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The Mind Reader

  • 1933
  • Approved
  • 1h 10min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.5/10
667
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Constance Cummings and Warren William in The Mind Reader (1933)
Chandler, a con-man, and his helper Frank decide to create a clairvoyant act for the carny circuit, as a little research reveals Americans spent $125 million on mind-readers and astrology. The carny, renamed Chandra, falls for one of his marks, Sylvia, but their love is tested when he brings tragedy to other peoples' lives and she asks him to go straight.
Reproducir trailer2:01
1 video
12 fotos
ActionCrimeDramaMysteryRomance

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaCon-man Chandler and his partner Frank decide to start a clairvoyant act. Chandler falls for Sylvia, one of their marks, but their relationship is challenged when his deception impacts other... Leer todoCon-man Chandler and his partner Frank decide to start a clairvoyant act. Chandler falls for Sylvia, one of their marks, but their relationship is challenged when his deception impacts others' lives and Sylvia urges him to reform.Con-man Chandler and his partner Frank decide to start a clairvoyant act. Chandler falls for Sylvia, one of their marks, but their relationship is challenged when his deception impacts others' lives and Sylvia urges him to reform.

  • Dirección
    • Roy Del Ruth
  • Guionistas
    • Robert Lord
    • Wilson Mizner
    • Vivian Crosby
  • Elenco
    • Warren William
    • Constance Cummings
    • Allen Jenkins
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.5/10
    667
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Roy Del Ruth
    • Guionistas
      • Robert Lord
      • Wilson Mizner
      • Vivian Crosby
    • Elenco
      • Warren William
      • Constance Cummings
      • Allen Jenkins
    • 24Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 13Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:01
    Official Trailer

    Fotos11

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    Elenco principal31

    Editar
    Warren William
    Warren William
    • Chandra
    Constance Cummings
    Constance Cummings
    • Sylvia
    Allen Jenkins
    Allen Jenkins
    • Frank
    Natalie Moorhead
    Natalie Moorhead
    • Mrs. Austin
    Mayo Methot
    Mayo Methot
    • Jenny
    Clarence Muse
    Clarence Muse
    • Sam
    Earle Foxe
    Earle Foxe
    • Don (Holman)
    Loretta Andrews
    Loretta Andrews
    • Blonde girl
    • (sin créditos)
    Irving Bacon
    Irving Bacon
    • Reporter
    • (sin créditos)
    Robert Barrat
    Robert Barrat
    • Detective
    • (sin créditos)
    Harry Beresford
    Harry Beresford
    • Chief Wilson
    • (sin créditos)
    Clara Blandick
    Clara Blandick
    • Auntie
    • (sin créditos)
    Symona Boniface
    Symona Boniface
    • Gossip in Phone Montage
    • (sin créditos)
    George Chandler
    George Chandler
    • Reporter
    • (sin créditos)
    Sidney D'Albrook
    Sidney D'Albrook
    • Brakeman
    • (sin créditos)
    Don Dillaway
    Don Dillaway
    • Jack
    • (sin créditos)
    Robert Greig
    Robert Greig
    • Swami
    • (sin créditos)
    Grace Hayle
    Grace Hayle
    • Shill
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Roy Del Ruth
    • Guionistas
      • Robert Lord
      • Wilson Mizner
      • Vivian Crosby
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios24

    6.5667
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    Opiniones destacadas

    Michael_Elliott

    Great Performances Highlight Gem

    Mind Reader, The (1933)

    *** (out of 4)

    Excellent performances highlight this Warner drama about a con man (Warren William) and his assistant (Allen Jenkins) who travel town to town with a circus doing various acts to bring in money. They then notice that the mind reader gag will bring in the most and soon the alias "Chandra" starts pulling people in but there's going to be a price to pay. I had heard so many positive things about this movie that it quickly became one that I searched out and thankfully got to see due to a recent TCM showing. Fans of classic cinema should certainly keep their eyes open for this one as it lives up to its reputation and also delivers some incredible performances. The film is pretty much divided into two halves with the first one dealing with various cons being performed by William. I found all of these games to be incredibly entertaining due in large part to William being able to push them over. It's very important that we believe these cons could actually be pushed over on people and William is so good here that it's never a problem. He slides into this role and never looks back and there's no a single frame in the film where we don't believe what he's doing and saying. Constance Cummings plays the woman he eventually falls in love with and the two share some great moments together and really make their love story believable. The underrated Jenkins does a very good job as well as he has several nice comic moments. The biggest surprise comes from future Bogart wife Mayo Methot who nearly steals the film as a young woman who is given bad advice and comes to let William know about it. I won't spoil what happens but it's pretty unforgettable and she really nails the part. I think the film begins to lose some of its power during the final twenty-five minutes with the last scam starts to be too big and of course there's going to be a moral lesson to pay. Up until then the film is extremely fast, fun and most important features some terrific acting. This film certainly deserves to be better known and hopefully TCM will start to show it more often.
    tchelitchew

