10, 000 Kids and a Cop (1948) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Hey, Abbott!
zsenorsock23 February 2007
Yes, the acting is stiff and the dialog is arch, but this is a fascinating look at a world and a time that doesn't exist anymore, yet was not that long ago.

This was a time when Abbott and Costello reigned at the top of the comedy mountain and as two of the biggest stars in Hollywood, had the money to build and fund the Lou Costello Jr. Foundation to help underprivileged kids. They had the connections to call on Jimmy Stewart, William Bendix and other top stars who did not appear in this short film, but did appear at fund raisers to help raise money for the center. Lou's devotion to the center and memory of his son Lou Jr. aka Butch is touching, as is his ambitious goal of providing centers like this to kids everywhere regardless of color or creed. In listening to Lou and seeing him interact with kids of every color and religion, its clear that as far as equality goes, Lou not only talked the talk, but he also walked the walk. A kid wasn't a black kid or a white kid or an Asian kid to Lou, he was just a kid.

Sadly, Costello had to turn over the center to the city of Los Angeles in the 1950's when he got into tax troubles and no longer had the money to fund the center himself. However, it still exists today, providing opportunities to disadvantaged kids (though no longer as many great opportunities as it did in this film when it was brand new) and is a lasting memorial to Butch and his big hearted father, Lou Costello.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
William Bendix Is William Powell
boblipton9 November 2023
William Bendix plays a beat cop who gets a tour of the Lou Costello Jr. Center in Los Angeles. Lou Costello's only son died at the age of a year, so he spent a lot of money setting up a place for youngsters to have clean, healthy fun -- and chocolate sodas -- in the boy's memory. Costello ran into tax troubles in the 1950s and handed the foundation over to the city of Los Angeles, but it is still in operation as of the day I wrote this review.

Bendix gets to see boys of all backgrounds play baseball, sees some of the facilities, and hears of more. Jimmy Stewart offers opening narration, and Abbott & Costello both appear as themselves.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed