Up in Central Park (1948)

★ 6.3 1h 24m IMDb

A newspaper reporter and the daughter of an immigrant maintenance man help expose political corruption in New York City.

Up in Central Park

Where to Watch

Streaming Services

Netflix
Netflix Plans from $6.99/mo. Stream thousands of movies and TV series on demand. No ads on Standard and Premium plans. Download for offline viewing.
View
Amazon Prime Video
Amazon Prime Video Included with Amazon Prime ($14.99/mo). Access thousands of movies and shows. Option to rent or buy titles not in Prime catalog.
View
Amazon Prime Video
Amazon Prime Video Included with Amazon Prime ($14.99/mo). Access thousands of movies and shows. Option to rent or buy titles not in Prime catalog.
View
Disney Plus
Disney Plus Starting at $7.99/mo. Home to Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars and National Geographic. Family-friendly content with downloads available.
View
HBO Max
HBO Max Plans from $9.99/mo with ads, $15.99/mo ad-free. HBO original series, blockbuster movies, and Max exclusives.
View
Max
Max Plans from $9.99/mo with ads, $15.99/mo ad-free. Formerly HBO Max. HBO originals, Warner Bros. movies, and exclusive content.
View
Hulu
Hulu Plans from $7.99/mo with ads, $17.99/mo ad-free. Next-day TV shows, Hulu originals, movies. Live TV add-on available ($76.99/mo).
View
Paramount Plus
Paramount Plus Plans from $5.99/mo with ads. CBS shows, Paramount movies, Champions League soccer, NFL games on select plans.
View
Apple TV Plus
Apple TV Plus $9.99/mo after 7-day free trial. Award-winning Apple original films and series. Available on all Apple devices and smart TVs.
View
Peacock
Peacock Free tier available. Premium from $7.99/mo. NBC shows, Universal movies, live sports including Premier League and NFL.
View
Showtime
Showtime $10.99/mo standalone or as add-on. Premium original series like Dexter, Billions, and championship boxing.
View
Starz
Starz $9.99/mo or as add-on through other services. Premium movies, original series, and early theatrical releases.
View
Paramount+ with Showtime
Paramount+ with Showtime $11.99/mo. Combined access to Paramount+ and Showtime content. Movies, series, live sports, and premium originals.
View
MUBI
MUBI $12.99/mo. Hand-picked art house and independent cinema. One new film added daily, curated by film experts worldwide.
View
Criterion Channel
Criterion Channel $10.99/mo. Classic, art house, and world cinema. Curated collections, filmmaker spotlights, and rare films.
View
YouTube Premium
YouTube Premium $13.99/mo. Ad-free YouTube, YouTube Music, and original series. Background play and offline downloads.
View
MGM Plus
MGM Plus Subscription streaming service
View
BritBox
BritBox $8.99/mo. The largest collection of British TV. BBC and ITV shows, mysteries, dramas, comedies, and documentaries.
View

We're checking 300+ streaming services for this title. Check back soon.

Audience Reviews

CinemaSerf 6/10 Jun 05, 2023
Despite not featuring in the top billing, this film really belongs to the honest emigrant Irishman "Moore" (Albert Sharpe). Straight off the boat with his feisty daughter "Rosie" (Deanna Durbin) he bumps into a welcoming committee that lets him know how he can take part in the democratic process (for a new mayor) and make a few bucks at the same time. He excels at his task and by a quirk of fate finds himself superintendent of Central Park - on a wapping great $3,000k per year! He is hands on, so likes to feed the animals - an activity that is clearly prohibited and attracts the attention of journalist "Matthews" (Dick Haymes). Realising the man's job and the purpose of the feeding - geese, grouse, duck all destined for the table of kingpin "Tweed" (Vincent Price), he writes a column, gets "Moore" fired and rouses the wrath of "Rosie" who intercedes for her father and also manages to attract the attention of "Tweed" too. It's quite a fun tale of corrupt local politics, naivety and integrity this, with Sharpe delivering well and Durbin doing the lively characterisation that she always did engagingly, too. Price makes for a reasonable sophisticate-cum-power-broker and Hobart Cavanaugh also chips in nicely as the hapless Mayor just doing what he is told. The ending is all a bit rushed, the story is really quite incomplete on a number of fronts and the musical numbers don't do a great deal for maintaining the pace, but it has a certain plausibility to it. It's quite possible this is what New York might have been like at the start.

Similar Movies