AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
490
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaDelia Jordan's father is murdered and some very valuable jewelry stolen. She hires reformed thief Michael Lanyard to find killer and jewels, before the police begin to suspect him.Delia Jordan's father is murdered and some very valuable jewelry stolen. She hires reformed thief Michael Lanyard to find killer and jewels, before the police begin to suspect him.Delia Jordan's father is murdered and some very valuable jewelry stolen. She hires reformed thief Michael Lanyard to find killer and jewels, before the police begin to suspect him.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Fred Kelsey
- Dickens
- (as Fred A. Kelsey)
George Lynn
- Dorgan
- (as Peter Lynn)
Murray Alper
- Pete
- (não creditado)
Harry A. Bailey
- Poker Game Dealer
- (não creditado)
Frank Bruno
- Gossiper
- (não creditado)
James Carlisle
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
Maurice Cass
- Jeweler at Martier's
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
"The Lone Wolf Strikes" from 1940 is a neat entry into the Lone Wolf series starring Warren William. William is delightful as Michael Lanyard, aka The Lone Wolf. His butler is played by Eric Blore, who has a large part in this and is very funny. In this story, Lanyard is asked by a friend to find pearls that were stolen from a friend of his, who was subsequently murdered - though the murder was called an accident.
Fake pearls and real pearls bounce back and forth, with William going to a gathering as Emil Gorlick, a diamond merchant. Gorlick is actually played by Montagu Love, but when William finds out that he has never met the thieves, he ties Gorlick up and impersonates him in order to re-steal the pearls.
Warren William was a wonderful, relaxed actor, an old-fashioned patrician type, who found humor in roles once the silents ended. In silents, he usually played the heavy. He played Perry Mason, Sam Spade, and Philo Vance, among other parts. He continued to play the occasional heavy, but he's best known for his precode work as a meanie. He died in 1948, only 53.
Very enjoyable.
Fake pearls and real pearls bounce back and forth, with William going to a gathering as Emil Gorlick, a diamond merchant. Gorlick is actually played by Montagu Love, but when William finds out that he has never met the thieves, he ties Gorlick up and impersonates him in order to re-steal the pearls.
Warren William was a wonderful, relaxed actor, an old-fashioned patrician type, who found humor in roles once the silents ended. In silents, he usually played the heavy. He played Perry Mason, Sam Spade, and Philo Vance, among other parts. He continued to play the occasional heavy, but he's best known for his precode work as a meanie. He died in 1948, only 53.
Very enjoyable.
This was William Warren's 2nd outing as Michael Lanyard the Lone Wolf with the eternal butler Eric Blore in for his 1st of many. It's another pleasant mystery-adventure, with fairly high Columbia production values and a generally light-hearted approach.
Girls father is murdered and has valuable pearl necklace stolen, girl enrols Lanyard to help and they both seem keener to find the pearls than the murderers. At first anyway, when their close mutual friend is also murdered it suddenly gets serious. With many wonderful gurnings by Blore, laconic wit from William and decoration from inquisitive Joan Perry it races along to the satisfactory climax. Favourite bit: Lanyard's fond encounter with his old friend (?) Emil Gorlic (played by Montagu Love) in his hotel room. Lanyard's passion for his extensive aquarium in his living room was I'm glad to relate, short-lived, and by the way the disputed elaborate balcony from Spy Hunt is here too, again on the 1st floor this time at the house of one of the baddies.
If you like the genre as I do - nice work by all concerned, if you don't - shame you wasted your time.
Girls father is murdered and has valuable pearl necklace stolen, girl enrols Lanyard to help and they both seem keener to find the pearls than the murderers. At first anyway, when their close mutual friend is also murdered it suddenly gets serious. With many wonderful gurnings by Blore, laconic wit from William and decoration from inquisitive Joan Perry it races along to the satisfactory climax. Favourite bit: Lanyard's fond encounter with his old friend (?) Emil Gorlic (played by Montagu Love) in his hotel room. Lanyard's passion for his extensive aquarium in his living room was I'm glad to relate, short-lived, and by the way the disputed elaborate balcony from Spy Hunt is here too, again on the 1st floor this time at the house of one of the baddies.
