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Pot o' Gold
Overlook Pick

Pot o' Gold

It's the prize romantic laugh of the year... more fun than winning the POT O' GOLD!
57
User Score25 ratings
TMDB 5.716+19411h 26mEnglish
ComedyMusicRomance

Synopsis

Jimmy, the owner of a failed music shop, goes to work with his uncle, the owner of a food factory. Before he gets there, he befriends an Irish family who happens to be his uncle's worst enemy because of their love for music and in-house band who constantly practices. Soon, Jimmy finds himself trying to help the band by getting them gigs and trying to reconcile the family with his uncle.

Director
George MarshallFrom TMDB credits
Studio
James Roosevelt Productions2 production companies
Release
April 3, 1941Released
Box Office
Budget $600,000

Top Cast

8 of 69
James Stewart
James Stewart
James Hamilton 'Jimmy' Haskell
Paulette Goddard
Paulette Goddard
Molly McCorkle
Horace Heidt
Horace Heidt
Horace Heidt
Charles Winninger
Charles Winninger
Charles 'C.J.' Haskell
Mary Gordon
Mary Gordon
Mom McCorkle
Frank Melton
Frank Melton
Jasper Backus
Jed Prouty
Jed Prouty
J.K. Louderman
Charles Arnt
Charles Arnt
Parks (butler)

Trailers & Photos

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Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Jun 25, 2022

There's loads going on in this musical caper with Jimmy Stewart as "Jimmy", a failed music shop owner who ends up working for his uncle "C.J" (Charles Winninger) who has a hate-hate relationship with the extended - and noisy - "McCorkle" family who live next door, and who are constantly practising their music - to the delight of the local community but to the chagrin of the old man. Stewart befriends the family, particularly the daughter "Molly" (Paulette Goddard) and is soon working to help them get gigs without his uncle knowing. When he has an opportunity to take over their one hour radio show, he gives them a chance to perform and events spiral out of control for all concerned. I'm not sure I'd want to be invited to a "McCorkle" supper, though - the musical preamble to their Irish stew must have rendered the dish stone cold by the time they actually started to eat it - and that summed up the whole effort, really: it's quite an engaging concept but without much pace, too many over-long set-piece musical routines, and at times it borders on the farcical. Stewart and Goddard have little, if any, chemistry between them and maybe it's only the redoubtable Mary Gordon "Ma McCorkle" who brings a bit of sparkle.

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