Gentleman Jim (1942) | |
Director(s) | Raoul Walsh |
Producer(s) | Robert Buckner |
Top Genres | Biographical, Drama, Film Adaptation, Romance, Sports |
Top Topics | Book-Based, Boxing, True Story (based on) |
Featured Cast:
Gentleman Jim Overview:
Gentleman Jim (1942) was a Sports - Biographical Film directed by Raoul Walsh and produced by Robert Buckner.
BlogHub Articles:
Gentleman Jim (1942): Biopic by Marquess of Queensberry Rules
By 4 Star Film Fan on Sep 16, 2019 From 4 Star FilmsBoxing movies and biopics are a mainstay of Hollywood. It’s an established fact so naming names is all but unnecessary.?The affable brilliance of Gentleman Jim is its agile footwork allowing it to sidestep a myriad of tropes attached to biopics and the schmaltz that Old Hollywood was always ca... Read full article
Fridays With Errol Flynn: Gentleman Jim (1942)
on Mar 18, 2016 From Journeys in Classic FilmAfter watching Errol Flynn corral the Old West in Dodge City (1939) and sail the seven seas as The Sea Hawk (1940s) it’s simultaneously refreshing and bizarre watching him play an average bank teller turned pugilist in Gentleman Jim. Unlike other boxing movies where the rise to the top and the... Read full article
Fridays With Errol Flynn: Gentleman Jim (1942)
on Mar 18, 2016 From Journeys in Classic FilmAfter watching Errol Flynn corral the Old West in Dodge City (1939) and sail the seven seas as The Sea Hawk (1940s) it’s simultaneously refreshing and bizarre watching him play an average bank teller turned pugilist in Gentleman Jim. Unlike other boxing movies where the rise to the top and the... Read full article
Gentleman Jim (1942) and Opportunities
By Google profile on Nov 28, 2010 From Out of the Past - A Classic Film BlogAbout MeBlogger, Out of the Past - A Classic Film Blog and more. Please add my Google profile to your circles. Merriam-Webster provides the following two definitions for the word "opportunity": a favorable juncture of circumstances a good chance for advancement or progress We talk about opportun... Read full article
What I learned from Gentleman Jim (1942)
By Raquel Stecher on Nov 30, -0001 From Out of the Past - A Classic Film BlogErrol Flynn as James "Gentleman Jim" Corbett Sometimes it takes a certain message delivered at just the right time to make a big impact. Gentleman Jim (1942) changed my life. And it really shouldn't have happened with this film. If you know me, you know that I avoid historical biopics like the pl... Read full article
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Quotes from
James J. Corbett aka Gentleman Jim: Yeah. I can see him now walking back to his room, alone, lying there all night and thinking, 'What's the use of ever getting up again?' John L! He'll never thump another bar and shout, 'I can lick any man in the world.' He must be lost.
James J. Corbett aka Gentleman Jim: The first time I saw you fight I was just a bit of a kid. There wasn't a man alive who could have stood up to you then. And tonight, well, I was just mighty glad that you weren't the John L. Sullivan of ten years ago.
John L. Sullivan: Is that what you're thinkin' now?
James J. Corbett aka Gentleman Jim: That's what I was thinking before I got into the ring with you.
John L. Sullivan: That's a fine decent thing for you to say, Jim. I don't knopw how we might have come out, oh, say, eight or ten tears ago. I... maybe I was faster then, but if I was, tonight you're the fastest thing on two feet
[repeated line]
Walter Lowrie: The Corbetts are at it again! The Corbetts are at it again!
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Facts about
The 2/14/44 Screen Guild radio broadcast of "Gentleman Jim" reunited Flynn, Smith, and Bond, but Grant Withers replaced Jack Carson as Walter Lowrie.
During the filming of Gentleman Jim, Errol Flynn suffered a mild heart attack. His weak heart kept him from serving in the Armed Forces during World War II.
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