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Francis Covers the Big Town
1953 film by Arthur Lubin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Francis Covers the Big Town is a 1953 American black-and-white comedy film from Universal-International, produced by Leonard Goldstein, directed by Arthur Lubin, that stars Donald O'Connor, Yvette Duguay, and Gene Lockhart. The distinctive voice of Francis is a voice-over by actor Chill Wills.
This is the fourth film in Universal-International's Francis the Talking Mule series continuing the misadventures of Peter Stirling and his friend Francis. Diabolique argued it was the best in the series.[2]
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Plot
Peter lands a job at a big New York City newspaper and while on assignment gets framed for a murder.
Cast
- Donald O'Connor as Peter Stirling
- Yvette Duguay as Maria Scola
- Gene Lockhart as Tom Henderson
- Nancy Guild as Alberta Ames
- William Harrigan as Deputy Chief Inspector Hansen
- Silvio Minciotti as Salvatore Scola
- Lowell Gilmore as Jefferson Garnet
- Larry Gates as Dan Austin
- Hanley Stafford as Dr. Goodrich
- Gale Gordon as District Attorney Evans
- Forrest Lewis as Judge Stanley
- John Qualen as Defense Attorney Cavendish
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Production
Production of the film was announced in July 1951 and was to be the third in the Francis series.[3]
Oscar Brodney was assigned to write the script.[4] David Stern reportedly also worked on the script.[5]
Filming started in August 1951 and involved ten days location shooting in New York.[6]
Francis was flown to New York and back on a cargo plane, which cost $700 plus airfares for his trainer and two handlers.[7]
At one stage of production, the film was going to be known as Francis, Racket Buster.[8][9]
Director Arthur Lubin complained during filming that he was becoming typecast as an animal director. He hoped to make The Interruption from a suspense story by W. W. Mason "just to remind producers that I can direct people too."[10]
Home media
The original film, Francis (1950), was released in 1978 as one of the first-ever titles in the new LaserDisc format, DiscoVision Catalog #22-003.[11] It was then re-issued on LaserDisc in May 1994 by MCA/Universal Home Video (Catalog #: 42024) as part of an Encore Edition Double Feature with Francis Goes to the Races (1951).
The first two Francis films were released again in 2004 by Universal Pictures on Region 1 and Region 4 DVD, along with the next two in the series, as The Adventures of Francis the Talking Mule Vol. 1. Several years later, Universal released all 7 Francis films as a set on three Region 1 and Region 4 DVDs, Francis The Talking Mule: The Complete Collection.
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References
External links
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