Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA tough district attorney has been cleaning up the town, and has already imprisoned twelve dangerous criminals. As he is about to name the target for his next investigation, he is murdered i... Tout lireA tough district attorney has been cleaning up the town, and has already imprisoned twelve dangerous criminals. As he is about to name the target for his next investigation, he is murdered in the midst of a crowd. The police have many suspects and hardly any clues, so two reporte... Tout lireA tough district attorney has been cleaning up the town, and has already imprisoned twelve dangerous criminals. As he is about to name the target for his next investigation, he is murdered in the midst of a crowd. The police have many suspects and hardly any clues, so two reporters decide to investigate for themselves.
- Tony
- (uncredited)
- District Attorney's Aide
- (uncredited)
- Club Patron
- (uncredited)
- KGT Radio Announcer
- (uncredited)
- Dr. Randolph Gorman
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
After two years of dealing with Herbert Yates at Republic, Trem Carr and Ray Johnson left to reform Republic Pictures. They produced a score of movies in their first year, and this was the first released. It's fast, it's moves right along, it's a fair enough mystery, but despite lead Heyburn looking adequate, director William Nigh seems to be more interested in getting his picture in the can and under budget, which is probably why DP Paul Ivano shoots almost all his set-ups in medium two-shots and doesn't move the camera much. There's a lot of editing for Russell F. Schoengarth to do, and he does it very well, keeping this to a non-boring 78 minutes.
As he is about to name the target for his next investigation, he is murdered in the midst of a crowd. The police have many suspects and hardly any clues, so two reporters decide to investigate for themselves.
It's an OK movie but the public domain prints are pretty bad quality.
Not bad for a Saturday afternoon. Sort of mindless. Too bad the prints aren't better. Never really understand that. Guess the original negative are long gone and only bad dupes are available.
The District Attorney falls over dead attending a prize fight and first it's thought to be heart failure. Before attending the fight he made a radio speech saying that he was about to bring in an indictment, The 13th Man he's brought to trial for racketeering and he gives some possibilities in the speech.
It's not natural causes of course that kills the DA and Walter Winchell like columnist Weldon Heyburn and his leg man Milburn Stone are on the trail. Stone makes a fatal discovery for him and it gets real personal for Heyburn after that.
Some familiar character players will be seen. Best of all is Dewey Robinson who usually played good natured mugs. He's a former prizefighter who due to a ring accident has been left with a lilting tenor and now has a new career in radio. Hearing him sing Will You Remember Me with the dubbed tenor is funny stuff.
Worth seeing the film for.
The story begins in a town where the District Attorney is running for re-election. In order to gain publicity and rid the town of crooks, he's leading a crackdown. So far, he's arrested a dozen mobsters and on the radio he announces he's about to arrest a 13th. And, as you'd always expect in such a film, the DA is about to assume room temperature before he can divulge who this man or woman is!!
Overall, this is very typical of a B mystery....not just in the ways mentioned above but in its fast pace, run time of about an hour and because it's predictable but still entertaining. Worth seeing if you enjoy the genre or just want to see what the first Monogram release was.
There are a lot of choices, and when the DA falls over dead due to a poison dart, an investigation begins as soon as it's revealed he did not die of a heart attack.
Among the most interested is Swifty Taylor (Weldon Heyburn), a radio journalist. He wants a scoop, so he does some investigating on his own. When his friend (Milburn Stone) runs into trouble, Swifty becomes more determined than ever to solve the case.
Fast-moving B movie.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe first picture released by the reformed Monogram Pictures Corporation, which was temporarily shelved from 1935-37 when its two owners, Trem Carr and W. Ray Johnston, joined with Mascot Pictures' Nat Levine and another independent studio, Liberty Pictures, to form Republic Pictures with Herbert J. Yates (owner of Consolidated Film Industries, a film processing laboratory) at the old Mack Sennett studio. The partnership held for a year until Carr and Johnston, chafing under the autocratic rule of Yates, left the company in 1937 and reformed Monogram. This is the first of a remarkable 20 features the studio would release that year. Monogram would always remain a low-budget outfit, its product geared for rural audiences and second-run theaters. In 1952 it changed its name to Allied Artists, hoping to erase the low-budget "stigma" associated with Monogram.
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 10m(70 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1