A nightclub singer is carrying on an affair with a married man. When she is found murdered, her lover is suspected of the crime.A nightclub singer is carrying on an affair with a married man. When she is found murdered, her lover is suspected of the crime.A nightclub singer is carrying on an affair with a married man. When she is found murdered, her lover is suspected of the crime.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
Charles D. Brown
- Detective
- (uncredited)
Mary Gordon
- Nurse
- (uncredited)
Robert Homans
- Desk Sergeant
- (uncredited)
Thomas E. Jackson
- Police Commissioner
- (uncredited)
Nicholas Kobliansky
- Cafe Manager
- (uncredited)
Bob Kortman
- Dave the Slapper
- (uncredited)
Imboden Parrish
- Cafe Patron
- (uncredited)
Virginia Pickering
- Baby
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Clive Brook (Jim) and Kay Francis (Fanny) are an upper class married couple who no longer get along with one another. They are both having affairs and part ways. Clive heads off to a down-market bar where his mistress Miriam Hopkins (Rosie) entertains middle-aged men. It's not really entertaining, though. Have you heard her sing??!! See this film and you'll understand what I mean. Anyway, she is also married. Being a singer in a dive-bar, her husband is, of course, a no-good gangster type who murders people. Say hello to Regis Toomey (Tony). Their marriage is also in difficulty and whilst she wants rid of him, Toomey wants her to take him back and give him money. The focus of the story is on Clive's storyline as he gets drunk and hangs out with Hopkins.
Whilst there is plenty of plot that is covered during this short film, unfortunately, three out of the four main characters are annoying. Clive's drunk character never gives off any personality whatsoever. He just comes across as arrogant and his unpleasantness is impossible to relate to and so it's hard to sympathize with him as the leading man. Mr boring. That leads us to the impossible scenario of Kay Francis character being totally in love with him and willing to sacrifice her own happiness to fit in with his arrogant ways. No fricking way! Her character is poorly written. Then there is Regis Toomey - again, it's impossible to relate to such a stupid character. Imagine talking to landlady Lucille La Verne like that. Something may well tell you that she might get the last laugh! The men are awful in this film. Miriam Hopkins runs the show whilst she is on screen. So, because of the cast, I'm afraid the film gets dragged down in its entertainment value to no more than a passable 'ok' status.
Whilst there is plenty of plot that is covered during this short film, unfortunately, three out of the four main characters are annoying. Clive's drunk character never gives off any personality whatsoever. He just comes across as arrogant and his unpleasantness is impossible to relate to and so it's hard to sympathize with him as the leading man. Mr boring. That leads us to the impossible scenario of Kay Francis character being totally in love with him and willing to sacrifice her own happiness to fit in with his arrogant ways. No fricking way! Her character is poorly written. Then there is Regis Toomey - again, it's impossible to relate to such a stupid character. Imagine talking to landlady Lucille La Verne like that. Something may well tell you that she might get the last laugh! The men are awful in this film. Miriam Hopkins runs the show whilst she is on screen. So, because of the cast, I'm afraid the film gets dragged down in its entertainment value to no more than a passable 'ok' status.
Clive Brooks and Kay Francis have a marriage that's falling apart. She is having an affair. He drinks heavily and is also having an affair with nightclub singer Miriam Hopkins. Hopkins in turn has a failing marriage to small time hood Regis Toomey. Toomey murders Hopkins while Brooks is asleep in the next room. Brooks is blamed. This pre-code crime melodrama fits a labyrinthine plot into just over an hour and still has time for Hopkins to sing two songs. They seriously do not make them like this anymore. This one's a load of fun with a batch of colorful characters all doing nasty stuff to each other. Lucille La Verne stands out as a rugged old battleaxe who does in Toomey. The film's title comes from the fact that the entire plot unfolds in only 24 hours.
There are some terrific gems in Paramount's library from 1930-34 that are simply turning to dust. It's a shame they're not on video. 24 Hours qualifies for an unqualified hit on all counts. It's moody, almost "noir" feel is fascinating. It's a visual treasure. Adulterous couple Clive Brook (his stiff, inebriated self) and Kay Francis (captivating here in one of her subtle, effective performances)survive an harrowing 24 Hours in which Brooks' lover (Miriam Hopkins steals the show as a lively chanteuse) manages to get bumped off by her maniacal husband (Regis Toomey). It's tastefully handled, yet gripping in its understatement. The photography is fluid -- this seems more like a 1932 film than a 31 -- it's very mobile, edited nicely. Try to get a copy of this from a collector. You won't be disappointed.
