अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंThe ex-fiancée of a young rich man becomes the companion of a jewel thief, forming a vaudeville act with face "cure", but after she discovers, that she can really cure people, she decides to... सभी पढ़ेंThe ex-fiancée of a young rich man becomes the companion of a jewel thief, forming a vaudeville act with face "cure", but after she discovers, that she can really cure people, she decides to quit.The ex-fiancée of a young rich man becomes the companion of a jewel thief, forming a vaudeville act with face "cure", but after she discovers, that she can really cure people, she decides to quit.
Vinton Hayworth
- Dan 'Dandy' Bennett
- (as Jack Arnold)
Hugh Chapman
- Boy in wheelchair
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Lew Davis
- Nightclub Waiter
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
John Dilson
- Mr. Greer
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Helen Jerome Eddy
- Mrs. Thompson
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Robert Gleckler
- Checkers, Casino Owner
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
William Gould
- Jewelry Fence
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Eddie Hart
- Eddie, Detective
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Nightclub entertainers Sally Eilers, Paul Guilfoyle, and Ann Miller elude a nightclub raid and become the special project of Detective Jonathan Hale. Failing to find work they end up at a revival meeting of Earl Hodgins where Eilers is
convinced there's a better way to work this game. So the former Broadway
chorus girl becomes a regular Aimee Semple McPherson, a regular Tarnished
Angel.
Of course with the Code now firmly in place there were now certain parameters that dictated how the plot would go. Our three miscreants try to be bad but can't help being good. In fact Jonathan Hale makes a career bust and his good name is restored.
The pre-Code <iracle Woman was a lot better with the same subject matter though Ann Miller has a nice dance number.
Of course with the Code now firmly in place there were now certain parameters that dictated how the plot would go. Our three miscreants try to be bad but can't help being good. In fact Jonathan Hale makes a career bust and his good name is restored.
The pre-Code <iracle Woman was a lot better with the same subject matter though Ann Miller has a nice dance number.
One didn't have to pay the admission price to this film in 1938 to know all about the plot, and if all of the posters were read before entering,there wasn't much chance of getting surprised i.e,; Sensational Expose of "Miracle Racket." Thrilling drama of show girl who turned "revivalist" for money gives inside stuff on phoneys. Fake evangelism exposed in a sensational story of Crime and Faith. She Lived A Scarlet Lie! Broadway show girl becomes revivalist..in a drama of night clubs and camp meetings that packs a mighty heart wallop. (and for those who couldn't guess the ending); She laughed at "suckers" who fell for her "line"...and fell herself for the oldest "line" of all. Monogram and PRC had better ideas regarding taglines on their posters; write something enticing that had nothing at all to do with the film being shown.
This was clearly made on a fairly low budget. Its director was certainly competent but not a distinguished one. When one thinks dark and murky, do the words Ann Miller come to mind? When one thinks star of movie about bad girl who tries a sham evangelist routine does Sally Eilers appear anywhere in the top 25 choices for this time period? Yet, Eilers is convincing. Miller is fine. The male performers are forgettable but adequate. And the mood it creates is on-target and chilling.
Had this come out a few years later, it would qualify as a film noir. The characters are hard-boiled. Eilers tries to dupe kindhearted society matron Alma Kruger. The children's hospital founded and operated by Kruger, which touches Eilers, is a precursor to the plot of "The Naked Kiss," which came almost three decades later.
This dark little movie is well worth a look.
Had this come out a few years later, it would qualify as a film noir. The characters are hard-boiled. Eilers tries to dupe kindhearted society matron Alma Kruger. The children's hospital founded and operated by Kruger, which touches Eilers, is a precursor to the plot of "The Naked Kiss," which came almost three decades later.
This dark little movie is well worth a look.
Police detective Cramer is obsessed with finding jewel thief Checkers and pursues nightclub performer Carol Vinson (Sally Eilers). He gets tricked and ridiculed in the press. Carol leaves town with her two performing friends. They walk into a revival meeting and she has an idea. She decides to work the revival circuit as Sister Connie. She raises the stakes by being a faith-healer and gets the best of Cramer again.
The idea is ripped from the headlines. While she is morally compromised, she is still intriguing as the central lead. I would have liked a darker journey, but this is post-Code at this point. She needs to Break Bad for a more compelling story. The second half is a bit meandering and the story loses steam. It's too bad. I really like the first half.
