Agrega una trama en tu idiomaSinister forces compete to find the million dollars in gold hidden by recently deceased gangster Joe Valerie in his family's old dark house 15 years earlier,Sinister forces compete to find the million dollars in gold hidden by recently deceased gangster Joe Valerie in his family's old dark house 15 years earlier,Sinister forces compete to find the million dollars in gold hidden by recently deceased gangster Joe Valerie in his family's old dark house 15 years earlier,
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Gertrude Hoffman
- Mattie
- (as Gertrude W. Hoffman)
Stanley Blystone
- Police Car Driver
- (sin créditos)
Ed Brady
- Paddywagon Cop
- (sin créditos)
Tom Brower
- Detective Schultz
- (sin créditos)
Pat O'Malley
- Detective Brady
- (sin créditos)
Ted Oliver
- Police Desk Sergeant Hamilton
- (sin créditos)
Irving Pichel
- Police Radio Announcer
- (voz)
- (sin créditos)
Max Wagner
- Policeman in Car
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Joe Valerie is a gangster who has stashed his loot. He's suffering unbearable pains on his death bed and offers Dr. Cornelius the location for a quick end. Mrs. Marble reads about Joe's death in the newspaper and assumes ownership of the loot. Mattie disagrees. Mrs. Marble falls down the stairs dead after seeing a vision. The police recruits clairvoyant Patricia to help with the investigation.
It's a haunted house meets murder mystery. I do like the starting premise. The police using a clairvoyant is a little out there. Warner Oland who plays Dr. Cornelius made his name playing Charlie Chan. At least, he's not doing a fake Asian here. It's fun that devolves a little into Scooby Doo territories. It's fine.
It's a haunted house meets murder mystery. I do like the starting premise. The police using a clairvoyant is a little out there. Warner Oland who plays Dr. Cornelius made his name playing Charlie Chan. At least, he's not doing a fake Asian here. It's fun that devolves a little into Scooby Doo territories. It's fine.
In Before Dawn you will have the opportunity to see Stu Erwin in for him was an
offbeat role. Merton Of The Movies typecast Erwin in roles as the eternal schnook.
Erwin is a police detective who is looking for stolen loot and the guy who stole it died and his ghost frightened housekeeper Jane Darwell. So Erwin takes the unusual step of inviting clairvoyant Dorothy Wilson on the case as a consultant.
Enough spooky goings on in this case although we never actually see any kind of spirit. Warner Oland is also in this film as psychiatrist from, where else, Vienna who also is in on the case to expose fake mediums. Wilson's father Dudley Digges is a shady character.
Before Dawn should satisfy mystery and horror fans.
Erwin is a police detective who is looking for stolen loot and the guy who stole it died and his ghost frightened housekeeper Jane Darwell. So Erwin takes the unusual step of inviting clairvoyant Dorothy Wilson on the case as a consultant.
Enough spooky goings on in this case although we never actually see any kind of spirit. Warner Oland is also in this film as psychiatrist from, where else, Vienna who also is in on the case to expose fake mediums. Wilson's father Dudley Digges is a shady character.
Before Dawn should satisfy mystery and horror fans.
Detective Stu Erwin is arresting psychics and scoops up Dorothy Wilson and her father, Dudley Diggs. It takes him about ten minutes of screen time to realize she's no phony and enlist her aid investigating the murder of Jane Darwell.
It's a movie clearly influenced by Avery Hopwood's THE BAT, with an old dark house, a hidden million dollars in gold, someone wandering around the house terrorizing anyone who might take the money. There's a lot going on for a a 60-minute movie, and Irving Pichel directs efficiently, with a cast that includes Warner Oland ad Oscar Apfel in the largest role I've ever seen him in. Erwin, who usually annoys me with his passive persona in comedies, is okay; Miss Wilson doesn't have much to do. Given the short length, this movie at a good clip.
It's a movie clearly influenced by Avery Hopwood's THE BAT, with an old dark house, a hidden million dollars in gold, someone wandering around the house terrorizing anyone who might take the money. There's a lot going on for a a 60-minute movie, and Irving Pichel directs efficiently, with a cast that includes Warner Oland ad Oscar Apfel in the largest role I've ever seen him in. Erwin, who usually annoys me with his passive persona in comedies, is okay; Miss Wilson doesn't have much to do. Given the short length, this movie at a good clip.