The other reviewers were on the mark on this one. It is an excellent Pre-Code drama. It catches you from the opening credits, superimposed over theatrical-looking models of the New York City skyline. You see the time on a big clock tower, and the 24 hours of the title starts there. All the action fits into that time frame, and the film ends with a shot of the same tower, with the same time as at the beginning. They sure fit a lot of excitement into that one-day period.
Brook and Francis are the stars of the film, but Hopkins really steals the show as the nightclub singer. You often read of Hopkins' difficult side- that she wasn't easy to work with, etc. And she and Bette Davis seem to have had a real hate-fest going (but, of course, Davis was reputed to be difficult, too). Whatever the truth of all that, I have always liked Hopkins a lot. She gave some wonderful performances, especially in that Pre-Code era. Her Ivy in "Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" is probably her best, but she was good in everything. "The Story of Temple Drake," this film, and many others. And she was great in comedy films, too. See "The Smiling Lieutenant" and "Trouble in Paradise," for example. The fact that such a master as Ernst Lubitsch put her in a number of his films says something.
Kay Francis was always good in these weepie kinds of roles. She really patented the part of the woman who is unhappy in her marriage, and looks for love elsewhere. This part is along the lines of the many films she made for Paramount and Warners, and she's very effective and believable here. I have mixed feelings about Clive Brook as an actor (as a man, he was reportedly a great guy). In many of his parts, he is the stiffest of stiff-upper lip gentlemen. As in "Shanghai Express." You kind of want to shake him, to get some kind of reaction out of him. But he was very popular at that time, and people seemed to like him. He could be very good, when he broke that frozen mask, and showed some emotion. He has a touching scene here, when he finds Hopkins the morning after his drunken adventures.
Lucille La Verne, one of the all-time great character actresses, is wonderful here, as always. She had such a distinctive face and voice. You can see why Disney used her as the model and voice of the witch in "Snow White." She was good in everything, from the woman who hides, and cheats, the down-and-out Rico in "Little Caesar," to her iconic part as the pal of Madame De Farge in "A Tale of Two Cities." You know, one of the ladies who sits knitting at the base of the guillotine, cackling and jeering as the aristocrats have their heads cut off. That part is probably the one everyone remembers her for. Her bio on IMDb.com is very interesting- a longtime legitimate stage actress, etc.
Director Gering's bio is interesting, too. A member of a Soviet delegation to the States, who stayed, and made a career for himself. He made some interesting films, too. "The Devil and the Deep," "Thirty Day Princess," and some other excellent films.
These early-Talkie films are so interesting, for a myriad of reasons. Aside from having great actors, production values, good directors, etc., they are also interesting for their historical and sociological insights into those times. It really is like peering through a kind of time- machine window, as if you're looking in on people from another era, or almost from another dimension. It really is fascinating. I also think these early sound movies, with their short running times, are like filmed short stories. Most of them run a little over an hour, and they manage to fit so much into that brief time. New movie makers could learn a lot on how to cut to the chase in such a short time, and still make a good film.
Anyway, check it out. This is a fascinating Pre-Code film, almost a blueprint for the late 40s Film Noirs. And it has some great performances.
Brook and Francis are the stars of the film, but Hopkins really steals the show as the nightclub singer. You often read of Hopkins' difficult side- that she wasn't easy to work with, etc. And she and Bette Davis seem to have had a real hate-fest going (but, of course, Davis was reputed to be difficult, too). Whatever the truth of all that, I have always liked Hopkins a lot. She gave some wonderful performances, especially in that Pre-Code era. Her Ivy in "Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" is probably her best, but she was good in everything. "The Story of Temple Drake," this film, and many others. And she was great in comedy films, too. See "The Smiling Lieutenant" and "Trouble in Paradise," for example. The fact that such a master as Ernst Lubitsch put her in a number of his films says something.
Kay Francis was always good in these weepie kinds of roles. She really patented the part of the woman who is unhappy in her marriage, and looks for love elsewhere. This part is along the lines of the many films she made for Paramount and Warners, and she's very effective and believable here. I have mixed feelings about Clive Brook as an actor (as a man, he was reportedly a great guy). In many of his parts, he is the stiffest of stiff-upper lip gentlemen. As in "Shanghai Express." You kind of want to shake him, to get some kind of reaction out of him. But he was very popular at that time, and people seemed to like him. He could be very good, when he broke that frozen mask, and showed some emotion. He has a touching scene here, when he finds Hopkins the morning after his drunken adventures.
