Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe Phantom Robber gets a fortune in jewels and some valuable papers from a robbery on the crack train "The Midnight Limited" and Val Lennon and his pretty assistant, Joan Marshall, are on h... Tout lireThe Phantom Robber gets a fortune in jewels and some valuable papers from a robbery on the crack train "The Midnight Limited" and Val Lennon and his pretty assistant, Joan Marshall, are on his trail. But the Phantom strikes three more times and adds murder to his list. Val decide... Tout lireThe Phantom Robber gets a fortune in jewels and some valuable papers from a robbery on the crack train "The Midnight Limited" and Val Lennon and his pretty assistant, Joan Marshall, are on his trail. But the Phantom strikes three more times and adds murder to his list. Val decides to use himself as bait, although Chief Harrigan and Joan beg him not to risk his life. B... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Valentine 'Val' Lennon
- (as John King)
- Abel Krantz
- (as Monty Collins)
- Train Conductor
- (as Herb Ashley)
- Jake Pringle
- (non crédité)
- Detective Conway
- (non crédité)
- Inspector in Montreal
- (non crédité)
- Detective Joe O'Neill
- (non crédité)
- Joe - Hotel Desk Clerk
- (non crédité)
- Mr. Gellard
- (non crédité)
- John - Train Porter
- (non crédité)
- Willy - Train Porter
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
The film is set mostly on trains, where a criminal genius keeps robbing folks of huge sums of money...and the police seem powerless to stop this. However, Val ('Dusty' King) promises to solve the case.
Dusty King was an actor known for B-westerns and action movies. In other words, he was pretty good at punching folks and the like....but wasn't the most charismatic or sexy actors. In fact, in this one he seems incredibly ordinary. He couldn't help it...he just wasn't a strong leading man type for this sort of film. Add to that the rather cheap look of the film and you've got a film that isn't bad...but isn't all that good either.
Marjorie Reynolds is appealing as the heroine. John King makes a good investigator. Then he opens his mouth and sings. "The Singing Detective" this also is not.
The dialog is strangely wordy and improbable in many cases. People have been given real mouthfuls to speak. But the plot is a decent one. It moves along nicely. And I had no idea who the villains were going to turn out to be. Usually I can either tell or I've got lost in too many characters.
Here, though, the characters are nicely delineated. And the ending comes as a surprise. At least it did for me.
The heroine is also little more than a cypher, but fortunately she is so charismatically played by charmingly vivacious Marjorie Reynolds that our almost total lack of any knowledge at all as to her likes and dislikes, her background and personality, seems not to matter. True, the script stratagem that cements her into the plot is most obtrusively unconvincing, but nonetheless I'm not complaining on this score. What does upset me is that an opportunity for a first-class little "B" has been thrown away by inadequate scripting.
Another minus is that all the exterior train footage is so obviously stock materialand rather ancient stock material at that! This lessens the movie's appeal for train buffs. And the usual racist "humor" with the eye-rolling porters doesn't help matters either. Tighter film editing was certainly called for. Any volunteers?
The story wastes no time plunging the audience into mystery. With a string of unexplained robberies haunting a night train, suspicion spreads among the passengers - each with just enough character to feel suspicious without tipping the plot too early. The lead detective is cool and composed, but it's the sharp pacing and tight dialogue that really keep things moving.
This isn't a grand production, but that's part of its charm. The train setting is used cleverly, creating a sense of urgency and movement that mirrors the unraveling mystery. While it might not have the visual flourishes of later noirs, it delivers a solid, engaging ride for fans of classic crime cinema.
If you're looking for a forgotten gem from the 1940s that knows exactly what it is, Midnight Limited is worth hopping aboard.
It's surprising because the director of this movie was Howard Bretherton. He was not a great director, but he was among that brotherhood who graduated from the editing booth. He could turn out a cheap feature quickly and usually make them pretty watchable. Such directors rarely shot scenes that would be removed by the editor; the skill was called 'cutting in the camera'.
Against actors who can't speak in any way that makes sense, the best director struggles in vain. While Bretherton toiled mostly in B Westerns, he was on his way up from here, first to Republic and then Columbia. He would retire from the Big Screen in 1952, spend a few years directing TV and die in 1969, aged 79.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis film received its earliest documented telecasts in Chicago Tuesday 9 February 1949 on WBKB (Channel 4), in Syracuse Wednesday 15 June 1949 on WHEN (Channel 8), in New York City Friday 22 July 1949 on WPIX (Channel 11) , in Detroit Monday 8 August 1949 on WXYZ (Channel7), in Los Angeles Tuesday 27 September 1949 on KTLA (Channel 5), and in Cincinnati Sunday 6 November 1949 on WLW-T (Channel 4).
- GaffesObvious parallel-moving rounded floodlight-beams from movie-10K's that sweep across and "follow" the general movement of the groups of passengers as they head towards the trains, when Val and Joan are first shown observing the passengers.
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Midnight Limited?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 1 minute
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1