Affairs of Cappy Ricks | |
Director: | Ralph Staub |
Producer: | Burt Kelly |
Starring: | Walter Brennan Mary Brian Lyle Talbot Frank Shields Frank Melton |
Music: | Alberto Colombo |
Cinematography: | Ernest Miller |
Editing: | William Morgan |
Studio: | Republic Pictures |
Distributor: | Republic Pictures |
Runtime: | 61 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Affairs of Cappy Ricks is a 1937 American comedy drama film directed by Ralph Staub and starring Walter Brennan, Mary Brian, Lyle Talbot, Frank Shields, and Frank Melton. It was produced and distributed by Republic Pictures. The plot is about a captain who returns home from a long voyage and has to take charge of his business and family.
Cappy Ricks (Walter Brennan) has returned home from a long voyage at sea only to find that his family and business are not as he left them. His daughter Frankie (Mary Brian) is engaged to a dimwit that he isn't fond of. His future mother-in-law already owns 51% of his business and has plans to replace his prized ship. A marriage date is set for his daughter. The business is to be merged with his long standing competitor. Cappy Ricks knows he has to end the chaos and set things straight. He brings everyone on his ship as there he can be the Captain and in charge. He has a two day excursion extend into an 8 week voyage. Then they are lost on an uninhabited island. And as in other movies of that period, he uses the island to straighten out the arrogance of the rich ladies and the weakness of sons under mothers dominance. They were never lost for he had secret radio contact. Captain Braddock "rescues" them but his modern electronic ship fails in a storm and only Cappy knows how to sail. The merger is cancelled, Mrs. Peasely is to move from his house, and his daughter is to marry the man she really loves all with a happy ending.
The Republic Pictures film was released May 24, 1937.[1]
On April 25, 2021, the film was screened in its entirety as an online pre-show attraction for one of the dueling streams that comprised the On Cinema Eighth Annual Oscar Special. It had been previously featured in the fifth episode of the 11th season of On Cinema.[2]