This was the final feature in Turner Classic Movies' ‘50s car movie marathon that originally aired on July 26, 2017. This was the twenty-ninth entry in the Bowery Boys series. It’s also notable for being the first film released by Allied Artists, which had previously been known as Monogram Pictures.
Slip (Leo Gorcey) is competing in a race in his busted old jalopy in hopes the winnings will help old timer Louie (Bernard Gorcey) save his soda shop. He doesn’t have a prayer of winning until his pal Sach (Huntz Hall) invents a super-duper rocket fuel in the back room of the store. When a gangster (Robert Lowery from the Batman serial) learns about their formula, he sets out to steal it before the big race.
I’m a fan of the Bowery Boys movies, so this one went down pretty smooth. It won’t be mistaken for one of the team’s best films, but there are enough laughs here to keep easy-to-please fans happy. Gorcey gets a couple of clever one-liners and malapropisms and Hall does an OK job doing his patented schtick. I also liked the running gag where every time the formula explodes, sexy Jane Easton appears out of a puff of smoke, leaving Slip and Sach to believe the stuff produces girls out of thin air.
The other Bowery Boys basically just stand around a lot as it’s more or less the Slip and Sach show the whole time. In fact, it’s actually kind of jarring when one of the other guys speaks. The senior Gorcey gets more to do this time out as the harried ice cream shop owner Louie. Lowery makes for a convincing foil for the team as well, which helps.
Sure, there are some stretches where the laughs dry up. We also get a party sequence that goes on far too long. The ice cream fight scene is pretty lame too. The biggest surprise is that the racing scenes are actually entertaining and exciting. There’s a great sequence where Hall loses his hat and runs onto the track to retrieve it, effectively turning the race into an all-out demolition derby. The finale isn’t quite as good, but it helps to end the movie on a fun note.