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IMDbPro

Strange Bargain

  • 1949
  • Approved
  • 1h 8m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
932
YOUR RATING
Strange Bargain (1949)
Film NoirCrimeDrama

In order to cash-in a life insurance policy, a failing business owner asks one of his employees, who has financial woes of his own, to aid him in disguising his suicide into a robbery-murder... Read allIn order to cash-in a life insurance policy, a failing business owner asks one of his employees, who has financial woes of his own, to aid him in disguising his suicide into a robbery-murder.In order to cash-in a life insurance policy, a failing business owner asks one of his employees, who has financial woes of his own, to aid him in disguising his suicide into a robbery-murder.

  • Director
    • Will Price
  • Writers
    • Lillie Hayward
    • J.H. Wallis
  • Stars
    • Martha Scott
    • Jeffrey Lynn
    • Harry Morgan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    932
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Will Price
    • Writers
      • Lillie Hayward
      • J.H. Wallis
    • Stars
      • Martha Scott
      • Jeffrey Lynn
      • Harry Morgan
    • 31User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos5

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    Top cast25

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    Martha Scott
    Martha Scott
    • Georgia Wilson
    Jeffrey Lynn
    Jeffrey Lynn
    • Sam Wilson
    Harry Morgan
    Harry Morgan
    • Lt. Richard Webb
    • (as Henry Morgan)
    Katherine Emery
    Katherine Emery
    • Edna Jarvis
    Richard Gaines
    Richard Gaines
    • Malcolm Jarvis
    Henry O'Neill
    Henry O'Neill
    • Timothy Hearne
    Walter Sande
    Walter Sande
    • Sgt. Cord
    Michael Chapin
    Michael Chapin
    • Roddy Wilson
    Arlene Gray
    Arlene Gray
    • Hilda Wilson
    Raymond Roe
    Raymond Roe
    • Sydney Jarvis
    Robert Bray
    Robert Bray
    • McTay
    Wanda Cantlon
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Ferguson
    • Office Worker at Meeting
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Flynn
    • Officer Hogan
    • (uncredited)
    Dan Foster
    • Tip
    • (uncredited)
    Joel Friedkin
    • Canon
    • (uncredited)
    John Hamilton
    John Hamilton
    • Employee at Meeting
    • (uncredited)
    Katherine Lytle
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Will Price
    • Writers
      • Lillie Hayward
      • J.H. Wallis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    6.7932
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    Featured reviews

    9m_finebesser

    Taut and clever programmer

    Don't mistake brevity and low budget for lack of quality. This movie is very well scripted and conceived. Harry Morgan gives a terrific performance as the policeman and Jeffrey Lynn is appropriately perplexed as the devoted husband who suddenly finds himself holding the bag when he is tricked by his boss into an ill-fated endeavor. Martha Scott is marvelous as his well-grounded wife. Strange Bargain is well-paced and well-acted throughout.

    Interestingly, this later served as a basis for a Murder She Wrote episode with Jeffrey Lynn, Martha Scott, and Harry Morgan recreating their roles. It actually makes for a fascinating "sequel."
    7kalbimassey

    Bourgeois Noir

    Sam Wilson (Jeffrey Lynn) is a well respected Christian man, residing in an attractive middle class neighborhood. He has a responsible job, plus an adoring wife and family. Unfortunately, financial issues are threatening to turn suburban bliss into suburban blues.

    On the very day that this meek, mild-mannered male musters sufficient courage to request a raise, his boss (Richard Gaines) offers him an unexpected windfall, provided that he is prepared to be the pivotal figure in a bizarre murder/suicide insurance scam. Will Lynn, the archetypal shrinking violet, shrink from violence?

    Following Gaines suspicious death, cantankerous colleague, Henry 'O Neill is the investigation's centre of interest, but the shudder at his own shadow, wouldn't say boo to a goose Lynn also comes under the microscope of diligent, disabled detective and local celebrity, Harry Morgan, respected for a war record superior to anything that Glenn Miller ever released.

    At an efficient, in-BANG-out 68 minutes Strange Bargain ought to have been fairly flab free, but there are moments of unnecessarily leaden footed talkiness along the way. With injury time approaching, the movie finally wriggles free from its inertia and hits pay dirt, courtesy of a couple of nifty plot twists and some eyebrow raising surprises.
    7AlsExGal

    A good performance by Jeffrey Lynn

    Assistant bookkeeper Sam Wilson (Jeffrey Lynn) can't make ends meet for himself, his wife, and two children, so he goes to his boss Mr. Jarvis asking for a raise. Instead of a raise he finds out from Jarvis that he is going to be let go shortly because the firm cannot afford him. It is then that Jarvis tells Wilson that he is broke and that, rather than see his wife and son destitute, he intends to kill himself so that they can collect the insurance money - 250K. But he needs Sam's help to cover up the suicide so that it looks like a murder/robbery so that the insurance will pay off. In return he will give Sam ten thousand dollars. Sam refuses.

