Monday, September 2, 2024

THERE AIN'T NO JUSTICE (1939)

With a career’s-worth of credits at various studios already behind him, British producer Michael Balcon, putting a new team together for next year’s Ealing Studios startup, elevated assistant-director Pen Tennyson to helm this sharp little boxing programmer.  And Tennyson really came thru, starting with the cast.  Jimmy Hanley, personable, if darn skinny for a boxer, is reasonably athletic as the young car mechanic who chucks his old job to take up boxing (after accidentally getting in a row with a top pro boxer) unaware he’s signed on with a crooked manager.  It’s also how he’ll pivot from his nice, new girlfriend to the manager’s moll, pawing the lad to see if he’ll throw a fight for a quick payout.  He just might, too, as his sister needs some quick cash after shady fiancĂ© Michael Wilding (the cad!) takes off with the 60 quid she had in the till.  Yikes!  Worked up with unusually satisfying twists from writer James Curtis (and a doozy of a climax when the bad guys try to stop the big fight by causing a riot in the stands), the film lets Tennyson display some atypical awareness for the time of workingclass life & sensibility in a lightweight drama (note the opening neighborhood establishing shots), the close family routine (Mom, Dad, son, daughter & 2-yr-old) in a flat two sizes too small, along with some terrific technical flair as needed.  Not only in above average fights in the ring, but in a quick-cut/montage suicide attempt.  Excellent stuff!  But Tennyson (and yes, he is related to the poet) only made two more films before dying in the war at  just 28 in 1940.*

DOUBLE-BILL/LINK:  *One of the two, his last release, CONVOY/’40.  https://maksquibs.blogspot.com/2022/04/convoy-1940.html

ATTENTION MUST BE PAID:  Once available only in subfusc VHS editions, this is now available (via Canal+) in near mint condition.  An unexpected treat on these low-budget films.

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