Hydraulic Mining versus Sacramento Valley Farming.Hydraulic Mining versus Sacramento Valley Farming.Hydraulic Mining versus Sacramento Valley Farming.
George 'Gabby' Hayes
- Enoch
- (as George Hayes)
Granville Bates
- Nixon
- (scenes deleted)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn an early scene in which Jared Whitney (George Brent) signs a hotel register, the close-up of the register page shows that the names immediately above Whitney's are "Mr. & Mrs. Donald Siegel, Sonora Cal". Don Siegel, later to gain fame as director of Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) and Dirty Harry (1971), and for mentoring a budding director named Clint Eastwood, was in charge of the second unit that made such insert shots for Warner Brothers movies in the late 1930s.
- GoofsAfter the office meeting with the mining syndicate in San Francisco, Whitney hands a letter to a secretary, addressed to Serena. The writing on the envelope is clearly different from the initial shot to the close-up.
- ConnectionsEdited into Out Where the Stars Begin (1938)
- SoundtracksI Gotta Get Back to My Gal
(1937) (uncredited)
Music by M.K. Jerome
Lyrics by Jack Scholl
Sung a cappella by George 'Gabby' Hayes as "I'll Never Be Fooled By a Gal"
Featured review
Jared Whitney (George Brent) is the manager of a hydraulic gold mine in 1880 California, but his position is complicated when he falls in love with Serena Ferris (Olivia De Havilland), the daughter of landowner Colonel Ferris Nclaude Rains), who is opposed to the mine.
Gold Is Where You Find It is only notable because it's and early Technicolor film and it's the only film I've seen where George Brent got top billing! Brent acquits himself well in the lead, but one thinks Errol Flynn may have been better suited to the part.
The Technicolor scenery is lovely, as is Olivia De Havilland. Claude Rains and Margaret Lindsay are wasted in supporting roles, while Michael Curtiz directs very well. Barton MacLane gets a good part as the treacherous mine foreman, and there's a spectacular flood sequence at the finale.
Coming in at a brisk 94 minutes, it's looks as though big chunks were cut out of the film, as Marcia Ralston is prominently billed in the cast but is seen very little in the film. Overall, good fun.
Gold Is Where You Find It is only notable because it's and early Technicolor film and it's the only film I've seen where George Brent got top billing! Brent acquits himself well in the lead, but one thinks Errol Flynn may have been better suited to the part.
The Technicolor scenery is lovely, as is Olivia De Havilland. Claude Rains and Margaret Lindsay are wasted in supporting roles, while Michael Curtiz directs very well. Barton MacLane gets a good part as the treacherous mine foreman, and there's a spectacular flood sequence at the finale.
Coming in at a brisk 94 minutes, it's looks as though big chunks were cut out of the film, as Marcia Ralston is prominently billed in the cast but is seen very little in the film. Overall, good fun.
- guswhovian
- Aug 24, 2020
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 34 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Gold Is Where You Find It (1938) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer