Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAfter a stamp collection goes missing and a businessman is kidnapped, the Lone Wolf attempts to keep one step ahead of the police in Miami in order to solve the crime and make a profit.After a stamp collection goes missing and a businessman is kidnapped, the Lone Wolf attempts to keep one step ahead of the police in Miami in order to solve the crime and make a profit.After a stamp collection goes missing and a businessman is kidnapped, the Lone Wolf attempts to keep one step ahead of the police in Miami in order to solve the crime and make a profit.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
John Henry Allen
- First Black Newsboy
- (sin créditos)
Herbert Ashley
- Morgue Attendant
- (sin créditos)
Steve Benson
- Motorcycle Squad Member
- (sin créditos)
Leon Davidson
- Motorcycle Squad Member
- (sin créditos)
Gayle DeCamp
- Motorcycle Squad Member
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
THE LONE WOLF KEEPS A DATE is so heavily pulled down by too many sub-plots that it becomes exceedingly hard to follow as it goes on and on with devious twists and turns. Suffice it to say, you can watch it at your own discomfort.
He's in Havana this time, coming to the aid of a damsel in distress (Frances Robinson) and keeping one step ahead of the police with his valet ERIC BLORE, again on hand to supply the comic interest.
THURSTON HALL is enjoyable as a harried police inspector and there are plenty of references to the dumb cops in his employ. None of them are clever enough to deal with WARREN WILLIAMS as The Lone Wolf.
It chugs along at a fast pace with, as Williams says, "no time for explanations." BRUCE BENNETT is the heroine's boyfriend, mixed up somehow in a kidnapping plot and needing help from The Wolf, who's mixed up in something about a valuable stamp collection. Bennett has only one brief scene in jail at the beginning.
Whatever humor there is comes from police bungling and the antics of Eric Blore as Williams' faithful valet--and always a welcome presence in these things.
Summing up: A jumbled trifle easily forgotten and not one of the best in the series.
He's in Havana this time, coming to the aid of a damsel in distress (Frances Robinson) and keeping one step ahead of the police with his valet ERIC BLORE, again on hand to supply the comic interest.
THURSTON HALL is enjoyable as a harried police inspector and there are plenty of references to the dumb cops in his employ. None of them are clever enough to deal with WARREN WILLIAMS as The Lone Wolf.
It chugs along at a fast pace with, as Williams says, "no time for explanations." BRUCE BENNETT is the heroine's boyfriend, mixed up somehow in a kidnapping plot and needing help from The Wolf, who's mixed up in something about a valuable stamp collection. Bennett has only one brief scene in jail at the beginning.
Whatever humor there is comes from police bungling and the antics of Eric Blore as Williams' faithful valet--and always a welcome presence in these things.
Summing up: A jumbled trifle easily forgotten and not one of the best in the series.
This was Warren Williams's 4th Lone Wolf outing to Eric Blore's 3rd as the adventurous master and butler Michael Lanyard and Jamison. The entire cast were dapper in the Hollywood sunshine but Blore outshone them all, he was never more snazzily dressed than in here.
The plot has it that Lanyard lets himself become embroiled in a rather nasty kidnapping affair after the baddies steal his precious stamp album mistaking it for their pay off of USD 100,000. And as usual he was helping out a damsel in distress. Amidst some fine comedic banter between the leads, slapstick, the baddies being hunted down by Lanyard and vice versa with the cops after Lanyard it can all get can pretty complicated and surreal at times, especially when the yacht makes an appearance so I recommend attention. Favourite bits: The amusing opening and chase scene in Havana; Lanyard feigning utter horror at the mess his stamp collection had got into in baddie Ed Gargan's none-too-delicate hands; whenever 53 yo zooty Blore had to run - what a sight!
All in all another nice entry in the series (by my count no. 6/15), for those of us who like the genre.
The plot has it that Lanyard lets himself become embroiled in a rather nasty kidnapping affair after the baddies steal his precious stamp album mistaking it for their pay off of USD 100,000. And as usual he was helping out a damsel in distress. Amidst some fine comedic banter between the leads, slapstick, the baddies being hunted down by Lanyard and vice versa with the cops after Lanyard it can all get can pretty complicated and surreal at times, especially when the yacht makes an appearance so I recommend attention. Favourite bits: The amusing opening and chase scene in Havana; Lanyard feigning utter horror at the mess his stamp collection had got into in baddie Ed Gargan's none-too-delicate hands; whenever 53 yo zooty Blore had to run - what a sight!
All in all another nice entry in the series (by my count no. 6/15), for those of us who like the genre.
The Lone Wolf Keeps A Date must have had a few showings at the White House. After all in FDR the most important and prominent stamp collector there ever was happened to be the current resident.
Warren William and Eric Blore as The Lone Wolf and his factotum Jameson are back again and this film for a B picture is rather complicated in terms of plot. It also has more comedy in it as Warren William and Eric Blore look like they're having a great old time overacting outrageously. Catch William in the scene with chief villain Don Beddoe and henchmen.
The story involves The Lone Wolf's stolen stamp collection and the kidnapping of a millionaire in which once again the cops in the person of Thurston Hall and sidekick Fred Kelsey suspect William is involved in the plot when he's really trying to help.
You have to love Kelsey who came from the Keystone Police Academy as a graduate and who is the butt of everything. The Lone Wolf Keeps A Date will give you some suspense and tickle your funny bone even more than most in the series.
Warren William and Eric Blore as The Lone Wolf and his factotum Jameson are back again and this film for a B picture is rather complicated in terms of plot. It also has more comedy in it as Warren William and Eric Blore look like they're having a great old time overacting outrageously. Catch William in the scene with chief villain Don Beddoe and henchmen.
The story involves The Lone Wolf's stolen stamp collection and the kidnapping of a millionaire in which once again the cops in the person of Thurston Hall and sidekick Fred Kelsey suspect William is involved in the plot when he's really trying to help.
You have to love Kelsey who came from the Keystone Police Academy as a graduate and who is the butt of everything. The Lone Wolf Keeps A Date will give you some suspense and tickle your funny bone even more than most in the series.
Warren William makes his fourth appearance as the title character Lone Wolf, and this time film centres on former jewel thief Michael Lanyard, aiming to recover his stamp collection as well as helping a damsel in distress, whose fiancée is accused of murder, and this involves a kidnapping.
The usual fun and games occur in this standard entry, but the comedy can overpower the mystery elements, whereas the previous entries I have seen balanced mystery and comedy quite well. Nevertheless, The Lone Wolf keeps a date is enjoyable, zips at a fast rate, and Jamison, Lone Wolf's valet - played by Eric Blore - is just as fast thinking as his boss. The leading lady was very pretty.
The usual fun and games occur in this standard entry, but the comedy can overpower the mystery elements, whereas the previous entries I have seen balanced mystery and comedy quite well. Nevertheless, The Lone Wolf keeps a date is enjoyable, zips at a fast rate, and Jamison, Lone Wolf's valet - played by Eric Blore - is just as fast thinking as his boss. The leading lady was very pretty.
During the 1940s, Columbia Pictures made two nearly identical B-detective series--Boston Blackie and The Lone Wolf. At times, the plots of the two seemed almost interchangeable and the formula was very similar. Both featured stupid police inspectors with even stupider assistants, both featured a leading man who had once been a criminal but had now gone straight and both featured a prominent role for a supporting buddy for the lead. About the only major difference was that the Lone Wolf's man-servant (Eric Blore) was hilarious and Blackie's friend ("Runt", usually played by George E. Stone) was relatively bland compared to the incomparable Blore. Blore simply was a very funny man in films like this as well as in the Astaire-Rogers films.
Now as for the plot, it involves a kidnapped man and a woman who is trying to solve this mystery in order to clear her fiancé who has been wrongly jailed for the crime. Not unexpectedly, the Lone Wolf (Warren William) stumbles upon this very pretty lady and offers his able assistance. While none of this is particularly original or memorable, the acting is excellent and the film is all in good fun. Overall, better than a Blackie film and about on par with a Falcon or Saint series film.
Now as for the plot, it involves a kidnapped man and a woman who is trying to solve this mystery in order to clear her fiancé who has been wrongly jailed for the crime. Not unexpectedly, the Lone Wolf (Warren William) stumbles upon this very pretty lady and offers his able assistance. While none of this is particularly original or memorable, the acting is excellent and the film is all in good fun. Overall, better than a Blackie film and about on par with a Falcon or Saint series film.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaAlthough the credits specify the source of the screenplay was a "work" by Louis Joseph Vance, no novel by this name was ever published, nor did any of Vance's novels contain a similar plot. Only some of the characters are in other novels.
- ConexionesFollowed by Más lobo que todos (1941)
- Bandas sonorasDown Argentina Way
(1940) (uncredited)
Music by Harry Warren
Played as background music in a restaurant
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- How long is The Lone Wolf Keeps a Date?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 5 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The Lone Wolf Keeps a Date (1940) officially released in India in English?
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