The Delicate Delinquent | |
---|---|
Directed by | Don McGuire |
Produced by | Jerry Lewis |
Written by |
Don McGuire Jerry Lewis (uncredited) |
Starring |
Jerry Lewis Darren McGavin Martha Hyer |
Music by | Buddy Bregman |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date
|
|
Running time
|
101 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $3.4 million (US) 803,522 admissions (France) |
The Delicate Delinquent is a 1957 American comedy film starring Jerry Lewis. Shot in black-and-white and VistaVision in 1956 and released on June 6, 1957 by Paramount Pictures, it is notable as the first film Lewis made without his longtime partner Dean Martin.
Sidney L. Pythias (Jerry Lewis), a janitor, is mistaken for a gang member and arrested along with three so-called "juvenile delinquents," Artie, Monk, and Harry.
Police officer Mike Damon (Darren McGavin) believes he can help a wayward youth just as a cop once did for him. He is given a month by Captain Riley (Horace McMahon) to set a boy right, provided he allow socialite and civic do-gooder Martha Henshaw (Martha Hyer) assist him in the effort.
Sidney's secret ambition is to be a policeman. He also wants to impress Patricia, a student nurse who lives in his building, by making something of himself. Mike and Martha bicker while working with Sidney, who is permitted to attend the police academy, over the objections of his "friends" Artie, Monk and Harry.
Artie is accidentally shot by a gun in Sidney's possession, endangering his future with the police force, but it turns out Monk is responsible. Cleared of all blame, Sidney becomes a cop, determined to set a good example for youths like himself, while Mike and Martha fall in love.
The cost of the film was a little under $500,000, and it grossed about $6 million.
It was re-released in 1962 on a double bill with another Lewis film, The Sad Sack (1957).
The DVD was released on October 12, 2004.