Reporter Jane Arden goes undercover to try to expose a gang of jewel thieves and smugglers. Her mission becomes more dangerous when her identity is discovered early on by one of the gang lea... Read allReporter Jane Arden goes undercover to try to expose a gang of jewel thieves and smugglers. Her mission becomes more dangerous when her identity is discovered early on by one of the gang leaders.Reporter Jane Arden goes undercover to try to expose a gang of jewel thieves and smugglers. Her mission becomes more dangerous when her identity is discovered early on by one of the gang leaders.
- Greek
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- Italian man
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- Irishman
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- Frenchman
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- Bellboy
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- Vanders' Henchman Driving Car
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Featured reviews
I read one other review that said that this film was originally intended to be the first of several Jane Arden films. I have no idea if that's true, but it does have a B-series feel to it...like the Torchy Blaine or Nancy Drew films of the 30s-40s. It wasn't a bad film at all...so perhaps this is true....perhaps it isn't.
A decent script but only pedestrian acting from Rosella Towne, the film is worth seeing but far from a must-see.
I don't understand the fake firing. Is there a point to that other than some contrived writing? The firing should be real and Arden should go investigating on her own. Ignoring that part, the story is fine. It's functional. I don't know this IP. I've never heard of it. I still don't understand the fake firing.
Jane Arden was probably the first girl reporter comic strip when it debuted in 1928. In various forms, it ran until 1968, and foreshadowed such characters as Lois Lane and Brenda Starr. Ruth Yorke appeared as Jane in a radio series in 1938 and 1939, and that's probably where Warner Brothers got the idea to make this movie. It's clearly a B movie, with direction by Terry Morse, but the large cast, typically for Warner Brothers, has such performers as William Gargan, Benny Rubin, and Hobart Cavanaugh. The result is a watchable hour of story.
This was intended to be the first of a series, based on a comic strip, but it didn't happen.
Arden is a reporter, working for William Gargan. She goes undercover to investigate a jewelry smuggling ring.
Unfortunately, the head honcho (James Stephenson) learns her true identity almost immediately. Since they are on board a ship bound for France, she has nowhere to run.
Fast-moving and entertaining. James Stephenson entered films late, after a stage career but died in 1941.
Did you know
- TriviaThe only film based on the long-running comic strip "Jane Arden", the original "spunky girl reporter", that was published from November 26, 1928 to January 20, 1968. The character served as a prototype for others such as Superman's Lois Lane, Frederick Nebel's "Torchy Blane", and another comic strip "Brenda Starr, Reporter", that ran from 1940 to 2011. There was also a "Jane Arden" radio program - a 15 minute weekday show on the NBC Blue Network from 1938 to 1939.
- GoofsWhen you first see the name Carlton Apts on Ed Tower's building; it is a close-up of the lettering which is on a small square piece of stone with indentations on the bottom and top as well as located on the side of the building. But on the following cut after the two hoodlums kidnap Towers; the Carlton Apts sign is now located over the entrance on a much larger and plain surface.
- Quotes
Teenie Moore: I'm warning you, if Jane Arden leaves, I leave with her.
Ed Towers: Consider yourself left.
Teenie Moore: Right!
[close-up, realizes what just happened]
Teenie Moore: You... Republican!
- ConnectionsReferenced in Humoresque (1946)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Dupla Conspiração
- Filming locations
- Bermuda(establishing shots, archive footage)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 58m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1