The Fireball (1950) Poster

(1950)

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3/10
Missed the point of my father's struggle
jerod2317 May 2007
'm one of the sons of the man on whose life this movie is based. Here are a few points that were different in the picture: My father skated under the name Eddie Cazar. One of his teammates was Johnny Cazar. If this movie is a hybrid of the two Cazars' lives, someone will have to fill in the details on Johnny.

My father was not an orphan. His Irish Catholic mother did leave him in order to take up with a French-Canadian Jewish gangster. Thus Eddie was left in the benignly neglectful care of my backwoods paternal grandfather. Either it was easier just to orphan him in the Hollywood version or being an orphan was part of Johnny's story.

My father was close to six feet tall, from the pictures I've seen I recall Johnny Cazar as being kind of tall himself. Mickey Rooney: not tall. Granted Mr. Rooney could do many of his own skating stunts, so maybe that's why he got the part.

The extent of the polio was seriously downplayed, which is the entire freaking point of the movie! Polio was a big deal back then, and they really gloss over it. It really belittles my father's struggle and accomplishment. You get a montage of treatments, including brief scenes of Mickey Rooney in an iron lung, and that's about it. No massive weight loss, no being rendered mute and having his vocal cords removed, no long time spent in that iron lung; just a little paralysis, no big whoop. It was just like a bad 'flu or something. They should have treated it more like the war injuries were in "The Best Years of Our Lives." Maybe that would have been too expensive or something. Of course it makes his comeback for one final season of skating all the less spectacular. In a way my father was the Earvin Johnson of the era, having the illness everyone feared the most, yet managing to fight back and still participate in a hugely popular sport.

The treatment of his rise from street skater to rollerderby star is close enough for a '50s era family movie. I.e. not enough sex and no drugs. That's true for both Cazars.

Real life is a lot more complex than reel life. His fall a lot harder, his climb up a lot harder, his triumph a lot more amazing, but it took a hell of a lot longer for redemption.

So do check out this movie, it is a glimpse into a nearly forgotten popular culture and plague. Even if it is a watered down look into one man's life or two men's conflated lives.
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Quite Enjoyable Little Film
claudiacasswell18 July 2002
If you are willing to suspend disbelief for 84 minutes and accept that someone who has never skated can become a roller derby champion in a matter of weeks or months, then you just might enjoy this movie. I watched it only to see Marilyn Monroe in one of her earliest roles and wound up actually liking the movie. Pat O'Brien gives a solid performance in a familiar role as Father O'Hara and it is difficult not to fall in love with Beverly Tyler as Mickey Rooney's loyal, suffering girlfriend. And while Miss Monroe's role is a very minor one with only a few lines, her presence in this film, by definition, makes it a classic.
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4/10
Roller Skate Rag, Rooney style.
mark.waltz17 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This fast moving B picture is loosely based on real life roller derby stars but has shrunk the main subject a good foot. Rooney is energetic as always bit he's not as frenetic as Andy Hardy or any of those eager kids trying to put on a show with Judy Garland. He's a starving orphan who ends up on wheels and enters a roller derby contest, becoming a star. Beverly Tyler is the instructor who encourages him rather than Glenn Corbett whom he started with and pushed him out on the floor just to Jr a bully. Pat O'Brien, the priest at the orphanage, encourages Rooney, but fate intervenes after he finds success with a bout of polio.

This is the stuff that B movies are made of, trends that have a limited audience and in this case, violent and often short lived in appeal. Rooney starts off quiet and humble but after he's seen on TV harassing Corbett, he all of a sudden becomes smug and unlikeable. His antics eventually become truly unfunny and he is hard to tolerate even after he gets sick.

This is only memorable for a look back at a forgotten sport and an early contract role for Marilyn Monroe at 20th, as the date of Rooney's friend, James Brown. She's completely inconsequential to the plot. Tyler is an acceptable leading lady and O'Brien is overly noble as the voice of reason that can't even get through to Rooney. The Mick was on a downward spiral at this time, and it didn't help that a lot of the B leads he was in had him in unsympathetic parts. Had the lead casting been a bit more realistic, this could have been a bit better, but director Tay Garnett really should have worked on toning down the star he got stuck with.
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4/10
Mickey On Wheels
bkoganbing12 February 2008
One of the early attractions of television was the Roller Derby, I well remember it though I certainly can't say I was any fan. And I doubt anyone became a fan after watching this average Mickey Rooney film.

