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The Patent Leather Kid Poster

The Patent Leather Kid

Fries of youth and courage that will set your heart ablaze! The love-romance that Broadway held dear to its heart for four months!
1927 | 150m | English

(634 votes)

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Popularity: 0.7 (history)

Details

The Patent Leather Kid is a 1927 silent film which tells the story of a boxer who scoffs at fighting outside the ring... particularly for the United States once it enters World War I. Eventually, he is drafted, is shipped overseas, and performs a heroic act, which results in his being severely wounded.
Release Date: Sep 01, 1927
Director: Alfred Santell
Writer: Adela Rogers St. Johns, Rupert Hughes
Genres: Drama, Romance, War
Keywords
Production Companies First National Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Apr 28, 2024 (Update)
Entered: Apr 28, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Richard Barthelmess Patent Leather Kid
Molly O'Day Curley Boyle, the Golden Dancer
Lawford Davidson Lieutenant Hugo Breen
Matthew Betz Jake Stuke
Arthur Stone Jimmy Kinch
Ray Turner Mabile Molasses
Hank Mann Sergeant
Walter James Officer Riley
Lucien Prival The German Officer
Nigel De Brulier The French Doctor
Billy Bletcher Fight Fan
Name Job
Alvin Knechtel Director of Photography
Alfred Santell Director
Adela Rogers St. Johns Adaptation
Arthur Edeson Director of Photography
Stephen Goosson Art Direction
Rupert Hughes Story
Ralph Hammeras Director of Photography
Name Title
Alfred Santell Producer
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
6.0

Whilst I did rather enjoy watching this, it's not really all that good. Richard Barthelmess is the eponymous "Kid: - a boxer of some skill who gets distracted at one of his fights by the pretty but fickle "Curley" (the rather dewy eyed Molly O'Day). They sort of hook up, much to the detriment of his ... career and to the chagrin of his loyal trainer "Puffy" (Arthur Stone) and for far more venal reasons by his manager "Stuke" (Matthew Betz) who having promised to help his avoid the draft, does nothing of the kind. So, off he goes to training camp and thence to the fields of France where, whilst not exactly cowardly, he isn't exactly at the front of the battle lines either - until, that is, tragedy strikes and he rises to the occasion. "Curley", meantime, has also come to France - as a nurse - and when the two meet up, they try to salvage something from their relationship as she concludes that she does actually love him (and not her soldier beau "Breen" (the handsome Lawford Davidson) - who also happens to be the "Kid's" commanding officer - small world!)... Barthelmess looks every inch the perfectly vain, dapper, character his is supposed to be but the love story just doesn't really work for me. There is no sense passion from either. There are ample good looking boxing and battle scenes, but they seem to be used as padding more often than not for 150 minutes is just far too long to tell this really quite insubstantial story. Some of the humour is a bit "of it's time", as we say nowadays - but rather than being offensive is just a bit crass. The star received an Oscar nomination for this (and "The Noose" (1928")) in the first ever Academy Awards and that did his career no harm, but this film as it ages has become something more for historians of classic cinema, than - classic cinema.

Jun 06, 2022