King of Hockey (1936) Poster

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7/10
Goalie Krowns King, Blinding Him Before Big Match
animal_8_511 April 2005
Dave Hodge, host of Hockey Night In Canada introduced King Of Hockey in serialized fashion during intermissions back in the 1970s. Many of we Canadian kids who watched never forgot. Synopsis: A hotshot ice hockey player named Gabby Dugan gets involved with the wrong crowd and his goaltender friend thinks our hero has sold out to the mob.

A scuffle breaks out and the goalie bops our hero over the melon with the modified cricket bat we hockey fans call a "goalstick." Everyone knows that high-scoring forwards and stingy goalies are always at odds and alternately admire and despise one another. This story seems to bank on that conflict.

The final game comes and Gabby has to play. Is he up to the task without vision? Does a team with the audacity to call themselves "The Violets" deserve any chance at the hallowed Stanley Cup?

This movie no doubt inspired many big Hollywood movies in years to come, including probably the 2003 flick, "Daredevil."

It should be distributed on DVD. If not, we may as well all be Gabby Dugans, because we'll probably never see this beauty again. I'll have to join Dave Hodge and toss my pen away in disgust and that wouldn't be pretty.
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5/10
A routine hockey drama that hockey fans might enjoy.
Art-2222 February 2000
I had the feeling that Warner Bros. was trying to showcase some up and coming stars near the start of their careers: both Dick Purcell and Wayne Morris started to get onscreen billing in 1936, and a hockey sports drama was chosen because Purcell was on the Fordham University hockey team and had experience playing the game. His hockey sequences look pretty good, but Morris looked very uncoordinated as the goalie. With the exception of Max Hoffman Jr., who you never see playing very much, the other players were hired from the University of Southern California and Loyola University hockey teams, making the action on the ice look very good indeed. The female leads, lovely Anne Nagel and her cute kid sister, Ann Gilles, were easy to enjoy, and the plot, involving gamblers trying to get Purcell to throw games, was the passable but predictable. Hockey fans will like this film, if only for action.
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6/10
The first hockey movie
Beney11714 March 2023
According to Wikipedia, this is the first hockey movie ever made. Not a bad start for a movie made almost 20 years before the first televised NHL game.

This short film is simple, charming and funny at time. There's definitely some original ideas (I don't think I've ever seen a story about a hockey player going blind), but the love story isn't much different from a ton of other 1930s movies.

The hockey scenes are what made this film truly enjoyable. For a 1936 movie, the on-ice cinematography is extremely surprising. It's fast, dynamic, agressive, and full of action shots. Some of them are exaggerated (especially the wall jumps that you will absolutely never see in a real hockey game), but still entertaining in the same way that the boxing scenes in Rocky are fun to watch. The 1930s arena is also a fun and rare thing to see if you like hockey history.

If you are a hockey fan, I recommend it.
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4/10
Captain America on ice!
planktonrules25 February 2017
Back years, years ago, B-movie actor Dick Purcell played in quite a variety of lower-budgeted pictures for Warner Brothers. He also happened to be the first Captain America. Here in a pre-Captain role, Purcell shows off his skills on the ice, as he stars in a hockey film--something VERY unique since hockey was far from a popular sport back in the day. However, instead of the original six NHL teams (Rangers, Blackhawks, Bruins, Canadians, Maple Leafs and Red Wings), this one features teams from the same cities but with names like 'the Violets'!!

When the film begins, Gabby Dugan (Purcell) is a college hockey star who gains the attention of the New York Violets' manager. Soon, he's playing for the Violets and is a star. But in addition to focusing all his attention on the game, he also spends a lot of his energy focusing on a pretty young lady, Kathleen (Anne Nagel).

Now here is where the plot gets pretty stupid. Dugan manages to convince Kathleen to come to the games and he gets her seats next to the penalty box. Then, he deliberately commits fouls in order to be sent to the box--where he makes time with her. Now his roommate, Jumbo (Wayne Morris) thinks that Dugan is deliberately getting sent to the penalty box because he's taking money from gamblers. What's worse is that he suffers a concussion and it affects his vision...and now his coach thinks he's on the take as well!