Lucille La Verne, one of the all-time great character actresses, is wonderful here, as always. She had such a distinctive face and voice. You can see why Disney used her as the model and voice of the witch in "Snow White." She was good in everything, from the woman who hides, and cheats, the down-and-out Rico in "Little Caesar," to her iconic part as the pal of Madame De Farge in "A Tale of Two Cities." You know, one of the ladies who sits knitting at the base of the guillotine, cackling and jeering as the aristocrats have their heads cut off. That part is probably the one everyone remembers her for. Her bio on IMDb.com is very interesting- a longtime legitimate stage actress, etc.
Director Gering's bio is interesting, too. A member of a Soviet delegation to the States, who stayed, and made a career for himself. He made some interesting films, too. "The Devil and the Deep," "Thirty Day Princess," and some other excellent films.
These early-Talkie films are so interesting, for a myriad of reasons. Aside from having great actors, production values, good directors, etc., they are also interesting for their historical and sociological insights into those times. It really is like peering through a kind of time- machine window, as if you're looking in on people from another era, or almost from another dimension. It really is fascinating. I also think these early sound movies, with their short running times, are like filmed short stories. Most of them run a little over an hour, and they manage to fit so much into that brief time. New movie makers could learn a lot on how to cut to the chase in such a short time, and still make a good film.
Anyway, check it out. This is a fascinating Pre-Code film, almost a blueprint for the late 40s Film Noirs. And it has some great performances.
"24 Hours" is a well-produced precode with a great cast, including Clive Brook, Kay Francis, Miriam Hopkins, Regis Toomey, and Lucille Laverne. Seeing Regis Toomey this young was a shock.
The film, as you might guess, takes place in a 24-hour period and we see the clock start the 24 hours and finish it. There's the added effect of snow.
Brook and a glamorous Francis are an unhappily married couple, Jim and Fanny Towner. They both admit they are miserable; Jim, drunk, leaves and walks in the snow. As he's walking, he sees a murder. He stops in a bar and drinks more and then heads to see Rosie (Hopkins), a nightclub singer. Her husband Tony (Toomey) shows up but she holds him off and takes Jim to her place so he can sleep it off.
The outraged Tony breaks in and kills her accidentally. When he realizes she's dead, he becomes terrified and runs.
Jim wakes up in the morning and finds Hopkins dead. He's arrested for murder. When Francis reads about his arrest, she rushes to the police station.
As good as some of the actors are, Miriam Hopkins has the best role and makes the most of it. She sings two great songs looks floosy-ish but great. She is one of the most underrated actresses in film history. Everyone is good, with a great turn by another unsung actress, Lucille Laverne.
Despite being on the slow side, and some of the actors lacking energy, these films are valuable for showing us life and mores, in this case 84 years ago. Plays, films, and movies were written about the upper class - with the depression and writers like Odets, that would soon change, and the common man would take over.
The film, as you might guess, takes place in a 24-hour period and we see the clock start the 24 hours and finish it. There's the added effect of snow.
Brook and a glamorous Francis are an unhappily married couple, Jim and Fanny Towner. They both admit they are miserable; Jim, drunk, leaves and walks in the snow. As he's walking, he sees a murder. He stops in a bar and drinks more and then heads to see Rosie (Hopkins), a nightclub singer. Her husband Tony (Toomey) shows up but she holds him off and takes Jim to her place so he can sleep it off.
The outraged Tony breaks in and kills her accidentally. When he realizes she's dead, he becomes terrified and runs.
Jim wakes up in the morning and finds Hopkins dead. He's arrested for murder. When Francis reads about his arrest, she rushes to the police station.
As good as some of the actors are, Miriam Hopkins has the best role and makes the most of it. She sings two great songs looks floosy-ish but great. She is one of the most underrated actresses in film history. Everyone is good, with a great turn by another unsung actress, Lucille Laverne.
Despite being on the slow side, and some of the actors lacking energy, these films are valuable for showing us life and mores, in this case 84 years ago. Plays, films, and movies were written about the upper class - with the depression and writers like Odets, that would soon change, and the common man would take over.
Did you know
- TriviaEugene Pallette was replaced by George Barbier before shooting began.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 6 minutes
- Color
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