The idea is ripped from the headlines. While she is morally compromised, she is still intriguing as the central lead. I would have liked a darker journey, but this is post-Code at this point. She needs to Break Bad for a more compelling story. The second half is a bit meandering and the story loses steam. It's too bad. I really like the first half.
There's a context to "Tarnished Angel" that many folks today might miss. In the 1920s, the biggest traveling evangelist was Aimee Semple McPherson. She was HUGE but ultimately many folks came to doubt her sincerity and allegations of all sorts of naughty behaviors reduced much of her fame and public adoration. As a result, a few years later, Frank Capra and Barbara Stanwyck made "The Miracle Woman" (1931)...an exposee of a lady evangelist who was in reality a fake. It was obviously modeled after McPherson, but for legal reasons they denied it was a veiled biography of her and her work.
In addition to this influence, I think the early Claude Rains film, "The Clairvoyant" (1935) must have influenced the writing of "Tarnished Angel". Rains plays a fake mentalist who, inexplicably, develops the real ability to tell the future...which horrified him when he saw death in some of his patrons! This sort of revelation is important to "Tarnished Angel".
"Tarnished Angel" begins with a police raid on a gambling clip joint. Carol (Sally Eilers) manages to escape and the man behind the raid is intent on catching her one day, as she is a crook. Later, Carol attends an evangelistic meeting just for the free food. After all, she is really down and out. But the meeting gives her the idea to reinvent herself....posing as a fake miracle worker who can heal the sick. Not surprisingly, she pays shills to pretend to be disabled and in the meetings she 'heals' them! But 'Sister Connie' is no dummy and soon is able to gain respectability...and even admits in one of her meetings that she was once a 'bad girl' named Carol! This fake sincerity act works like a charm....and soon all sorts of people believe in her and her cause....except for that cop who knows what sort she really is. Where does all this go next? See the film.
While the film did pull its punches at the end, this is an excellent B-movie. While the budget was relatively low, the actors mostly second-tier and the running time just over an hour (all hallmarks of a B), it is far better than you'd expect. It also is rather timeless, as the story, sadly, isn't so unusual today with some very famous fake faith healers being exposed in recent years.
By the way, the word 'cripple' is used a lot. Of course it's not politically correct to say that...but crooks would use words like that, so it added to the realism.
In addition to this influence, I think the early Claude Rains film, "The Clairvoyant" (1935) must have influenced the writing of "Tarnished Angel". Rains plays a fake mentalist who, inexplicably, develops the real ability to tell the future...which horrified him when he saw death in some of his patrons! This sort of revelation is important to "Tarnished Angel".
"Tarnished Angel" begins with a police raid on a gambling clip joint. Carol (Sally Eilers) manages to escape and the man behind the raid is intent on catching her one day, as she is a crook. Later, Carol attends an evangelistic meeting just for the free food. After all, she is really down and out. But the meeting gives her the idea to reinvent herself....posing as a fake miracle worker who can heal the sick. Not surprisingly, she pays shills to pretend to be disabled and in the meetings she 'heals' them! But 'Sister Connie' is no dummy and soon is able to gain respectability...and even admits in one of her meetings that she was once a 'bad girl' named Carol! This fake sincerity act works like a charm....and soon all sorts of people believe in her and her cause....except for that cop who knows what sort she really is. Where does all this go next? See the film.
While the film did pull its punches at the end, this is an excellent B-movie. While the budget was relatively low, the actors mostly second-tier and the running time just over an hour (all hallmarks of a B), it is far better than you'd expect. It also is rather timeless, as the story, sadly, isn't so unusual today with some very famous fake faith healers being exposed in recent years.
By the way, the word 'cripple' is used a lot. Of course it's not politically correct to say that...but crooks would use words like that, so it added to the realism.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe costumes worn by Sally Eilers as "Sister Connie" resembled those worn by Aimee Semple McPherson, also known as Sister Aimee, a well-known evangelist at the time.
- गूफ़The car chase after the raid at the club goes past the Mayflower doughnut shop on the corner of 8th Street and South Broadway in Los Angeles three times, and much too quickly for the chase just going around and around the block. They are finally pulled over in front of the May Department Store at the same intersection.
- साउंडट्रैकIt's the Doctor's Orders
(1938)
Music by Sammy Fain
Lyrics by Lew Brown
Played during the opening credits and at the end
Sung by Ann Miller at the Club Tally-Ho
Reprised on piano by Sally Eilers while Ann Miller tap-danced
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि
- 1 घं 7 मि(67 min)
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.37 : 1
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