Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMorning Express ace reporter 'Timmy' Blake uses her wiles and charms to get the scoop on rival papers, and keep her editor happy. When the Express gets a tip that a wealthy old man was poiso... Tout lireMorning Express ace reporter 'Timmy' Blake uses her wiles and charms to get the scoop on rival papers, and keep her editor happy. When the Express gets a tip that a wealthy old man was poisoned and 'Timmy' spots the young widow in a nightclub only a day later, she descends on the... Tout lireMorning Express ace reporter 'Timmy' Blake uses her wiles and charms to get the scoop on rival papers, and keep her editor happy. When the Express gets a tip that a wealthy old man was poisoned and 'Timmy' spots the young widow in a nightclub only a day later, she descends on the town where the death took place to dig out the facts. When her reporting results in the a... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
- Mac
- (as George Stone)
- Jury Foreman
- (non crédité)
- Plainclothesman at Train Wreck
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Both stars are energetic and talk fast but the characterizations are not subtle in this noisy newspaper drama. O'Brien is exceedingly bossy and unpleasant as the demanding editor; Blondell is just not believable as the hardboiled reporter who for some reason has a soft spot for her crabby boss.
The plot involves a murder investigation by Blondell and the paper. Having received an anonymous tip, Blondell stops a funeral and convinces the coroner to do an autopsy. Sure enough, the guy was poisoned. Could the murderer have been Margaret Lindsay, the beautiful widow? John Litel, the doctor who attributed the death to a heart attack? The paper pushes hard for Lindsay's indictment for the murder but just when it's almost too late, Blondell starts feeling guilty and wonders if Lindsay is innocent after all....
An interesting cast includes Regis Toomey, Eddie Acuff, and George E. Stone as various newspaper employees. Ben Welden plays a casino owner who, in one of the picture's many ridiculous sequences, visits O'Brien's office to help identify a suspect and then is held at gunpoint by O'Brien to prevent him leaving and talking to other papers' reporters.
A fast paced newspaper drama with these stars sounds like great fun. Unfortunately, the obnoxious characters and poor plot pretty much sink it.
**** Back in Circulation (9/25/37) Ray Enright ~ Joan Blondell, Pat O'Brien, Margaret Lindsay, John Litel
Timmy Blake (Joan Blondell) is a reporter for the New York Express, a paper run by Bill Morgan (Pat O'Brien), who also is Timmy's boyfriend, and the audience does need to be told that a few times, as these two show zero affection for each other, but do show lots of anger, more like a divorced couple still working together. They are both completely amoral in regards to their profession, in pursuit of a story, regardless of who it hurts.
One night Morgan gets an anonymous note saying that prominent automobile manufacturer Vernon Wade did not die of a heart attack, but instead was murdered by poison. His funeral is planned the next day and he is scheduled to be cremated immediately afterward. Head scratching moment number one - Morgan and Blake go to the town where the funeral is being held and, on the strength of nothing but their fast talking, get the coroner to agree to call off the funeral and perform an autopsy on Wade. The autopsy does turn up that Wade was indeed poisoned using a poison that the Wades did have around the house.
Next is the search for the murderer which, oddly enough, is being headed up by Blake and Morgan rather than the police. The widow is being strangely enigmatic about all of this, and slowly clues arise that point to the widow (Margaret Lindsay) as the murderer. She is arrested and tried for the murder, but this is where things get weird. Suddenly Timmy Blake, ace reporter, grows a heart and a conscience and becomes convinced that the widow is innocent when the clues she dug up were what indicted her in the first place. But for some reason the widow, although she says she is innocent, refuses to assist in her own defense. Complications ensue.
This one was better than I expected precisely because it takes such an odd turn during its last one third, and the mystery is compelling. This was made during the two year period that James Cagney was absent Warner Brothers while they were locked in a contract dispute. And although O'Brien was very good in his role, his seemed like the kind of part that would have gone to Cagney had he been available at the time.
If you've seen Mervyn LeRoy's excellent FIVE STAR FINAL made in 1931 this will make you a little depressed. That film was a scathing attack on the disgusting and disreputable practices of the gutter press but six years later it looks like its message was ignored. It's not just the fact that nothing seems to have changed, this picture presents its protagonists as nice, fun-loving regular guys and even tries to inject some elements of comedy. There's no condemnation of these unpleasant people, they don't change, they're the same scumbags at the end as they are at the beginning. The unfunny comedy relief doesn't help - it actually feels quite out of place and a little disrespectful.
After destroying someone's life, Joan Blondell's character does try to make amends but not because she thinks it's the right thing to do, she does this just to make herself feel better about herself. She and Pat O'Brien do put in what feel like authentic performances which does let you engage with them - although you don't really want to.
It's a reasonably well made picture but there's an undercurrent of sourness to this.
Here, the reporter is beautiful Joan Blondell, as sparkling and energetic as ever, and her editor is Pat O'Brien (who also appeared in "The Front Page"). Blondell is Timmy, a crafty reporter good at getting in on the most important stories, no matter what she has to do. O'Brien is Bill Morgan, who knows Timmy is the best and is constantly sending her out.
When a wealthy man dies, Bill receives a letter saying he was poisoned, so he dispatches Timmy to investigate. She's able to stop the funeral and convince the medical examiner to do an autopsy. Turns out he was poisoned, and suspicion falls on his wife (Margaret Lindsay). The paper goes after her in a big way, but after Timmy spends some time with her, she begins to suspect that the widow is innocent and hiding something. This puts her at odds with Bill.
Thanks to Blondell's performance, this movie manages to come off, though it isn't the tightest script. It flip-flops between comedy and heavy drama, and the alliance is uneasy.
John Litel and Regis Toomey are featured. Lindsay gives a '30s-style performance, and today it sticks out as being melodramatic. That was the style, and that's the way many roles were written. This was on its way out of style due to stars like Bette Davis.
Entertaining. Always a pleasure to see Blondell in a film.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe opening train wreck was done using pre-WWII O gauge Lionel trains and 1:48 scale signals.
- GaffesIn the close-up of an article by 'Timmy' Blake of the trial, the first two paragraphs are about the trial and Arline Wade. The following paragraphs are about other subjects entirely.
- Citations
'Timmy' Blake: I hate spoil your fun Buck; but, this isn't the ball game we're going to.
Buck: Huh?
'Timmy' Blake: Take that Press card outta your hat!
- Crédits fousOpening credits appear as headlines on a newspaper.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Back in Circulation
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 21 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1