It took a while apparently for Mickey Rooney to finally get cast in adult roles. Producers were still seeing him as either good kid Andy Hardy or that punk from Boys Town, Whitey Marsh. Fireball has Mickey running away from an orphanage where Father Pat O'Brien is having a devil of a time trying to reach this angry young man. Maybe Spencer Tracy had a better touch.

Anyway he finds a pair of roller-skates, a job washing dishes with Ralph Dumke, and pretty soon he's found his way to the skating rink where he finally shows a natural aptitude for speed skating under the tutelage of champion Beverly Tyler. That fact doesn't sit well with her skating partner Glenn Corbett.

Mickey attracts the attention of the television audience just now discovering roller derby when the TV cameras pan to him, heckling the living fecal matter out of Glenn Corbett. Seeing Mickey doing that reminded me of someone I knew way back in the day who used to get free baseball tickets and I went to games with him. The price was listening to this short obnoxious individual heckling the opposition ballplayers the way Rooney was doing to Corbett. Like Mickey in the movie, this individual had issues, many kinds of issues.

Of course he does become a roller derby champion, but faces a couple of crises, personal and professional which I won't go into.

Fireball was made on the cheap to take advantage of the current discovery of the roller derby. Pat O'Brien is the usual wise Catholic prelate, nothing new here since Angels With Dirty Faces. And Rooney is 30, looking 30 playing a teen.

Fireball did give me that unwanted trip down memory lane, not to early television and the roller derby, but to Yankee Stadium trying to pretend I did not know the obnoxious individual sitting next to me.
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10/10
The "MICK" Vintage '50s Fair
bux14 March 2007
After the war, and the demise of the ANDY HARDY series, Rooney seemed to be trying to find his niche in Hollywoodland.

From around 1949 to 1956, Rooney made some of the very best film noir ever put on celluloid: THE BIG WHEEL, MY OUTLAW BROTHER, QUICKSAND, and the classic DRIVE A CROOKED ROAD. THE FIREBALL is a another mini-classic.

Yes, it's the typical sports story-young man struggles to the top, becomes a dickweed, then after life-altering crisis becomes a "real hero." But it is how the Mick plays it here that makes this one great viewing.

It also doesn't hurt to be able to catch a glimpse of MM now and again-and also a pre-RIN TIN TIN Jim Brown.

Throw in Pat O'Brien as a priest and you gotta classic!!!
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Young Marilyn was a fireball
jarrodmcdonald-117 September 2014
A lot has been written about Marilyn Monroe. And a lot of people pride themselves on knowing all things Marilyn. But my guess is that most folks have not seen some of her early film work.

For instance, she has a bit part in DANGEROUS YEARS (1948) the lead in Phil Karlson's LADIES OF THE CHORUS, a low-budget film for Columbia from 1949 and she has a tiny role in the Marx Brothers' LOVE HAPPY (1950). Die-hard enthusiasts will gladly recommend her in all of these.

Though she began her ascendancy at 20th Century Fox in 1950, she did not have her first starring role until 1952′s DON'T BOTHER TO KNOCK. For two years, she was put in a series of Fox programmers, playing supporting parts. These second-tier jobs are interesting to watch, because you can see how she has to serve out her apprenticeship under actresses like Bette Davis, Claudette Colbert and Ginger Rogers.

Once she was even loaned out was to RKO for CLASH BY NIGHT, where we find her understudying another major star (Barbara Stanwyck). As always, even in a minor role, she still makes an indelible impression.

All of Marilyn's films, including the early titles, have been released on home video by Fox. That is, except for one she made with Mickey Rooney and Pat O'Brien in 1950 called THE FIREBALL. The copyright for this film was taken over by Warner Brothers, and for years it languished in the vaults. But not long ago, it was released through the Warner Archive, and though we have it now without benefit of special features or the kind of restoration one would like, at least it is commercially available.

