Businessman Gerald Axton goes to his ranch to rest, having had a near-heart-attack due to business worries. But while there (with his female assistant who makes his heart flutter as much as ... Read allBusinessman Gerald Axton goes to his ranch to rest, having had a near-heart-attack due to business worries. But while there (with his female assistant who makes his heart flutter as much as his business worries), a pair of escaped criminals crashes the party, as well as a plane l... Read allBusinessman Gerald Axton goes to his ranch to rest, having had a near-heart-attack due to business worries. But while there (with his female assistant who makes his heart flutter as much as his business worries), a pair of escaped criminals crashes the party, as well as a plane load of passengers who literally crash in. Coincidentally, the plane was carrying the state... Read all
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** 1/2 (out of 4)
Semi-rip of The Petrified Forest has a plane full of people crash landing on the field of a man (Lionel Atwill) being held captive by a couple robbers. There are a few good laughs here but the direction is so strange that it's hard to really get caught up in the film. There's very little suspense in the movie but there are a couple nice laughs, which help the movie move along. Wallace Ford playing the tough guy was a bit hard to believe and led to several unintentional laughs. J. Carroll Naish and Irene Harvey turn in good performances as does Atwill.
Gerald Axton (Lionel Atwill), a wealthy industrialist, is told by his doctor that he'll have a fatal heart attack if he doesn't rest awhile, so he decides to retreat to his ranch. Axton has sent an actress he has romantically tired of away to Hollywood for a screen test, and she is scheduled to fly there the next day with an actor she is in love with (Louis Hayward), The fact that she chose another man and has bruised his ego is why Axton wants her out of his sight. On the same plane is the windbag governor of the state, with whom Axton is currently having a feud. A cynical world-weary reporter is also onboard.
Axton is currently in love with his assistant, Laura, and has convinced her to come to his ranch with him. He has sent her husband on a rather dangerous aerial mission given the weather, and hopes to seduce Laura while her husband is otherwise occupied in the air. At the same time, murderers Jack and Judy escape from the sheriff near the Axton ranch and are looking for a place to temporarily hole up.
All of these people - and their planes - end up at the Axton ranch. Since Axton doesn't particularly like any of these people he plays psychological games with them, with unclear motives, although it's safe to say he'd be OK with all of them winding up dead with the exception of Laura. Complications ensue.
This is a rare B movie for MGM, with none of their familiar contract players, not even their supporting ones. The role of the hardened and hard drinking reporter would have probably gone to Lee Tracy in better days, but is well played by Stuart Erwin. The fact that he and Atwill are the most recognizable members of the cast just burnishes the film's B credentials.
It has a seemingly code busting ending that is oddly sympathetic to the escaped criminals. I'd recommend it as an entertaining B that looks like nothing else MGM did during the 30s.
It's a little like "The Petrified Forest." That holds up pretty well but is very stagy. And it's a little like "Key Largo," which no one is going to fault.
Lionel Atwill is a manipulator who tries to have the husband of a woman he's attracted to crash his plane. At the same time, he will be taking care of an ex-girlfriend, an actress he has ostensibly sent to Hollywood in that same plane. Her boyfriend, Louis Hayward, a fading movie star, is also on the plane, as is the governor of the state. Atwill has it in for him.
The plane crashes at his house in the country, where he is ostensibly taking in the eponymous rest.
Add t to this mix a reporter who wants the story. (A rather pudgy looking Stuart Erwin is good in this role.) And a Bonnie and Clyde duo on the lam. Their names are Jack and Judy. Or, their name (as they were originally a vaudeville team) IS Jack and Judy.
All this, as well as a couple minor players, in one house! This doesn't come across as a formulaic programmer. It has plenty of tension. The only aspect that bothered me was Jack's slang: Over and over, instead of saying "OK," he says "Oke." Slang can really date a movie. But this one holds up very well indeed, in spite of that one small annoyance.
Atwill is great as always, one of the most underrated actors of the Golden Era, and Bernadene Hayes steals the film half way through as the Vaudeville hoofer turned gun moll.
I'll bet it was fun to make this one.
The cast, all first rate character actors or middle-tier stars perform their obligations well. Each fulfilling a specified characterization. Lionel Atwill, driven and vindictive business tycoon no doubt a R.I.N.O, Raymond Walburn, corrupt Governor (in Illinois that's expected), Stuart Erwin, obnoxious reporter (is there any other type), Louis Hayward, washed up actor (which he would become post WWII). Added too this is Wallace Ford and Bernadene Hayes as 'Jack and Judy' (Bonnie & Clyde) plus Irene Hervey and Ann Loring for the 'Damsels In Distress' (D.I.D.).
They are all thrown together in a plot that includes a isolated ranch substituting for the 'old dark house'. Romantic liaisons gone wrong, a airplane crash with gangsters on the loose. Too bad they did not have a sandstorm to go with it, but you cannot have everything. I liked it and with a running time of only 70" you cannot go wrong to give it a try.
Did you know
- TriviaThe radio at Axton's ranch is an extremely rare 1935 Zenith model 1000Z "Stratosphere". Only 350 were made and it was priced at $750 ($16,600 in 2023). It used 25 vacuum tubes and its cabinet is made of inlaid walnut, elm and laurel woods. It had a then cutting-edge automatic volume control. In 2023 these radios, completely restored, can fetch over $50,000. It is the "holy grail" for radio collectors and museums.
- Quotes
Oscar 'Chubby' Rudd: Two years ago you were so conservative, you buttoned your underwear up the sides; now when you go past, people think it's the fire department out on a picnic!
- SoundtracksI've Got a Feelin' You're Foolin'
(uncredited)
Music by Nacio Herb Brown
Lyrics (unused) by Arthur Freed
Played on piano at the ranch by Wallace Ford
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- Silêncio Absoluto
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- Runtime
- 1h 10m(70 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1