You're Never Too Young

  • Dean Martin: Bob Miles
  • Jerry Lewis: Wilbur Hoolick
  • Diana Lynn: Nancy Collins
  • Nina Foch: Gretchen Brendan
  • Raymond Burr: Noonan
  • Mitzi McCall: Skeets Powell
  • Veda Ann Borg: Mrs. Noonan
  • Margery Maude: Mrs. Ella Brennan
  • Romo Vincent: Ticket Seller
  • Nancy Kulp: Marty's mother
  • Milton Frome: Lieutenant O'Malley

You're never too young, Alternative title: The Gangster fright, is an American comedy film from the year 1955.

Action

In Los Angeles, the thief Noonan steals a precious diamond. Meanwhile, hairdresser apprentice Wilbur Hoolick is cut down by his boss, because he can not. When he tried on a private school teacher Bob Miles and this almost hurt, he likes it and wants to return to his home in Washington. Noonan, who hid the diamond in Wilbur's jacket, it follows. Because the ticket he can not otherwise afford to Wilbur dressed as a schoolboy and continues with children ticket. The fraud on flies and Wilbur hiding from Noonan and the conductor of Nancy Collins, the lover of Bob. The cares about the supposedly sick young.

Despite its size and deep voice Wilbur is not noticeable and follows Nancy in Mrs. Brennan's private school for girls, which is located in Oregon. The girls are impressed by the presence of a young boy and force him to stay at least until the Spring Festival. Only Bob Wilbur is on the ropes and want to get rid of him because he thinks he wants to ranmachen to Nancy. Noonan tries during which several times in vain to come to the school grounds, as he has Wilbur's game also sees through. After the Spring Festival, in which Wilbur has misdirigiert the choir, to Noonan returns as Wilbur's father who wants to pick him up. Wilbur goes Noonan in the case, but is saved by Bob and the police.

In the final scene, Bob, who was called up as a reservist wants a shave when Zugfriseur and lands again at Wilbur on the chair.

Production

The Gangster Nightmare was filmed from October to December 1954. The film was released in the U.S. cinemas on 25 August 1955.

The gangster horror based on a play Connie Goes Home by Fanny Kilbourne and Edward Childs Carpenter. This was filmed in 1942 under the title The Major and the Minor.

Criticism

The filmdienst called The Gangster fright "very silly scale [n ] film, but in which the clown Lewis can show some of his showpiece. "

Cinema wrote: "The droll tracking Gaudi is a remake of Billy Wilder's The Major and the Minor (42). Conclusion: clowning with some Lewis cabinet pieces. "

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