Racing Luck (1948 film) explained

Racing Luck
Director:William Berke
Producer:Sam Katzman
Starring:Gloria Henry
Stanley Clements
David Bruce
Paula Raymond
Harry Cheshire
Dooley Wilson
Cinematography:Ira H. Morgan
Editing:Henry Batista
Studio:Sam Katzman Productions
Distributor:Columbia Pictures
Runtime:66 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Racing Luck is a 1948 American comedy romance sport film directed by William Berke and starring Gloria Henry.

Plot

Saddled with debts after her father's death, Phyllis Warren's most valuable properties are a pair of thoroughbreds: Flasher, which her little brother "Boots" trains and rides, and Charm Boy, which doesn't seem to run well unless Flasher is in the same race.

Charm Boy is bought at a Santa Anita claiming race by rich trainer Jeff Stuart as a gift to Natalie Gunther, his sweetheart. Phyllis, not intending to part with the horse, persuades Jeff to return him, but Natalie sees a grateful Phyllis hug him, she keeps the horse and dumps her beau.

With a big stakes race coming up, Natalie discovers that Charm Boy won't run unless Flasher does as well. A wager is made that the winning trainer gets to keep both. A barn fire results in an injury to Boots, but he still manages to ride Flasher to victory and win Charm Boy back for his sister.

Cast

Reception

Variety wrote that "Sam Katzman failed in his productional chores with a poor screenplay... and direction William Berke fails to give the pic a pace worthy of interest."[1]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.org/stream/variety172-1948-11#page/n70/mode/1up Review of film