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Come on George! (1939)
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Overview
Release Date:
November 1939 (UK) morePlot:
George is an old stable hand and is the only one who can control a jittery racehorse. full summary | add synopsisUser Comments:
(All together:) Come On George!!! moreCast
(Complete credited cast)| George Formby | ... | George | |
| Patricia Kirkwood | ... | Ann Johnson | |
| Joss Ambler | ... | Sir Charles Bailey | |
| Meriel Forbes | ... | Monica Bailey | |
| Cyril Raymond | ... | Jimmy Taylor | |
| George Hayes | ... | Bannerman | |
| George Carney | ... | Sergeant Johnson | |
| Ronald Shiner | ... | Nat | |
| Gibb McLaughlin | ... | Dr MacGregor | |
| Hal Gordon | ... | Stableboy | |
| Davy Burnaby | ... | Col. Bollinger | |
| C. Denier Warren | ... | Banker | |
| James Hayter | ... | Barker | |
| Syd Crossley | ... | Police Constable Cronley |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
88 minCountry:
UKLanguage:
EnglishColour:
Black and WhiteAspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 moreSound Mix:
MonoFilming Locations:
Ealing Studios, Ealing, London, England, UKMOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
George Formby's wife Beryl was so jealous of his glamourous co-star Patricia Kirkwood that she tried to sabotage Kirkwood's performance, insisting the she had her long hair cut short, and dressed in dowdy clothes. However, the cast and crew had the last laugh, when the final kiss was achieved by distracting Beryl with a telephone call, and shooting the scene in one take. moreGoofs:
Continuity: When George, after singing "I'm Making Headway Now" in the stables, places his ukulele into a wheel barrow and walks away, it is a totally different instrument to the one he uses to sing the song. moreSoundtrack:
Pardon Me moreFAQ
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Another of my favourite Formby's, a perfect "book-end" to Trouble Brewing made in the same year. This time he swaps jobs from ice cream seller to steeplechase jockey through a series of accidents, involving being on the run from the Law for a crime he didn't commit. The horse they want him to ride is a killer, Maneater, but he doesn't know that so the two of them get along splendidly. Until George finds out, that is... There are of course similarities to the earlier Marx Bros Day at the Races here.
On the way he sings some pleasant songs, my favourite being I couldn't let the stable down - apparently the song he sang to Squib, Goodnight Little Fellow he used to sing to his dog in a 1925 revue! And he falls for Pat Kirkwood, then 18 but who didn't really have a good part except to decorate the landscape. I've always loved the trilby-hatted, shapeless overcoat, blue-chinned pre-War atmosphere in this one even though I'm not a fan of forcing horses to run and jump over objects in their way for love or money.
It was the centenary of the birth of Britain's most popular, highest paid star for 7 years on the trot to 1945 in 2004 and what did the BBC and all of the other TV channels in the UK do to mark the fact? Absolutely nothing. None of them, terrestrial or satellite showed so much as a clip of one of his 20 films. I call this burying the past, and solely because it suits the history-less 20 year olds who run all of these channels. Otoh it could be argued by them that as this is the first comment on the IMDb since its inception for this film that there's nearly no-one out there who appreciates Formby any more. Maybe they should check out www.georgeformby.co.uk.