Product Details
Irish Luck

Irish Luck
Directed by Howard Bretherton

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Product Description

Ample food and sturdy drink, a clean pillow for your head, and may you be forty years in heaven...before the devil knows your dead! Add some Irish wit & wisdom to any room with these clever and humorous signs. They make great little additions to the larger personalized Irish signs or fun little gifts for all your Irish friends. A decorative routered edge comes standard, but you can add a hand kerfed, 1 inch heavy poplar wood molding frame with hand painted gilded pin stripes for a small additional fee. This Irish sign measures 11x14. This sign comes with a little bit of Irish luck, free of charge.More Information:This sign is proudly made in the USA. Click here to learn more about this style of sign.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #113879 in DVD
  • Released on: 2004-12-21
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Black & White, Closed-captioned, Dolby, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 51 minutes

Customer Reviews

Grouping Of Crisp Sequences In A Pleasing Programmer.4
Produced by actor Grant Withers, this is the initial entry of a Frankie Darro starring series for Monogram Pictures during which this foremost exponent of the Boyish Enthusiasm genre plays as a hotel bellhop and "Amateur Detective" (the movie's title in England), and it is also the first of six works for which Darro is cast along with comic actor Mantan Moreland as his foil who wishes to exercise no part of crime solving, a chronic habit and avocation of Darro's characters, "Buzzy O'Brien" in this archetypal instance. The short (51 min.) film begins in brisk fashion and continues on a smooth roll throughout with Buzzy, son of a former police detective, becoming entangled in shady goings-on at his place of employment, the Regal Hotel, including multiple murders and a theft of negotiable bonds, with the young bellboy being in the midst of it all, as the temptation to be a nonprofessional gumshoe ensures that his job, his good standing with old family friend Detective Lanahan (Dick Purcell), and his very life will be in hazard. Very popular upon its release, the film still generates approval from viewers due to excellent casting and delivery of rapid-fire and crisp dialogue by the players, with ill-starred Monogram mainstay Purcell earning the acting laurels for his effortless performance as a no-nonsense detective in charge of the many investigations at the hotel; the direction, editing and scoring are not equalled by the studio's 1944 recrafting of the story as THE ADVENTURES OF KITTY O'DAY, featuring Jean Parker.