
George (George Wallace) leaps into song in the courtyard of Mrs McAllister’s dog kennel (and boarding house). Jean McAllister (Lois Green) whips off her skirt to join him, dancing in hotpants. Henry (John Dobbie) and a large cast of passers-by contribute to the high jinks, along with an array of canine friends – one of which appears to have the power of speech. Summary by Paul Byrnes.
Ken Hall pulled out all the stops in this number – the most elaborately staged musical comedy sequence in any Cinesound film. There is very little onscreen music in the early Cinesound films, partly because it was difficult to record live music at Cinesound’s cramped Bondi Junction studios. That changed after The Broken Melody, at the beginning of 1938, in which Hall succeeded in squeezing 50 members of the Sydney Symphony and a couple of choirs into the studio.
Teaming up with George Wallace also appears to have stimulated Hall’s desire for more music, because Wallace was an entertaining singer. This sequence builds up considerable energy and comedy as it goes, in the manner of an MGM musical. Hall could never match the resources that Hollywood musicals had, but he does a brilliant job in this sequence at escalating the sense of fun and musical invention. Lois Green appears to be having a ball in her hotpants, and Wallace shows how light he was on his feet. Audiences usually went to live theatres to see this kind of show in the 1930s. Ken Hall appears in this routine to have been heading towards making a full-scale musical, but he never got there. Gone to the Dogs was released in Sydney in August 1939 – just before war broke out in Europe.
While working as a zookeeper, George (George Wallace) accidentally invents a tonic that makes dogs run faster. He and his mate Henry (John Dobbie) are sacked for impersonating a gorilla, so they try the tonic on their landlady’s greyhound Black Beauty, an aspiring champion. It works, but George can’t remember what’s in it, so his friend Jimmy (John Fleeting), a veterinarian, has to work it out.
With a major race approaching, arch villain Gustav Sunderman (Lou Vernon) and his henchmen plan to steal Black Beauty and put another black dog in his place. George witnesses the substitution, so he and Henry and their dog Aloysius follow the gang to their hideout, in a house that’s reputed to be haunted. After many scrapes and scares, they escape, pursued by henchmen. They commandeer a plane to fly them to the dog track, where they unmask the substitution. The real Black Beauty romps home and George and Henry are heroes.
Gone to the Dogs is the second of two comedies that George Wallace made with Cinesound, after Let George Do It (1938). It’s a more ambitious production, although the results are patchy. Wallace was an accomplished singer and songwriter, as well as a dancer and comedian, so this film offers a major musical song and dance interlude that features dogs, children, dancing girls and backing singers on bicycles! The humour is more slapstick, the plot more perfunctory and far-fetched.
Ken Hall was in the habit of building a story from back to front. He often came up with a finale first, then built a plot to get to it. In this one it’s a dog race, a subject that was relatively novel, because greyhound racing had only become regulated in New South Wales in 1932. Going to 'the dogs’ was a popular pastime, even a craze, by the late 1930s – hence the words in George Wallace’s song. There’s a strong resemblance between this finale and that of a film made in 1927, The Kid Stakes. That film features a children’s goat race, but the kids get to the track in the same manner as George and Henry – they commandeer an aeroplane. There is no question that Hall would have known of the earlier film, but so would many members of the audience. Hall tended to borrow freely from films he liked, although rarely was it as obvious.
The robbers’ hide-out in a haunted house is a direct 'borrow’ from Buster Keaton’s 1921 short comedy The Haunted House. The big musical production number is certainly heavily derived from the style of Hollywood musicals of the 1930s, albeit with fewer resources. Lois Green, the blonde actress who whips off her skirt, was a star of musical comedy for JC Williamson’s theatrical company. This appears to have been her only film.
Notes by Paul Byrnes
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.