    Warren William is perfectly cast as smooth psychic swindler

    I'm a real sucker for movies about fake psychics and occult scammers, and "The Mind Reader" makes for a very fine entry in that sparsely populated genre. Warren William really gets to muck it up as a skeevy huckster who makes his money as a traveling fortune teller. Always one one step ahead of the simple-minded authorities, he never stays long enough in one whistlestop town for his parlor tricks to get exposed. When he falls for Constance Cummings, he begins to seriously question some of his life choices.

    Although the tone is rather jaunty compared to something like "The Spiritualist" or "Nightmare Alley", there are a few dramatic moments showing the moral peril and self-centeredness inherent to psychic swindling. William has one great dramatic moment where he breaks down on stage in Mexico, drunkenly abusing the crowd while showing a truly hideous side of his personality. It's one of his finer bits of acting. The film also looks great, with plenty of imaginative angles and vivid lighting that emphasize Chandra's crooked nature.
    6blanche-2

    Chandra the Magnificent

    Warren William is "The Mind Reader" in this pre-code film also starring Constance Cummings and Allen Jenkins.

    William is a snake oil salesman (a con artist) during the Depression, using his skills of persuasion to sell products. One day, his associate, Frank (Jenkins) is reading about mind readers and thinks it might be a great profession, so William becomes Chandra. He is very successful. When he meets the beautiful Sylvia (Cummings), he falls in love. After an unfortunate incident, he promises her that if she'll stay with him, he'll quit. But the con and the money are seductive.

    This is an early talkie and very well directed by Roy del Ruth. Unlike some early talkies, it's not stagy and the actors don't have trouble with the dialogue rhythm. Often in these early films, there are big pauses in between lines, but not here.

    Warren William is one of my favorites. He played these dark characters in silents and the early years of sound, and then we were able to hear his wonderful laugh and see his humor in films like the Perry Mason series (though he and the scripts weren't Erle Stanley Gardner's idea of Perry Mason), Satan Met a Lady, The Lone Wolf series, and others.

    Constance Cummings was both beautiful and amazing, and she does a lovely job here. She deserved to be a bigger star, but she left Hollywood early on and moved with her husband to England, where she made some films and appeared in her husband's (Benn Levy) plays. When she was around 70, she appeared on Broadway in a play about a stroke victim, Wings, for which she won a Tony Award. This was a great opportunity to see her on film.

    Interesting film, kind of a forerunner to "Nightmare Alley" in a way - those movie fortunetellers are always fakes.
    8AlsExGal

    Warren William trades on "I want to believe" sixty years before the X-Files

    Warren William's character is traveling around the country doing various cons - painless dentistry, miracle hair tonic, the world's longest flagpole sitter (don't ask). Then he notices that a self described mentalist is cleaning up. He researches the trade some and comes up with an act as a mind reader and christens himself Chandra the Great. He asks the audience to write down their questions about the future or just the unknown parts of the present such as where did they misplace their keys and to sign their names to the paper. He then seems to burn the pieces of paper. In fact he sends them down a chute to his assistant Frank (Allen Jenkins) below, who then tells Chandra through a microphone what questions are asked and who wrote it. Chandra repeats what Frank says and then comes up with a bogus answer. The key to his success is dramatic and believable delivery, and with years of experience as a conman, he has delivery down pat. But then one day he meets a beautiful woman, Sylvia (Constance Cumming) who lost this month's rent money - his partner Frank stole it - and he falls in love. Complications ensue as Chandra must appear legitimate to Sylvia if he is going to win her love.

    This is another great Warren William performance where, yes, he is doing hideous callous things trading on Depression era audiences who want to believe that somebody has answers to their problems, but you also empathize with him as a man who really has no skills other than being a conman whose motivation changes from merely wanting the easy life for himself to wanting nice things for his wife in an economic time that is extremely unforgiving. Of course if you tell enough lies to enough people who act on what you told them as though it was gospel, there are going to be some victims and they are not going to be happy about it and may hunt you down.

    There is some wry social commentary going on here such as rich people having hundreds of dollars to blow on mind readers during the Depression, where average people had to scrape to come up with a dollar for the same thing. Also note that there is a smidgeon of racial equality here as Chandra has an African American partner (Clarence Muse) as well as Frank, and shakes hands with him when he says goodbye. That doesn't seem like much, but it was a lot even for the precode years.

