poster

Little Old New York (1940)

4 | Feb 09, 1940 (US) | Romance, Comedy, Drama, History | 01:40

A spirited belle of the brawling waterfront, fighting for the heart of handsome Robert Fulton

Inventor Robert Fulton receives support from a tavern owner and a shipyard worker to help realize his dream of a high-powered steamboat.

Featured Crew

Director
Producer
Original Music Composer
Director of Photography
Art Direction
Set Decoration
Screenplay
Theatre Play

Cast

profile
Alice Faye
Pat O'Day
profile
Richard Greene
Robert Fulton
profile
Fred MacMurray
Charles Brownne
profile
Brenda Joyce
Harriet Livingston
profile
Andy Devine
"Commodore"
profile
Henry Stephenson
Robert R. Livingston
profile
Fritz Feld
Tavern Keeper
profile
Ward Bond
Regan
profile
Clarence Wilson
Willie Stout
profile
Robert Middlemass
Nicholas Roosevelt

Reviews

avatar
CinemaSerf
6 | Jun 23, 2022
Richard Greene is engineering pioneer "Robert Fulton", a man with a vision for building a steamboat that can work the interior river network of the USA quickly, and efficiently, distributing goods from the seaports to the towns and cities. Unfortunately, his first effort in Paris led to a an explosive conclusion, so getting backing for this new venture is proving difficult, especially when his fellow sailors think this might be a threat to their own existence and his latest prototype gets torched. The story is entertaining, Fred MacMurray and Alice Faye work well with Ward Bond, Henry Stephenson and an on-form Andy Devine to create an enjoyably flowing narrative of toing and froing as friends become foes become friends again, President Jefferson applies trade embargoes - oh, and yes - of course there is a little romance bubbling away too. It's got just about enough action both on and off the water, the dialogue is a bit on the wordy side, but quite witty at times and the last fifteen minutes are really quite funny. Worth a watch.