Michael O'Keefe
Young Freddie Frisby(Mickey Rooney)looses his job as a orange sorter at Bob Sears'(William Demerest)packing plant. Trying to impress the boss' daughter, Judy(Terry Moore), Freddie messes up for the last time and is hastily fired. Things begin to look up when he finds he has inherited his uncle's estate. Judy by his side, Freddie realizes he has inherited a box of magic tricks with instructions. So young Mr. Frisby decides to become a magician with Judy as his assistant. Behind Mr. Sears' back, the two love birds try to find a secret location to practice magic tricks and end up kidnapped by hoodlums, planning a payroll robbery.You can at times see the age difference between Rooney and Moore, but it really makes no distraction. The couple work well with each other. Not exactly one of Mickey's better flicks, but interesting enough.Peter Godfrey directs and the cast also features: Charles Arnt, Douglas Fowley, Mike Mazurki and Ned Glass.
John Seal
As absurd as the premise is--orange sorter inherits 'fortune' and attempts to establish a new career as master magician--there's still plenty to enjoy in He's a Cockeyed Wonder. Mickey Rooney is as fun and lively as ever as hapless fruit worker Freddie Frisby, whilst Terry Moore is delightful and attractive as gal pal Judy Sears. Then there's the always reliable, always grouchy William Demarest as Judy's father Bob (who also happens to be Freddie's boss), as well as Mike Mazurki in his usual role as a none too bright heavy. Surprisingly well shot by Andy Hardy veteran Lester White, this briskly paced Columbia second feature is perfect entertainment on a cold winter's night.
mark.waltz
Milquetoast Mickey Rooney plays a sorter at an orange packing factory who can do no well in foreman William Demarest's eyes, but has caught the affections of Demarest's lovely daughter, Terry Moore. Like all of the ladies who found Jerry Lewis's bumbling characters adorable, Rooney brings out Moore's motherly instincts which just drives Demarest nuts. Then, Rooney inherits his late uncle's estate, which basically consists of a small amount of cash and his magic act. Prectictably, bad guys arrive in town in the guise of bank robbers, and it is Rooney who saves the day.While predictable and not too intelligent, the film has some fine farcial moments typical of the comedies that Columbia was doing at this time, most notably the handful of Lucille Ball movies ("The Fuller Brush Girl" and "Her Husband's Affairs"), to name a few, and "The Fuller Brush Man" and "The Good Humor Man". Obviously made cheaply, "He's a Cockeyed Wonder" is merely OK with some funny moments involving the magic tricks, but lacks the farcial elements of several of the earlier movies I mentioned.Rooney, on a career dive after leaving MGM with flops like "Summer Holiday" (and a critically lambasted performance as Lorenz Hart in "Words and Music"), gets to be more low key and less Andy Hardy-like than normal, and that's a good thing. He's more like the characters that Buster Keaton and occasionally Joe E. Brown got to play. Terry Moore is lovely, and Demarest is appropriately crabby. The villains are typically dumb. Rather than utilize the magic to confuse the robbers into submission, the writers utilize an old farm with skunks, barns and a well. This results in an ending missing what was expected and is a major let down.
sandlot3
Fans of Mickey Rooney will enjoy this movie although its not one of his best. He appears a bit older than his girlfriend (the beautiful Terry Moore, 10 years his junior), but at times you don't notice it. He plays an orange tester who inherits his uncle's magic act (and Jimmy the Crow) and accidentally stumbles across a payroll robbery. There are some comical moments, especially when he is trying to learn the act as well as his interactions with Jimmy. But the picture is mostly to show off Moore in one of her first starring roles. Rooney's career unfortunately was going the other way. Luckily for his fans, the resilient Rooney never gave up and rebounded several years later.