    With Allen Jenkins as Chandra's larcenous friend and assistant, Natalie Moorhead as one of Chandra's rich clients, and Constance Cumming in a rare Warner Brothers appearance.
    51930s_Time_Machine

    Long before Dick Dastardly was in the Wacky Races, he was Warren William!

    What makes this especially entertaining is how it pretends to take itself ever so seriously, but subtly and deliberately, not quite convincingly enough. Humour is often funnier when it's not that obvious and you have to discover it hidden in a serious drama like this.

    In this fairly short picture, Warren William has tremendous fun hamming up his moustache twiddling loveable rogue character to a hundred and ten percent. You can't be certain whether it's because you can really sense his own personal enjoyment at playing this role or whether you're being fooled by some good acting but whatever it is, that ninety year old enjoyment is infectious. Although you'll probably forget you've seen this in a few weeks (to be honest, it's not that memorable), you can't help but enjoy watching it.

    Since this is a First National B-feature, without the constraints of conforming to the Warner's 'A-picture' conventions, Roy Del Ruth, possibly WB's top director at the time also enjoys this lack of restriction by experimenting with clever shots, wacky camera angles and atmospheric lighting. This makes the result both fun and interesting to watch but it's not just the direction and Warren William which make this picture worth seeing ninety years after it was made. It's actually a good little story with a great snappy script so and if you like 1930s, blue-collar, American speak, you'll find this just swell! Its script benefits from one of the writers being Wilson Mizner. Who? - he was one of America's most celebrated writers having had what might be described as a very eventful life (and yes, movies have been made about him) or as one of his contemporaries said: America's most fascinating outlaw. His street-level wit, nurtured by his own plentiful life experiences add a certain spice to this story which although fairly engaging anyway is made much tastier by the magic of his wordweaving.

    Overall, although this is nothing that special with no deep message or even very shallow message, it is reasonably entertaining .

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    • Trivia
      Famed raconteur Wilson Mizner co-authored The Mind Reader (1933) during his short stay in Hollywood while on the lam from an elaborate hoax he perpetrated in Florida a few years before.

      Wilson was one of Broadway's leading lights during the 1910's and 1920's, rising to scandalous celebrity-hood after the 29-year old married an 80-year old heiress. From there he dove headlong into managing boxing matches (which he fixed) and the Rand Hotel. What made Wilson even more memorable, however, was his well-known wit. At his hotel, patrons were greeted by the sign "Guests must carry out their own dead." When one of his boxers met a violent end, Mizner merely said, "Tell 'em to start counting ten over him, and he'll get up."

      In the late 1920's, Mizner set up the greatest scheme of all. He and his brother Addison retired south to Florida where they began snapping up cheap land and selling it for inflated prices, using their connections to Broadway's leading names and newspaper columnists for publicity. Ultimately the Great Florida Land Boom went bust and Wilson fled to Hollywood one step ahead of the law.

      There Wilson set up shop at Warner Brothers, usually sleeping on a couch in the writers's quarters and being awoken whenever his writing partners needed a tasty quip with a hard, cynical edge. Wilson must have been wide awake for most of the writing of The Mind Reader as it is full of such lines, mostly spoken by Warren William's partner-in-crime Allen Jenkins. When William hooks up with a girl that may be underage, Jenkins reminds him, "You ever heard of a guy named Mann? He's got an Act and it ain't in vaudeville!" Jenkins' closing line is a corker as well but you will have to watch the movie for that one.

      Mizner died of a heart attack before the film was released, following his brother who had died shortly before. Even in the months before his death, Mizner's cruel wit never deserted him. When his brother Addison telegrammed to say he was gravely ill, Wilson sent one back from Hollywood stating, "STOP DYING. AM TRYING TO WRITE COMEDY."
    • Errores
      While the secondary headline and first 2½ paragraphs of The Evening News article "Mrs. Munro Collapses; Murder Trial Is Delayed" relate to the case, the following five lines in each of two half-columns is gibberish.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in TCM Guest Programmer: Stephen Sondheim (2005)
    • Bandas sonoras
      The Stars and Stripes Forever
      (1896) (uncredited)

      Music by John Philip Sousa

      Played by the band during the painless dentist segment at the beginning

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 1 de abril de 1933 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • El adivino
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Danville, California, Estados Unidos(train depot)
    • Productora
      • First National Pictures
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 154,000 (estimado)
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 10 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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