This old dark house film is hardly a mystery. You pretty much know who the bad guy is going to be upfront. Yet it has its charms.
After a gangster dies, his elderly widow proclaims that now she is going to cash in on his one million in gold which she has kept all of these years. But on her way to get the gold she sees the gangster's ghost and falls down the stairs and dies. Meanwhile, Stuart Erwin is a plain clothes policeman making the rounds and arresting fraudulent psychics. Patricia (Dorothy Wilson) and her father (Dudley Digges) get rounded up in the dragnet. It turns out that Patricia is a legit psychic, but her dad is dishonest and greedy. After she convinces the police of her authenticity, they decide to take Patricia to the old dark house where the gangster's money is to try and solve who this "ghost" was and where the money is. Unfortunately they bring her father along for the ride.
In spite of the villain being obvious, this one does have some very good atmosphere. And you have to wonder why such a house was built with secret passageways, secret rooms, and trap doors in the first place. Plus it is fun to see Stuart Erwin in a role where he is the forceful confident protagonist throughout rather than a human Droopy like figure as he usually is.
After a gangster dies, his elderly widow proclaims that now she is going to cash in on his one million in gold which she has kept all of these years. But on her way to get the gold she sees the gangster's ghost and falls down the stairs and dies. Meanwhile, Stuart Erwin is a plain clothes policeman making the rounds and arresting fraudulent psychics. Patricia (Dorothy Wilson) and her father (Dudley Digges) get rounded up in the dragnet. It turns out that Patricia is a legit psychic, but her dad is dishonest and greedy. After she convinces the police of her authenticity, they decide to take Patricia to the old dark house where the gangster's money is to try and solve who this "ghost" was and where the money is. Unfortunately they bring her father along for the ride.
In spite of the villain being obvious, this one does have some very good atmosphere. And you have to wonder why such a house was built with secret passageways, secret rooms, and trap doors in the first place. Plus it is fun to see Stuart Erwin in a role where he is the forceful confident protagonist throughout rather than a human Droopy like figure as he usually is.
Back in the 1920s and 30s, Hollywood made a bunch of creepy old dark house films. This is yet another one, though it's a tad different here and there...enough so that it's worth seeing even if the plot isn't especially believable.
When the story begins, a man is dying in agony. He begs his doctor (Warner Oland) to kill him and put him out of his mercy....and the doctor agrees to do so AFTER the man tells him about a fortune in hidden gold.
Some time passes. At the home where the money is hid, the dead man's widow learns of his death. Now she no longer needs to keep the loot hidden...she wants to live in style. But when the ghost of the dead man seems to appear, she dies of fright.
Soon after this, the police constable (Stu Erwin) is investigating some psychic frauds. However, one of them seems to have genuine powers and the police decide to let her investigate the death of the lady by fright. What's really going on here and will they figure out the truth in time?
This is a decent old mystery, though I must admit that Warner Oland overacted horribly throughout the film. Additionally, who the killer is becomes rather obvious. Despite this, the film is enjoyable and fun...if also a bit antiquated.
When the story begins, a man is dying in agony. He begs his doctor (Warner Oland) to kill him and put him out of his mercy....and the doctor agrees to do so AFTER the man tells him about a fortune in hidden gold.
Some time passes. At the home where the money is hid, the dead man's widow learns of his death. Now she no longer needs to keep the loot hidden...she wants to live in style. But when the ghost of the dead man seems to appear, she dies of fright.
Soon after this, the police constable (Stu Erwin) is investigating some psychic frauds. However, one of them seems to have genuine powers and the police decide to let her investigate the death of the lady by fright. What's really going on here and will they figure out the truth in time?
This is a decent old mystery, though I must admit that Warner Oland overacted horribly throughout the film. Additionally, who the killer is becomes rather obvious. Despite this, the film is enjoyable and fun...if also a bit antiquated.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaHollywood Reporter news items had Gregory Ratoff, Hobart Cavanaugh, and Lal Chand Mehra as cast members, but they did not appear or were not identifiable in the movie. At one point, several arrested psychics exited a police van, but only the back of their heads was visible. One was wearing a turban, a common costume for Mehra.
- Citas
Dwight Wilson: [to Patricia] Say, baby, I'm for yuh. My face hasn't been so red since I went to my first burlesque show.
- Bandas sonorasThe Wedding March
(1843) (uncredited)
from "A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.61"
Written by Felix Mendelssohn
In the score at the end
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Death Watch
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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