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Sing Sing Nights

  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 1h
NOTE IMDb
4,8/10
89
MA NOTE
Hardie Albright, Boots Mallory, and Conway Tearle in Sing Sing Nights (1934)
CriminalitéDrameGuerreMystèreRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA respected war correspondent is found murdered, with three bullets--from three different guns--in him. Three different men are arrested, convicted and sentenced to death for the murder, but... Tout lireA respected war correspondent is found murdered, with three bullets--from three different guns--in him. Three different men are arrested, convicted and sentenced to death for the murder, but only one can be the actual killer. A criminologist sets out to find who is really guilty.A respected war correspondent is found murdered, with three bullets--from three different guns--in him. Three different men are arrested, convicted and sentenced to death for the murder, but only one can be the actual killer. A criminologist sets out to find who is really guilty.

  • Réalisation
    • Lewis D. Collins
  • Scénario
    • Harry Stephen Keeler
    • Marion Orth
    • Charles Logue
  • Casting principal
    • Conway Tearle
    • Ferdinand Gottschalk
    • Hardie Albright
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    4,8/10
    89
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Lewis D. Collins
    • Scénario
      • Harry Stephen Keeler
      • Marion Orth
      • Charles Logue
    • Casting principal
      • Conway Tearle
      • Ferdinand Gottschalk
      • Hardie Albright
    • 5avis d'utilisateurs
    • 2avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos1

    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux24

    Modifier
    Conway Tearle
    Conway Tearle
    • Floyd Harding Cooper
    Ferdinand Gottschalk
    Ferdinand Gottschalk
    • Professor Varney
    Hardie Albright
    Hardie Albright
    • Howard Trude
    Jameson Thomas
    Jameson Thomas
    • Robert McCaigh
    Berton Churchill
    Berton Churchill
    • Governor Duane
    Boots Mallory
    Boots Mallory
    • Ellen Croft
    Mary Doran
    Mary Doran
    • Anne McCaigh
    Henry Kolker
    Henry Kolker
    • Kurt Nordon
    Lotus Long
    Lotus Long
    • Li Sung
    Richard Tucker
    Richard Tucker
    • Attorney General
    George Baxter
    George Baxter
    • Sergei Krenwicz
    Edward Keane
    • Chang
    • (as Edward Keene)
    Lew Kelly
    Lew Kelly
    • Police Detective
    Jack Casey
    • Policeman
    • (non crédité)
    Jack Cheatham
    Jack Cheatham
    • Prison Guard
    • (non crédité)
    Gino Corrado
    Gino Corrado
    • Latin-American General
    • (non crédité)
    Lester Dorr
    Lester Dorr
    • Newspaper Reporter
    • (non crédité)
    Harry Harvey
    Harry Harvey
    • New York Cab Driver
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Lewis D. Collins
    • Scénario
      • Harry Stephen Keeler
      • Marion Orth
      • Charles Logue
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs5

    4,889
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    9
    10

    Avis à la une

    1F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    Worse than a death sentence

    Harry Stephen Keeler (1890-1967) was the Ed Wood of detective novels. As Ed Wood did with low-budget movies, hack novelist Keeler ground out whodunits that are laughably bad yet exert a weird fascination in their badness. As with Ed Wood, certain themes turn up incessantly in Keeler's novels to a point beyond obsession. Keeler often ignored all the rules of mystery fiction: in one of his novels, the murderer turns out to be someone who is mentioned for the first time in the very last line of the novel! He often piled gimmick upon gimmick, until the gimmicks cancelled each other out: for example, a homicidal midget who disguises himself as a baby (plausible) but who commits his murders while piloting a helicopter, so as not to leave footprints (which makes his baby disguise rather pointless). Although Keeler was American (most of his novels take place in Chicago), he was first published in England. Eventually his plotlines became so contrived that English-language publishers would no longer take his work: his last several novels have only been published in Spanish and Portuguese translations. Keeler had a strange and tragic life: at one point during his adolescence, his mother had him committed to an insane asylum simply because she wanted to get rid of him; there is some evidence that he may have been subjected to one or more illegal operations on his brain during his captivity.

    'Sing Sing Nights' is a low-budget movie based on Keeler's novel of the same name; although Keeler didn't work on the screenplay, the film preserves the inane plotting and absurd gimmickry of his unique style. At this comparatively early stage in Keeler's career, his plotlines still held some faint resemblance to reality, so 'Sing Sing Nights' is merely implausible... as opposed to his later novels, which were downright incoherent.