If you like the genre as I do - nice work by all concerned, if you don't - shame you wasted your time.
This is the second of the Lone Wolf series starring the roguish Warren William. While this film includes a positive cast change (Eric Blore is now the butler), the overall level of supporting acting is a big drop off from the last film. In the first one, Rita Hayworth and Ida Lupino were along for the ride as well as the Wolf's daughter (played very well by the excellent child actress, Virginia Weidler). Apart from Blore, the show is all Warren William and while he is very good, the film's chemistry is a bit lacking--making this a pretty ordinary B-detective film. While not quite as exciting or magical as a Sherlock Holmes or Charlie Chan film, it is roughly on-par with a Saint or Falcon film--and this isn't bad company for this film. A slightly better than average time-passer for fans of the genre--but unfortunately, not a lot more.
Director Sidney Salkow directed the films in the Lone Wolf series, Warren William portrayed with considerable charm the shady leading man, and the formula generally worked well.
Skillful B&W cinematography by Henry Freulich definitely helps, especially the interiors where all the pearl necklace shenanigans happen, with so many faux/real item exchanges that it did not take long for me to feel that I was looking for a ball under countless thimbles.
William and Joan Perry make a good looking leading duo, he with his attention firmly trained on his multifaceted aquarium, she heads over heels for a fella using her to spy on the Lone Wolf, and Eric Blore ever the thumb-sucking butler who the Lone Wolf counts on to spill the beans, so as to deceive the villains.
The final chase is a real sleeper to wrap a light-hearted 67-minute flick that is definitely worth watching. Found it better than the more famous THE LONE WOLF KEEPS A DATE. 7/10.
Skillful B&W cinematography by Henry Freulich definitely helps, especially the interiors where all the pearl necklace shenanigans happen, with so many faux/real item exchanges that it did not take long for me to feel that I was looking for a ball under countless thimbles.
William and Joan Perry make a good looking leading duo, he with his attention firmly trained on his multifaceted aquarium, she heads over heels for a fella using her to spy on the Lone Wolf, and Eric Blore ever the thumb-sucking butler who the Lone Wolf counts on to spill the beans, so as to deceive the villains.
The final chase is a real sleeper to wrap a light-hearted 67-minute flick that is definitely worth watching. Found it better than the more famous THE LONE WOLF KEEPS A DATE. 7/10.
Decent entry in The Lone Wolf series. The plot about a stolen pearl necklace and fake duplicates, along with two gangs of competing baddies, is pretty convoluted. In fact, you may need a scorecard to keep track of the disappearing necklaces. Holding things together, of course, is the commanding Warren William as the reformed jewel thief turned amateur sleuth. As the Wolf, he does the tongue-in-cheek part well, so we never take things too seriously—a requirement for the many amateur detectives of the time. But what's this about the Wolf ooing-and-aahing over his rows of aquariums. Something fishy going on here. There's also good humorous support from Blore as the butler, while the two well-upholstered girls, Perry and Alwyn, supply tricky eye candy.
Frankly, I would prefer a more streamlined plot, (do we really need a second jewel thief gang), but the basic premise is a good one, and I like that first bit of necklace trickery where Jordan gets fooled by a seductive Binnie. Note that the story is from the now legendary blacklisted Dalton Trumbo, still working the B-movie level. On the whole, it's an entertaining hour without being anything special.
Frankly, I would prefer a more streamlined plot, (do we really need a second jewel thief gang), but the basic premise is a good one, and I like that first bit of necklace trickery where Jordan gets fooled by a seductive Binnie. Note that the story is from the now legendary blacklisted Dalton Trumbo, still working the B-movie level. On the whole, it's an entertaining hour without being anything special.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAlthough the credits specify the story was based on a "work" by Louis Joseph Vance, no such work has been found. Only some of the characters in his novels were used in this story.
- Erros de gravaçãoDelia and Michael enter the room and Delia screams at what she sees, but the body is behind the desk and invisible from the door,
- ConexõesFollowed by Noiva da Fatalidade (1940)
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- How long is The Lone Wolf Strikes?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 7 min(67 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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