The picture was a starring vehicle for Rooney, who plays a daredevil skater that risks his life to impress the right people. And although she's eighth billed here, it is clear who the real fireball is.
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8/10
Nostalgic Ride with Mickey and Marilyn
PamelaShort23 August 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This is a very fun and nostalgic film with Mickey Rooney doing his best with a familiar storyline. Rooney once again plays a rebellious teenager, Johnny, who lives in an orphanage run by Father O'Hara ( Pat O'Brien ). Johnny runs away from the home and ends up stealing a pair of roller skates. A series of events has Johnny meeting Mary Reeves (Beverly Tyler ) a champion roller skater in the Roller Derby and she encourages Johnny to participate in the races. This eventually leads him to fame and fortune as a popular roller derby star. However as his star rises, so does his pomposity. Tragedy strikes when he contracts polio and it is Father O'Hara who supports and encourages him through the illness. With Mary and Father O'Hara to cheer him on, he over comes his fears and is reinstated on the team. Soon his old cockiness comes back, but to Father O'Hara's delight, Johnny helps a young skater succeed, showing him the same kindness he had received throughout his illness, thus learning the valuable lesson the Father had tried to teach him all along. The story moves at a good pace and is helped by actors Milburn Stone, James Brown and a very stunning, young Marilyn Monroe. Although her role is small, she leaves a lasting impression. Some also may be interested in seeing some of the on location scenes shot around parts of Los Angeles. Watching The Fireball is a very enjoyable ride into a past era with some classic stars of the day.
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Living up to Memories.
redryan6427 May 2002
Movies are often thought to be good or palatable in the time that they are new, when they are viewed in the particular era in which they are produced. The Audience and the picture are 'in synch' with other. Their further acceptance depends on their content, casting, story line, etc.

The passing of time is also a major player in the legacy of any production. The difference in our attitudes and mores can make a great difference in a film's 'reputation'. This is the basis for some very serious works of a former era become today's 'Camp'.

The age of the individual viewer and the time elapsed are also active agents in a movie's rating. The memory, of course, can enhance and expand the scope and impact of a story, making the version in one's head far different than the on screen product.The Fireball (1950) doesn't seem to fall into any of these traps (at least for this writer).

I remember viewing this at a relative's house in the early 50's. It was the nightly movie, the feature that so many TV Stations ran in the slot following the nightly news cast. We gathered around the small b&w screen,interrupted for commercial breaks, and followed the drama of an orphaned Mickey Rooney rise,fall and rise again as a Roller Derby Star. Oh, the Roller Derby!It was a very popular item at then. It seemed to be a great picture (to an 8 year old) at the time.

Now, years later, viewable on VHS, with no interruptions, The Fireball is once again around to be seen by all. It,of course, now can be seen as chronicling the spirit of the Post World War II America and a simpler, slower, quieter time. But in its own way, it has held up quite well. It may even be seen in a little better light today, because it seems to be a sincere, straight forward story.

And, we must not forget a very good cast. Mickey Rooney had fallen a little in his Box Office ratings, and turns in a very good performance, including some very amusing skating sequences. Add Pat O'Brien as (what else?) a Priest at the Orphanage,James Brown, Milburn Stone and a young Marilyn Monroe and you've got a solid 'little' film, one that many, who may be unfamiliar with it, will find to be surprisingly enjoyable.
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Mickey Rooney Is Terrific
drednm30 October 2020
This is a terrific ultra low-budget film that hits its marks and offers a few surprises. Mickey Rooney stars as an orphanage kid no one wanted. He's past school age (Rooney's 30ish here) but the priest who runs the joint (Pat O'Brien) can't get him motivated to learn a skill. After a big fight, Rooney runs away ... much to O'Brien's delight. Now he'll have to learn a skill. Faced with harsh reality he steals a pair of roller skates and tries to hawk them and eventually lands a job as a dishwasher in a dive. But those skates. He goes to the local rink for lessons and his world changes. He finally finds a passion and becomes a roller derby star until tragedy hits and he learns a thing or two about fame, humility, and life. Fascinating film with Rooney doing much of his own skating. Beverly Tyler is the girl, Ralph Dumke is the dive owner, Milburn Stone is the rink owner. And Marilyn Monroe shows up and gets a few lines as a fan. She even gets a couple scenes with Rooney. I remember roller derby from 1950s TV. It made no sense to me then or now.
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