Off Limits (1952) Poster

(1952)

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7/10
Funny!
$conan$10 April 1999
This movie was very funny. Hope plays a Prize fighters manager who gets swindled into the army by his corrupt partners, where he finds another fighter. He trains the kid to beat his ex-fighter and win the belt. While doing this he gets into his usual Bob Hope trouble with the MP and a woman. This is another good move by Bob Hope.
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5/10
Hope Was Off Limits For Maxwell
bkoganbing21 June 2009
Off Limits is a very typical Bob Hope product with Hope playing a character that he's done before, a guy who thinks he's a sharpie, but is really quite the schnook. Hope is a fight manager who finally gets himself a champion in Stanley Clements only to be done out of his end of the champ by partners, Marvin Miller and Richard Weil.

It's quite the con they pull, sending a fake draft notice to Clements and then having Hope enlist to protect their investment. Of course Clements gets rejected by the Draft Board, but Hope's in for the duration.

While there he buddies up with Mickey Rooney who was also a fighter and thinks he can be lightweight champion himself. Hope kids him along because he's got his mind on Marilyn Maxwell who is Rooney's aunt if you can believe that one. Later on Hope and Rooney get real earnest in their championship quest.

All this is done mind you while the two of them become Military Police. That's another thing I found hard to swallow in Off Limits. Still Rooney and Hope work quite well together and I'm surprised they never did another film together. All their shenanigans are watched with a jaundiced eye by the Captain of the MPs Eddie Mayehoff who probably has the best performance in the film.

Off Limits was the second of two films Bob Hope did with Marilyn Maxwell the first being the infinitely better The Lemon Drop Kid. The two of them were involved with each other at the time though that would shortly come to an end. There's a little bite in their scenes together as Maxwell was realizing Hope wasn't going to leave Dolores for her.

If you look quick you'll see Charles Bronson in a brief appearance as a fighter training in a gym in one scene. Bing Crosby makes his obligatory appearance in Hope film via a clip from Welcome Stranger.

As in The Lemon Drop Kid, Jay Livingston and Ray Evans wrote the score though nothing as memorable as Silver Bells came out Off Limits. Still it's a pleasant enough service comedy, though far from Hope's best work.
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5/10
A 50 year-old Bob Hope goes into the US Army in this adequate film.
planktonrules19 April 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Hollywood made quite a few military films starring the most ridiculous actors. In "Great Guns", a 300-400 pound 49 year0old Oliver Hardy joins up. And, in "Buck Privates", a 46 year-old Bud Abbott also joins the army. So, the notion of a 50 year-old Bob Hope in the army is ridiculous but not without some precedent. My advice is to completely block this out of your mind--as a case of temporary amnesia will definitely make this better viewing.

Now some might also laugh at the notion of the very diminutive Mickey Rooney serving as well in this film. However, he WAS not too old to serve (33) and he actually did serve with some distinction during WWII.

The film begins with Hope playing the role of a manager-trainer for the newest boxing champ. He's on top of the world...until his fighter is drafted. Oddly, he, too, decides to join up so can follow his client--though if they both did serve, the chances of them staying together would have been negligible. However, it appears that the boxer's draft notice was all part of a ruse to get Hope out of the way and break his contract with the champ. When this champ is ruled psychologically unfit for service (he seems to have faked being crazy), Hope is stuck in the army while this promising boxer gets a new manager with more clout. Hope is irritated but there is nothing he can do....or is there? In the service he meets a game guy (Rooney) who also wants to become a boxer. However Rooney's platinum blonde aunt (Marilyn Maxwell) insists that he will NOT become a boxer--she didn't want to see him become a punch-drunk idiot. And, because Hope has become smitten with her, he is inclined to agree.

Later, when their commander (Mayehoff) hears that Rooney wants to box, he arranges some fights--and Hope is unable to stop it. However, inexplicably, Maxwell's insistence that Rooney not box suddenly vanished and Rooeny begins working his way through the professional boxing ranks. And, when the 'big match' occurs, thugs are determined to do anything to stop Hope from helping his protégé. Will Rooney manage to become the next champ? And what about Hope?

