaded Covid-19 news for 1-hour 45 minutes, this is a good film, and its made for children everywhere and code-approved!
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9/10
Very talented cast perform with a good script telling a touching racetrack story
morrisonhimself2 May 2021
So many likable characters are played by so many excellent actors, it's hard to know where to start bragging about "Boots Malone."

But brag I will.

Billed as "introducing" is young Johnny Stewart, though he had performed two roles previously, but for TV. His eager young apprentice is likable, but also vulnerable, except when he flares up at being mistreated. He gives a great performance, but is credited with only 10 roles. Again I ask, What's wrong with Hollywood casting directors?

Starring in the title role is the iconic William Holden, someone I've admired for a very long time. His character is not so admirable. At first. Holden, though, shows that character as being many-faceted so we have hope for him, right up to the end.

Almost stealing the show is Stanley Clements, who is supposedly best-known for the his roles in The Bowery Boys, but again and again he has shown, especially here, that he is an actor, obviously capable of many types of roles. His might be the most likable character in this movie.

Again, all the actors here deserve praise, even if they don't get screen credit. The director and writers have created and produced a good story, showing what seems to be a good slice of actual race-track life and the intriguing "little people" (no pun intended) who populate it.

Between films like this and the books of Dick Francis, I am pretty sure I'll never place another bet on a horse race. By "another," I mean I'll never place that second bet. But I can still admire the horses and many of the people who train and ride them.

Director William Dieterle has shown some great racing shots, exciting even to us who see horse-racing only in movies or on TV. I highly recommend "Boots Malone" and there is a good print at YouTube, at least today, 1 May 2021. I hope you get to see it.
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8/10
Under Rated Gem
DKosty12311 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Columbia Pictures did this one in 1952, and I am not sure how many times Holden worked in that studio. I watched this one on You Tube because I was interested in seeing a Holden movie I had not seen. Turns out this is a really good film, a sleeper which has been too often overlooked.

Granted there are many other horse race films, this one is different because it doesn't focus on the horses like many of them do. It's focus is Boot's Malone and his mysterious young man he mentors. The film is not as predictable as many of this type made.

While it does have the biggest race near the end, the path to that race is not the usual one. There's lots of story and plenty of supporting actors here to help it along. The big thing here though is Holden. He does some fine acting making what would be a mundane movie better than the average film.

The film is very good at pulling in the viewer, and Holden's acting has a lot to do with that. He is the wise trainer doing a eulogy of one of his former jockeys early in the film. Meanwhile, a mysterious young man who seems to have an endless supply of $100 bills comes into Malones world. It is this young man who keeps Boots in the horse racing game as he is thinking of quitting.

The film avoids the trap of revealing too soon who the kid really is and keeps Holden out of any romance angles which are 2 traps too many films did back then. Holden's love is for horse racing and then as the film goes on he develops a special bond with the young interloper.

At the first scene of the film, a corrupt gambler slugs Holden because of 2 thousand dollar debt Boots can't pay. He comes back later in the movie to try and get Boots to fix a race. While this plot does get used in other films, in this one it is toned down. Because of the young guy having this money, the gambler does not come to collect on his debt. Boots only money is from every character around him.

This is a refreshing look at horse racing because it actually explains some of the terminology used in racing. The acting is electric. Very good film, check it out. It's better than just William Holden but he sure makes this a better film too,
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