Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA croupier is murdered in a Mexico City gambling casino and the Lone Wolf is suspected. Sharon Montgomery, wife of diamond merchant Charles Montgomery, becomes involved in a jewel heist, in ... Leer todoA croupier is murdered in a Mexico City gambling casino and the Lone Wolf is suspected. Sharon Montgomery, wife of diamond merchant Charles Montgomery, becomes involved in a jewel heist, in which again the Lone Wolf is a suspect.A croupier is murdered in a Mexico City gambling casino and the Lone Wolf is suspected. Sharon Montgomery, wife of diamond merchant Charles Montgomery, becomes involved in a jewel heist, in which again the Lone Wolf is a suspect.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Fotos
Leonardo Scavino
- Hotel Manager
- (as Lee Lenoir)
Nita Bieber
- Hotel Maid
- (sin créditos)
Barbara Brewster
- Police Chauffeur's Daughter
- (sin créditos)
Oliver Cross
- Club Patron
- (sin créditos)
John Dutriz
- Cop at Hotel
- (sin créditos)
Bess Flowers
- Club Patron
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
From 1947, Michael Lanyard/The Lone Wolf is back again, this time played by Gerald Mohr, with Eric Blore as his butler/associate.
This series had seen better days - I actually liked Warren William best as Lone Wolf. He was always lighthearted and funny. Mohr is fine, a little miscast and doesn't have William's commanding presence.
Lanyard is a reformed jewel thief, but he's constantly mixed up in some kind of trouble with the police at his door. During his time in Mexico City, the situation is no different.
He becomes a suspect not only in a jewel robbery but murder of a diamond dealer's wife (Sheila Ryan) - and is accused of smuggling. Lanyard meets a woman in debt to a gambling house for 50 grand; he discovers the machines are rigged and is determined to help her.
Of course it falls to him to clear his name or end up in a Mexican prison.
The nice part of this film is that Eric Blore has a bigger role and is very funny fighting with the boss.
This series had seen better days - I actually liked Warren William best as Lone Wolf. He was always lighthearted and funny. Mohr is fine, a little miscast and doesn't have William's commanding presence.
Lanyard is a reformed jewel thief, but he's constantly mixed up in some kind of trouble with the police at his door. During his time in Mexico City, the situation is no different.
He becomes a suspect not only in a jewel robbery but murder of a diamond dealer's wife (Sheila Ryan) - and is accused of smuggling. Lanyard meets a woman in debt to a gambling house for 50 grand; he discovers the machines are rigged and is determined to help her.
Of course it falls to him to clear his name or end up in a Mexican prison.
The nice part of this film is that Eric Blore has a bigger role and is very funny fighting with the boss.
Determined to actually take his fortnight's leave this year, "Jamison" (Eric Blore) stages what amounts to a mini-revolt against his boss "Lanyard" (Gerald Mohr) - even refusing to do up his bow tie for him. The compromise - well they are both going to Mexico. Of course, trouble is never far away and when a croupier is killed, suspicion falls on the "Lone Wolf". Meantime, they also encounter the outwardly wealthy "Agatha Van Weir" (Winifred Harris) who is $50,000 in the hole to the crooked casino owner "Henderson" (John Gallaudet) and who has been using her diamond as collateral. Clever people might realise that being around "Lanyard" is just too risky - and when the wife of a diamond dealer (Sheila Ryan) is also found brown bread, he'd better get a move on before anyone else ends up toast - including him! What made this a bit more enjoyable is the beefed up role for the usually quite entertaining Blore. Indeed, "Jamison" proves quite adept at a bit of pilfering and mischief-making that might just save the day! Good fun, this one.
One of the few entries that has never aired on Turner Classic Movies, "The Lone Wolf in Mexico" (1946), like the Monogram Charlie Chan entry "The Red Dragon" (1945), features a studio-bound Mexico City with no interesting exteriors (1944's "The Falcon in Mexico" at least was partially shot outdoors and has the look of authenticity). The budgets for Columbia's Lone Wolf were about the same as RKO's Falcon but this latter entry suffers from overly familiar territory. On vacation south of the border, Michael Lanyard (Gerald Mohr) visits a shady gambling casino run by Henderson (John Gallaudet) which substitutes fake diamonds for the genuine article. He meets up with a former flame (Jacqueline De Wit), her croupier husband (Bernard Nedell), and a debt-ridden beauty (Sheila Ryan) who wants our hero to recover some gems that she'd hocked. A decent cast enlivens the proceedings, especially the welcome return of Eric Blore as faithful manservant Jamison. Nestor Paiva (Lucas in "Creature from the Black Lagoon") plays the police inspector and Chris-Pin Martin has an unbilled part as an amusing taxi driver who sleeps on the job. After Warren William exited the series with 1943's "Passport to Suez," Columbia revived it in 1946 with "The Notorious Lone Wolf," bringing back Eric Blore but replacing William with Gerald Mohr, who played the unbilled murder victim in a previous Wolf, 1942's "One Dangerous Night." Following the release of "Mexico" in Jan 1947, Mohr made one final appearance in "The Lone Wolf in London," easily the best of the three, with a standout performance from Universal beauty Evelyn Ankers playing a femme fatale in one of her last roles. A very busy actor, especially on television, Mohr has perhaps been unjustly maligned for his three Wolf entries, all of which ploughed the same material that audiences had grown tired of (he died in 1968). Columbia tried once more with "The Lone Wolf and His Lady" (1949), which sat on the shelf for a full year before it was released. Ron Randell replaced Gerald Mohr while Alan Mowbray replaced Eric Blore. The 1954 TV series which followed featured former Saint Louis Hayward in the title role.
A croupier is murdered in a Mexico City gambling casino and the Lone Wolf is suspected. Sharon Montgomery, wife of diamond merchant Charles Montgomery, becomes involved in a jewel heist, in which again the Lone Wolf is a suspect.
Gerard Mohr stars as the Lone Wolf, and despite Warren William being hard to replace, he does a competent job, and is a little tough. He lacks the natural charm that William had but Mohr does have his own style. As for the film, it's rather average but still enjoyable and the locale is quite good. It does lack action and loses some steam towards the end. The plot can be a bit muddled at times, too.
Gerard Mohr stars as the Lone Wolf, and despite Warren William being hard to replace, he does a competent job, and is a little tough. He lacks the natural charm that William had but Mohr does have his own style. As for the film, it's rather average but still enjoyable and the locale is quite good. It does lack action and loses some steam towards the end. The plot can be a bit muddled at times, too.
Gerald Mohr returns in his second of three appearances as Michael Lanyard, former jewel thief, accused of crime any time one happens in his vicinity. Now that the War is over, he and vacationing manservant Eric Blore travel down to Mexico, where they are promptly accused of stealing some jewelry and smuggling it to the US, so he has to clear things up himself. With Sheila Ryan, Nestor Paiva, and Chris-Pin Martin.
Mohr, alas, was born a bit too late to prosper with a pencil-thin mustache, a cultured speaking voice, and dark good looks. He mostly played villains in the movies, although he had a wider range on the radio. A thorough professional, he worked steadily through his death in 1968 at the age of 54.
Mohr, alas, was born a bit too late to prosper with a pencil-thin mustache, a cultured speaking voice, and dark good looks. He mostly played villains in the movies, although he had a wider range on the radio. A thorough professional, he worked steadily through his death in 1968 at the age of 54.
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- ConexionesFollowed by Los ojos del Nilo (1947)
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 9 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The Lone Wolf in Mexico (1947) officially released in Canada in English?
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