Overall this is a reasonably pleasant film with one serious problem--it is well made but not funny. And, considering it's supposed to be a comedy, that is a BIG problem. It's not a bad film--but I never laughed once. So, provided you don't mind its lack of humor, it's a decent enough film. But funny, it ain't.
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This film is well worth watching.
depuyleavitt3 March 2004
Not only do Bob Hope and Mickey Rooney deliver enjoyable performances, there is a great character, "Chow Hound" portrayed by Norman Leavitt. Mr.Leavitt is one of those wonderful character actors whose face you have seen a million times but might not remember his name. After watching "Off Limits", you will never forget him. For years I have enjoyed his performances in many "Andy Griffith" and "I Love Lucy" episodes as well as his performance in the feature "The Blue Gardenia" directed by Fritz Lang. Also, he was in one of my all time favorite films, "Harvey" as one of the cab drivers. The cast of "off Limits" should have gone on to make a sequel, it was like watching a charmed ensemble cast movie.
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6/10
Military Police
gattonero97526 July 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I had never been a a Bob Hope fan but after this picture I am! He is so aggressive, energetic and funny in this screwball comedy directed by George Marshall. I also have never seen Mickey Rooney so young and boy was he also a Powerhouse very funny and very energetic also he and Bob Hope made a wonderful team I wonder why they never made more films together they would have been a hit. This is the first and only time teeming of these comedy Legends, Bob Hope plays Wally Hogan, a boxing trainer who loses his one and only Champion to the draft and decides to enlist so he can keep an eye on his prize fighter. He is left holding his laces when his boxer is discharge until enlisted private and amateur boxer Herbert Tuttle Rooney ask Wally to train him. But Wally is more interested in tuttle's Aunt play by the beautiful Marilyn Maxwell then actually training the youn pcontender It's a wonderful, full of delicious cameos if you don't blink among the notable cameos are Charles Bronson in a 30-second uncredited wordless bit he is in the scene where Hogan is talking to the military police at the gym I'm training Mickey Rooney Bronson's 30 seconds can be seen in the background with him sparring with another Boxer and that was it. Also Carolyn Jones has a uncredited bit as one of the many girlfriends that Hogan has in the beginning of the film also actress Mary Murphy as an uncredited bit if you remember her she was and the wild one with Marlon Brando. Also Doucet has an uncredited bit as a barfly he had also starred in the wild one with Marlon Brando. Tom Harmon yes Mark Harmon's father is in this film also.
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7/10
Hope is an MP who can't stay out of trouble
SimonJack15 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"Off Limits" is one of the many comedies that Bob Hope made during his period of prolific 1940s-50s filmmaking. It's above the average of that batch, with a better and more detailed plot. This is one before Hope begins talking to the camera, and it comes across as more natural. Here, he shares the main lead time with Mickey Rooney and Marilyn Maxwell. And, the film has a handful of good supporting players of Hollywood of the 1940s-50s. Stanley Clements plays Bullets Bradley, Norman Leavitt is Chowhound, and Marvin Miller (of TV's 1955- 60 series, "The Millionaire") is Vic Breck.

Eddie Mayehoff made only half a dozen movies in his 25-year career, but his character is easily identified from the many appearances he made in TV series from 1946 to 1970. Mayehoff plays the nemesis of Bob Hope's Wally Hogan, the MP who rises from corporal to sergeant to lieutenant to captain during the movie. Legendary world-heavyweight boxing champ Jack Dempsey has some film time, as himself, refereeing two fights in the film.

This film isn't loaded with one-liners as many of Bob Hope's movies are, but it has some funny and very good lines. In place of more dialog, it has some very funny situations. A scene toward the end is hilarious. With few words, Hope smashes, paints, breaks, scratches and otherwise ruins a brand new car that he mistakenly takes for the car of a couple of bad guys. Instead it was a gift to a general from his wife. This is a fun film – a rare one in which Hope serves in the military. For several decades, he was the top performer to entertain American and Allied troops in the Armed Forces around the world. Often times, he put on shows for troops in areas that were close to the front lines or under fire (Korea and Vietnam). He was too young to serve in WW I, and beyond service age for WW II.

Here are a couple funny lines from the film. For more humorous dialog, check the Quotes section here on the IMDb Web page for this film.

Wally Hogan: A zebra's covered with stripes, but underneath he's still a jackass.

Wally Hogan: When I was born, the doctor said, "Boil some hot water," and I've been in it ever since.
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4/10
Tired Bob Hope movie
blanche-27 October 2023
Love the older Bob Hope films but not this one.

He stars with Mickey Rooney and Marilyn Maxwell in the military comedy. Both men love the same woman.

Hope plays a boxing coach tricked into working as a Military Policeman. He meets Mickey Rooney, and more importantly, his good-looking aunt. To get closer to her, Hope offers to train Mickey as a fighter.

Unfortunately, this is a tedious and not funny film. The fact that it made no sense wouldn't have bothered me if I had been laughing - I mean, Hope was what, 49, being drafted? Or how about short stuff Mickey as a lightweight champ.

This doesn't hold up the way other Hope movies do.
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9/10
a good Hope Movie
bkuszak7 February 2004
This is a very good Bob Hope movie. He does a wonderful job of playing a military person that really isn't very military minded. His usual pranks to get out of something he doesn't want to do, doesn't let you down, and I love the way he always gets a jab at his old buddy Bing in his solo movies, and he has a very neat way of doing it in this movie. The only thing I don't understand in the movie is that the champ refers to "women" as buffaloes. Does anyone know where or why that term was used in those days. This is the only movie I've ever heard them refered to as.
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8/10
Bob Hope and Mickey Rooney make a good team in Off Limits
tavm8 August 2015
In this Bob Hope vehicle, he's a fight manager who trains a champ and has all the women he wants and more! Then the champ gets drafted and Hope enlists with him. Well, something else happens but let's skip there and just say that Mickey Rooney and Marilyn Maxwell then get involved with him and lots of funny lines and scenes and a number or two gets performed and there's a chase because of another messy visual comedy scene. Oh, and there's also their military police superior (Eddie Mayehoff) to deal with and the champ's flunkies and...well, just watch the thing if you're so inclined. It's on YouTube right now. It's one of few Hope movies that's not in the public domain that's available there...
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8/10
We were all laughing out loud, Bob Hope's best work
California_Girl_205826 June 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This movie does NOT focus on the military duties so much but focuses on a guy (Mickey Rooney) in the army, who wants to be a prize fighter and a trainer (Bob Hope) who joined the army to watch another fighter but things go wrong and the trainer (Bob Hope) gets stuck in the army and ends up training the new guy (Mickey Rooney). This was my first time seeing this movie. Next to the Lemon Drop Kid, its going to be my favorite movie with Bob Hope. I am thinking about buying it. Bob Hope really outdone himself, we were all laughing out loud, throughout the movie. Like so many Military comedy movies: Kelly Heroes, Major Payne, No Time for Sergeants, Sgt. Bilko, At War With the Army, just a few Military comedy movies; if you liked these; you're going to love this one.
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