    Floyd Cooper (played mostly in flashback by Conway Tearle) is a respected war correspondent who is secretly involved in gun-running and other crimes... until he is found dead. Cause of death: three bullet wounds in his brain, heart and spine ... fired by three different weapons! Any one of the bullets could have killed Cooper, but only ONE bullet actually did the deed. Which?

    Three different men (Trude, McCaigh and Krenwicz) come forward, each admitting that he shot Cooper, and each claiming to have fired the fatal shot. All three men are arrested, tried and convicted for the same murder. All three men are sentenced to die in the electric chair in Sing Sing. (On the same night, of course.)

    Into the death cell comes Professor Varney, world-famous criminologist. Because only one bullet actually killed Cooper, two of these men are innocent and must go free. (I don't believe a word of this, but it's all in the movie.) Each of the three men, in flashback, describes the circumstances which led to his decision to murder Cooper, and how he did the deed. We're meant to be kept in suspense for the final revelation, disclosing which man is the murderer and which two will go free.

    Guess what? I don't care, and you won't either. The movie's central gimmick (lifted intact from Keeler's novel) sounds ingenious, but doesn't hold up to a glimmer of logic. I don't know much about U.S. criminal law from the 1930s, or forensic medicine ditto, but I strongly suspect that: #1) a New York coroner in 1934 would have no difficulty determining which bullet killed the victim; and #2) the previous point is moot, because the law would find all three gunmen culpable even if only one actually killed the victim.

    This movie is brainless, but (unlike Keeler's novels or an Ed Wood flick) it's not quite brainless enough to be enjoyable in its brainlessness. All the actors give dead-earnest performances, showing no awareness of how awful this material is. Even usually reliable character actor Berton Churchill lets me down here. The pacing is terrible, the shot-matching is poor, the lighting is bad (probably on purpose, to conceal the cheap sets). The production values are wretched, without quite descending to the enjoyable cheesiness of an Ed Wood movie. If you're an Ed Wood fan who likes to read, I recommend that you seek out some of Harry Stephen Keeler's novels, which really are the literary equivalent of 'Plan 9 from Outer Space'. I don't recommend the movie version of 'Sing Sing Nights', and I rate this movie absolutely zero.
    3bkoganbing

    What are the odds?

    What are the odds that famous war correspondent Conway Tearle is shot and killed in his home three times by three men who tell of three very good motives for doing this one in? Yet that is the plot premise in Sing Sing Nights.

    In real life this would have been straightened by the District Attorney's office before going to trial on any of the three who all turn themselves in and confess to doing the deed. But all three are tried and all three convicted.

    The three murderers are Hardie Albright, Ferdinand Gottschalk, and Jameson Thomas. Tearle was a real snake on many levels as you will see and no one could blame anyone. But there are laws.

    It's not a bad plot premise, but this B film suffers from lack of direction and lack of production values. Imagine what Raymond Chandler or James M. Cain might have done?
    4boblipton

    Poor Mystery

    Conway Tearle has been murdered. Three men have confessed to the crime, and offered the gun each has claimed he did Tearle in with. The ballistics on each matches a bullet in Tearle's corpse. None of them will say anything more, but District Attorney Richard Tucker notes lazily he didn't need anything else to convict every one of them, and send them all to the gallows. But the situation is ridiculous. While there's no way of knowing which bullet struck Tearle first, any of them would have killed him instantly That means that two men are going to be killed for a crime neither had committed. So Ferdinand Gottschalk goes to Sing Sing with two pardons and a lie detector, and convinces them to tell what had happened.

    It's an intriguing idea for a murder mystery. This movie is derived from Harry Stephen Keeler's book of the same name. I hope he wrote a mystery better than this one, because not only is Gottschalk's lie detector infallible (real ones never have been), but he comes armed with facts that are not revealed until after he makes his accusation, which makes this a cheat on the audience, even if you accept the legal positions.

    The performances are pretty good for a Poverty Row movie, and the players are well known from elsewhere in their careers, even if they were not the draws they had been, or would become: Hardie Albright is a good performer away from the stultified roles he played for George Arliss' vehicles; Berton Churchill is good as an honest politician, and among the ladies, Mary Doran and Boots Mallory did all right for themselves elsewhere. But the essential unfairness of the answer to who did it rankles.

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      The earliest documented telecasts of this film took place in Los Angeles Friday 30 December 1949 on KTSL (Channel 2), and in New York City Thursday 20 July 1950 on the Night Owl Theatre on WPIX (Channel 11).

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 15 décembre 1934 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Reprieved
    • Société de production
      • Trem Carr Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Hardie Albright, Boots Mallory, and Conway Tearle in Sing Sing Nights (1934)
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