Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe Phantom Robber gets a fortune in jewels and some valuable papers from a robbery on the crack train "The Midnight Limited" and Val Lennon and his pretty assistant, Joan Marshall, are on h... Alles lesenThe Phantom Robber gets a fortune in jewels and some valuable papers from a robbery on the crack train "The Midnight Limited" and Val Lennon and his pretty assistant, Joan Marshall, are on his trail. But the Phantom strikes three more times and adds murder to his list. Val decide... Alles lesenThe Phantom Robber gets a fortune in jewels and some valuable papers from a robbery on the crack train "The Midnight Limited" and Val Lennon and his pretty assistant, Joan Marshall, are on his trail. But the Phantom strikes three more times and adds murder to his list. Val decides to use himself as bait, although Chief Harrigan and Joan beg him not to risk his life. B... Alles lesen
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Valentine 'Val' Lennon
- (as John King)
- Abel Krantz
- (as Monty Collins)
- Train Conductor
- (as Herb Ashley)
- Jake Pringle
- (Nicht genannt)
- Detective Conway
- (Nicht genannt)
- Inspector in Montreal
- (Nicht genannt)
- Detective Joe O'Neill
- (Nicht genannt)
- Joe - Hotel Desk Clerk
- (Nicht genannt)
- Mr. Gellard
- (Nicht genannt)
- John - Train Porter
- (Nicht genannt)
- Willy - Train Porter
- (Nicht genannt)
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It's surprising because the director of this movie was Howard Bretherton. He was not a great director, but he was among that brotherhood who graduated from the editing booth. He could turn out a cheap feature quickly and usually make them pretty watchable. Such directors rarely shot scenes that would be removed by the editor; the skill was called 'cutting in the camera'.
Against actors who can't speak in any way that makes sense, the best director struggles in vain. While Bretherton toiled mostly in B Westerns, he was on his way up from here, first to Republic and then Columbia. He would retire from the Big Screen in 1952, spend a few years directing TV and die in 1969, aged 79.
Almost coldly clinical, even if the film has some romance and a musical number, this film didn't really work for me. The film is much too talky for an hour long mystery (The interrogation scene early on seems to go one for an hour instead of 5 or 6 minutes) and there are times when very little actually happens despite "movement" (how many trips are actually made?). It also doesn't help that the script seems to clue us in as to whats going on much too early simply as a means of keeping us interested. The cast, of B movie and supporting stalwarts is quite good, though they seem to be simply running back and forth needlessly instead of actually solving a mystery.
You can try it if you catch it on TV but otherwise I'd skip it.
The film is set mostly on trains, where a criminal genius keeps robbing folks of huge sums of money...and the police seem powerless to stop this. However, Val ('Dusty' King) promises to solve the case.
Dusty King was an actor known for B-westerns and action movies. In other words, he was pretty good at punching folks and the like....but wasn't the most charismatic or sexy actors. In fact, in this one he seems incredibly ordinary. He couldn't help it...he just wasn't a strong leading man type for this sort of film. Add to that the rather cheap look of the film and you've got a film that isn't bad...but isn't all that good either.
It turns into a murder case when one King's men is killed. Marjorie Reynolds gets robbed as an afterthought. After that she joins forces with King.
Seems like this was a good plan that was only good for one or two scores. The crooks should have quit while they were ahead. Obviously there was an inside man.
John King even got to sing a song that wasn't a cowboy ballad.
Sets were cheap and shabby, some bad editing as well. Not the best mystery going.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis film received its earliest documented telecasts in Chicago Tuesday 9 February 1949 on WBKB (Channel 4), in Syracuse Wednesday 15 June 1949 on WHEN (Channel 8), in New York City Friday 22 July 1949 on WPIX (Channel 11) , in Detroit Monday 8 August 1949 on WXYZ (Channel7), in Los Angeles Tuesday 27 September 1949 on KTLA (Channel 5), and in Cincinnati Sunday 6 November 1949 on WLW-T (Channel 4).
- PatzerObvious parallel-moving rounded floodlight-beams from movie-10K's that sweep across and "follow" the general movement of the groups of passengers as they head towards the trains, when Val and Joan are first shown observing the passengers.
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 1 Min.(61 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1