    The following night Jarvis calls Sam anyways and tells him the password for the suicide he plans to commit. Sam races over to his house to try and stop him, but he is too late. Jarvis is dead on the floor. So, realizing it is too late to stop the suicide, seeing the 10K on the desk, and reading Jarvis' written plea to Sam to help him cover the suicide, he decides that not helping him now will do no good, and so he does make it look like a robbery, takes the 10K, and throws the gun into the bay. What Sam doesn't realize is that everything he has just done not only makes it look like a murder, it makes it look like a murder he could have committed.

    Besides the rather clever plot and red herrings thrown all over the place for such a short B feature with no A list stars, this is really a museum piece of post war middle class life and even business values of the time. The USA is headed into HUAC/Red Scare land at this point, so time is taken to show the Wilson family praying before eating, there is talk of going to church like it would ordinarily be a weekly event, and note that even people who had desk jobs worked half a day on Saturday at this point in time. As for business values, Mr. Jarvis knows his employees and they know him. Even down to Sam the assistant bookkeeper for twelve years - Jarvis couldn't have found him THAT valuable to keep him in a lower level position all of that time.

    Harry Morgan plays Lt. Webb, a police detective whose only job at this point is to find Jarvis' murderer. He even comes to Jarvis' company and fingerprints all of the employees! I can't believe if someone like workaday cog in the machine Sam had been murdered there would have been much more than a police report. Since Morgan has been playing lots of bad guys and moral cowards up to this point in time, quite a bit of unlikability bleeds into his performance to where I want somebody to drag him away by that cane of his.

    Finally I have to give Jeffrey Lynn his due. He carries off being the central character in this film very well, often just telegraphing his feelings by posture and facial expression, particularly when he comes across Jarvis' suicide scene. This is time well spent at just over an hour.
    snicklefritzy

    Interesting Trivia

    An interesting note about this movie: The TV Series "Murder, She Wrote" produced a "sequel" to it in a 1987 episode, "The Days Dwindle Down," (episode # 3.21). Several actors, including Harry Morgan, reprise their roles. Jessica Fletcher re-solves the original crime by interviewing several of the original characters some 30 years after the fact (actually closer to 40 years!). The episode makes nice use of scenes from the original movie as flashbacks to explain the plot. Imagine the surprise of watching a typical MSW episode about an old murder, and then a 34-year-old Harry Morgan suddenly pops up in B&W interviewing the same (though younger) witnesses about the same murder!
    6bmacv

    A sedate but satisfying middle-class thriller

    A sedate thriller built upon the insecurities of the newly emergent white-collar class, Strange Bargain offers solid production values and brisk direction. Jeffrey Lynn (who looks like a solution of Ray Milland and Bruce Bennett) is a hard-working family man who earns his keep as an accountant. One morning when the milk bill comes due he screws up his courage to ask for a raise; when he does, his boss tells him that the firm's at the brink of bankruptcy, and lets him go. But wait -- there's more! The boss plans to kill himself but make it look like murder so his wife can collect the insurance; for helping, he offers Lynn $10-grand. Lynn tries to prevent the suicide but arrives too late, finding his boss already dead. Enter a police detective (Harry Morgan) whose instincts tell him all is not as it seems (not only to him, but to us as well). Morgan aside, you're not likely to recognize any of the cast, but the story works itself out neatly and holds your interest. Too polite and middle-class to be true noir, Strange Bargain nontheless delivers what it promises.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to contemporary articles in Los Angeles newspapers, Pat O'Brien and Robert Young were considered for the lead in this picture at various times during pre-production.
    • Goofs
      When Sam pulls into the circular driveway of his boss's home, he pulls completely past the house. When the camera cuts to him getting out of his car, the car is parked very close to the front door of the house. The same shot of the car pulling far around the driveway is used again when he drives over to see Mrs. Jarvis; again, the shot of him getting out of the car puts him very close to the house's front door.
    • Quotes

      Sam Wilson: Darling, I made a terrible mistake. But I'll never make another one.

      Georgia Wilson: Oh, yes, you will. You'll make lots of them. Not like this, of course. But you're a man, and men are always making mistakes. Even -- even women make them sometimes.

    • Connections
      Edited into Arabesque: The Days Dwindle Down (1987)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 5, 1949 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Extraño convenio
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Monica Pier, Santa Monica, California, USA(Where Sam Wilson disposed of the gun that Malcolm Jarvis used to kill himself)
    • Production company
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 8m(68 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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