Sorrowful Jones backdrop
Sorrowful Jones

Sorrowful Jones

Funnier Than "The Paleface"!

6.6 / 1019491h 28m

Synopsis

A young girl is left with the notoriously cheap Sorrowful Jones as a marker for a bet. When her father doesn't return, he learns that taking care of a child interferes with his free-wheeling lifestyle. Sorrowful must also evade crooked gangsters and indulge in a bit of horse-thieving.

Genre: Comedy

Status: Released

Director: Sidney Lanfield

Website:

Main Cast

Bob Hope

Bob Hope

Humphrey "Sorrowful" Jones

Lucille Ball

Lucille Ball

Gladys O'Neill

William Demarest

William Demarest

Regret

Bruce Cabot

Bruce Cabot

Big Steve Holloway

Thomas Gomez

Thomas Gomez

Reardon

Tom Pedi

Tom Pedi

Once Over Sam

Paul Lees

Orville Smith

Houseley Stevenson

Houseley Stevenson

Doc Chesley

Ben Welden

Ben Welden

Big Steve's Bodyguard

Emmett Vogan

Emmett Vogan

Psychiatrist

User Reviews

John Chard

Rock-a-bye Baby at Pimlico. Damon Runyon's Little Miss Marker had already been filmed in 1934 as a Shirley Temple starrer, this remake changes the title and brings in the star power of Bob Hope and Lucille Ball, with great results. Story has Hope as sly bookie Sorrowful Jones, who after accepting a five year old girl as a betting marker, gets lumbered with the child when her father is wasted by gangster Big Steve Holloway (Bruce Cabot). Initially a fish out of water with the kid, Sorrowful strikes up a loving relationship with her and aided by his ex-girlfriend, Gladys O'Neill (Ball), fights to keep the child out of an orphanage. It's not - as some of the posters proclaim - funnier than Paleface (either of them since the sequel is better), in fact it's not close to the funny heights achieved by Hope's next Runyon adapted picture, The Lemon Drop Kid. However, Sorrowful Jones is funny, Hope gets to deliver some absolute corking lines that are guaranteed to at the least put a big grin on your face, but there's a semi-seriousness to it all which thankfully works a treat alongside the quips and wonderfully strange situations that Jones finds himself in. With a weighty support cast that also features William Demarest and Thomas Gomez helping things along, and young Mary Jane Saunders adorable beyond compare, this is a little cracker of a picture to brighten your day. 7/10