The Police catch up with an organized racetrack tipster service which victimizes those found to be in need of money.The Police catch up with an organized racetrack tipster service which victimizes those found to be in need of money.The Police catch up with an organized racetrack tipster service which victimizes those found to be in need of money.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Photos
Ernie Alexander
- Mechanic
- (uncredited)
Raymond Bailey
- Phony Bookmaker
- (uncredited)
Hugh Beaumont
- Charles Adams
- (uncredited)
Barbara Bedford
- Secretary
- (uncredited)
John Butler
- Gus
- (uncredited)
Gene Coogan
- Racketeer
- (uncredited)
Joe Devlin
- Racketeer
- (uncredited)
Robert Elliott
- Policeman
- (uncredited)
John Hamilton
- James Sawyer
- (uncredited)
Richard Kipling
- Mr. Dodd
- (uncredited)
Mike Lally
- Telephone Tipster
- (uncredited)
Mitchell Lewis
- Jake
- (uncredited)
May McAvoy
- Secretary
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Crime Does Not Pay short centering on con men who rip-off people with bets on "sure things." It's not easy to feel sorry for these people who put themselves in this spot by gambling in the first place. But the short does a good enough job selling the hard luck stories of one or two so you don't root for the bad guys. Hugh Beaumont, who would go on to play Ward Cleaver on Leave It to Beaver, is one of the people ripped off. So Hugh goes to get his money back and winds up getting the snot beat out of him. What happens to him from there I won't spoil. Let's just say this is one story Ward didn't share with the Beaver. The Crime Does Not Pay series was usually entertaining and this is no exception. Good cast includes George Cleveland, John Archer, Noel Madison, and the aforementioned Hugh Beaumont.
This most definitely not one of the better of the Crime Does Not Pay Series from MGM. Considering the phone bill they had to run up making random
calls to get one sucjer I can't see how this racket made any money.
Still this concerns the tragic story of John Archer and the jackpot he got into after getting a random phone call with a betting tip on a sure thing.
A couple of familiar TV faces are in this film. John Hamilton plays the stern face and voice of thoroughbred racing who will not stand for monkey business in his sport and George Cleveland as another sucker the police have to browbeat into being a witness.
Still can't see how this racket paid.
Still this concerns the tragic story of John Archer and the jackpot he got into after getting a random phone call with a betting tip on a sure thing.
A couple of familiar TV faces are in this film. John Hamilton plays the stern face and voice of thoroughbred racing who will not stand for monkey business in his sport and George Cleveland as another sucker the police have to browbeat into being a witness.
Still can't see how this racket paid.
Sucker List (1941)
*** (out of 4)
This isn't the greatest entry in MGM's Crime Does Not Pay series but it's still an entertaining one for fans of the series. Once again we're told that the MGM Crime Reporter is trying to bring down a racket that is causing millions of people money and a few their lives. It deals with people who pass out fake tips who hope people in debt will contact them for future tips. Of course, this is all meant to put money into the bad guys pockets as they trap people and this short shows what happens when a husband (John Archer) with a sick wife (Lynne Carver) takes the bad tip and threatens to go to the police. This has always been my favorite shorts series and this is due to how simple the stories usually were and how the studio (in their own way) tried telling people what bad things to try and avoid. Some people call these shorts over-dramatic and perhaps they are but it was just their way of hammering home stuff that many people fell victim to. This short here is a pretty good one even if the screenplay has a few weak spots including the fact that many of these victims probably shouldn't have been doing what they were. If they simply weren't trying to double and triple their money then they wouldn't have been scammed but that's just a minor thing. For the most part the film is well acted and the director by Roy Rowland hits all the right notes. Archer is pretty good in his role as is Noel Madison as the main bad guy. Look quick for Mickey Rooney's rather in a quick bit as well. While this certainly isn't the best film in the series, there's enough going on to make it worth viewing.
*** (out of 4)
This isn't the greatest entry in MGM's Crime Does Not Pay series but it's still an entertaining one for fans of the series. Once again we're told that the MGM Crime Reporter is trying to bring down a racket that is causing millions of people money and a few their lives. It deals with people who pass out fake tips who hope people in debt will contact them for future tips. Of course, this is all meant to put money into the bad guys pockets as they trap people and this short shows what happens when a husband (John Archer) with a sick wife (Lynne Carver) takes the bad tip and threatens to go to the police. This has always been my favorite shorts series and this is due to how simple the stories usually were and how the studio (in their own way) tried telling people what bad things to try and avoid. Some people call these shorts over-dramatic and perhaps they are but it was just their way of hammering home stuff that many people fell victim to. This short here is a pretty good one even if the screenplay has a few weak spots including the fact that many of these victims probably shouldn't have been doing what they were. If they simply weren't trying to double and triple their money then they wouldn't have been scammed but that's just a minor thing. For the most part the film is well acted and the director by Roy Rowland hits all the right notes. Archer is pretty good in his role as is Noel Madison as the main bad guy. Look quick for Mickey Rooney's rather in a quick bit as well. While this certainly isn't the best film in the series, there's enough going on to make it worth viewing.
This is the MGM Crime Does Not Pay series. Crooks are trying to scam horse race betters. They circulate flyers offering sure bets. They target desperate gamblers. Bill Allen needs money and falls for the scam.
I know this scam and it's not done quite this way. It's a scam of big numbers. They send out predictions of every possible outcome. The predictions will come true for only a few, but those few will think that this is the real deal. They would be easy pickings for a subscription fee scam. This episode is not quite right. I can't buy horse racing as some sort of paragon of virtue. The commentary made me laugh.
I know this scam and it's not done quite this way. It's a scam of big numbers. They send out predictions of every possible outcome. The predictions will come true for only a few, but those few will think that this is the real deal. They would be easy pickings for a subscription fee scam. This episode is not quite right. I can't buy horse racing as some sort of paragon of virtue. The commentary made me laugh.
Racketeers get a mailing list of people who owe money and are desperate to make dough fast. They call them up with tips on horse races -- each horse gets touted to different bettors. Some will win and be hooked, but discover that Crime Does Not Pay.
After a start covering rackets like protection, this long-running MGM short subject series settled into various swindles, usually examples of long and short confidence games that ended in violence -- something that the high-toned con artist tried to avoid. This one was called The Tip Sheet and relied on the fact that in a race with seven horses, one was going to win, so with a large list of suckers, you can convince one seventh of them that you could predict a winner; it's mass-marketing racetrack touts.
Usually swindlers like this tried to avoid violence, but violence is highly cinematic, and everyone knew this series was violent, so give 'em what they want and what they expect.
After a start covering rackets like protection, this long-running MGM short subject series settled into various swindles, usually examples of long and short confidence games that ended in violence -- something that the high-toned con artist tried to avoid. This one was called The Tip Sheet and relied on the fact that in a race with seven horses, one was going to win, so with a large list of suckers, you can convince one seventh of them that you could predict a winner; it's mass-marketing racetrack touts.
Usually swindlers like this tried to avoid violence, but violence is highly cinematic, and everyone knew this series was violent, so give 'em what they want and what they expect.
Did you know
- TriviaFinal appearance of Phillip Trent as the MGM Crime Reporter.
- ConnectionsFollowed by For the Common Defense! (1942)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Crime Does Not Pay No. 36: Sucker List
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 19m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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