As a hockey fan, I enjoyed seeing the film because it showed how insanely rugged the game was back in the day. No Plexiglas to protect the audience, no helmets and, worst of all, no face protection for the goalies! But, as a movie fan, I couldn't help but think the plot was kinda dopey...rather second-rate. After all, it just didn't make sense. Why wouldn't Dugan tell Jumbo and the team that he suffered vision problems as a result of the blow? And, going to the penalty box just so you can make time with your girl?! Huh?! The bottom line is that if you are hockey fan it's worth seeing...otherwise, it's just a cheap B-movie.

NOTE: Apparently Purcell played hockey for Fordham, so this would explain how he was so nimble on those skates!
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4/10
An Oddity
theognis-808216 January 2024
Hollywood had many sad stories, but here is a swift, engaging yarn, starring four attractive, capable actors, who all died at a rather young age, with the two men playing professional athletes: Dick Purcell (38), Wayne Morris (45), Anne Nagel (50), and, as the paradigmatic pretty and dizzy blonde, Marie Wilson (56). It seems that people who entertain others should have a happier fate. The story is not much, but it involves friendship and forgiveness and the proud, self-reliance of the main character. Movies about boxing, baseball, football, running, horse-racing, and track and field are more common, but despite "Slap Shot" (1977), hockey is a rarity.
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5/10
Enjoyed The Olde Tyme Hockey
ArtVandelayImporterExporter15 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Dick Purcell and the rest of the skaters looked like they knew what they were doing out there, so as a sports movie the action looked credible. But holy blip is Wayne Morris ever a horrible goalie, which I hate to even mention since he went on to become one of America's most-decorated war heroes. Love the referee in sweater and tie, too. And the chain-link fencing on top of the boards. I was half-hoping to see King Clancy make a cameo. The approach to on-ice violence is interesting. On one hand Purcell gets penalized for ''checking an opponent into the boards,'' which today would be a love-tap. But shortly thereafter Morris clubs Purcell over the head with the blade of a goalie stick. Never mind vision problems, Purcell would be taking his dirt nap after that bit of business. The gambling plot is under-developed. The love story is unbelievable even for a 30s movie. Heck, the whole thing is under-cooked. Marie Wilson steals the movie as Morris's girlfriend and the movie's comic relief. And Anne Nagel is one sweet dish. If you're a hockey fan watch it for the way the game scenes are shot. Other than that it's pure corn-pone.
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4/10
It's no substitute for the NHL
Mike-7643 July 2005
Gabby Dugan gets a wing position with the Violets, the current Tri State champs, and instantly becomes the star of the league. Gabby's main interest becomes Kathleen O'Rourke, a socialite, who seems to be playing hard to get. Jumbo Mullins (goalie and roommate of Gabby) and Coach Trotter, seem to think that Gabby is sacrificing the team's playoff chances by focusing his attention to Kathleen and their suspicion is further heightened when Jumbo finds a payoff from known gambler Torga for Gabby not to play at his best. When Jumbo confronts Gabby with his accusations, he conks Gabby on the head with his stick, which lands Gabby in the hospital. The injury proves to be more serious than Gabby thinks, since his play goes down drastically which forces Trotter to kick him off the team, with accusations of throwing games, but Gabby soon realizes that the injury will leave him blind. It's a hokey melodrama with nothing really standing out as being special (perhaps the exception is Marie Wilson, giving a preview of her My Friend Irma role). The sound engineering on the film is really sub-par and the script does too neat a job trying to resolve all the points of the story. All in all, it's not that bad a film considering the sports star consorting with gamblers storyline has been done to death many times over. Rating, 4.
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8/10
Great action
morrisonhimself19 March 2004
Great action highlighted by some superb camera work and excellent skating more than make up for a fairly lame script.

The actors were good. Dick Purcell was well cast since he had played hockey in college.

Wayne Morris in this early role was thoroughly charming and boyish.

George E. Stone as the bad guy stood out because of his charm. He obviously couldn't have been really evil, not with that smile.

This could have been a great movie if the story had been allowed to develop, but apparently the bosses ordered it kept to an hour. Too bad.

With this very talented cast and crew, "King of Hockey" could have been a classic.
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