A paroled embezzler skips town with his $100K loot and boards the Chicago-New York train, followed by an assortment of shady characters who want the money, but en-route to NYC the embezzler ... Read allA paroled embezzler skips town with his $100K loot and boards the Chicago-New York train, followed by an assortment of shady characters who want the money, but en-route to NYC the embezzler is murdered and his loot disappears.A paroled embezzler skips town with his $100K loot and boards the Chicago-New York train, followed by an assortment of shady characters who want the money, but en-route to NYC the embezzler is murdered and his loot disappears.
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- (uncredited)
- Eddie
- (uncredited)
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- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
The audience may not have as much fun, depending on how witty you may or may not think the proceedings are because the accent is on the comedy angle and many of the one-liners aren't loaded with enough ammunition. Fans of Marjorie Main will probably be delighted with her brass characterization but Whitmore gets a little tiresome in his over-confident manner, never at a loss for a flippant remark.
For what really is an MGM B-picture, the cast isn't bad at all. We have PHYLLIS KIRK, ANN DVORAK, DOUGLAS FOWLEY, FRED CLARK and DON PORTER rounding out a good supporting cast, although Kirk has only a brief role at the beginning. All of them handle the mystery/comedy material with professional ease in a story that has Main and Whitmore discovering two dead bodies while a train is enroute from Montana to New York and trying to solve the murder while eluding the efforts of detective Clark to get to the bottom of the matter. Much of the humor depends on their struggle to get a dead body back and forth into different compartments.
It's a breezy sort of B-film that passes the time pleasantly, nothing more, and at a brief running time of one hour and nine minutes probably played the lower half of double bills in '50.
Trivia note: The scene where Marjorie Main sings with a band is painfully funny (with the pain outdoing the laughter). Not for every taste.
Presumably because of rights issues -- money, perhaps, though this could have been during the time that Palmer (due to a divorce settlement) was intentionally making as little money as possible -- The Miss Withers part was rewritten to eliminate her.
It wasn't till some time later that an attempt was made to bring Hildie to the screen on TV, embodied in the formidable person of Eve Arden.
Other than disappointing fans of Miss Withers or of the original story in and of itself, this is a decent enough film of it.
I would want Hattie and John to team up sooner and more consistently. It does turn into a fun screwball Weekend at Bernie situation. It's silly although it could get even more ridiculous. It's a solid duo.
Did you know
- TriviaJack Bailey, who plays the quiz show host at the beginning of the film, became famous shortly afterward as host of the highly popular 1950s TV series Queen for a Day (1951).
- Quotes
John J. Malone: First this fiend murders Keppler
Myron Brynk: Shut up, Malone.
John J. Malone: What do you mean, shut up? You deliberately killed two people in cold blood.
Myron Brynk: I want to retain you as my attorney.
John J. Malone: Dragged their bodies all over a train. I want a $10,000 retainer.
Myron Brynk: Come down to the jail and I'll write you a check.
John J. Malone: Gentlemen, this is clearly a crime of passion.
- Crazy creditsFOREWORD: "The producers of this picture feel that the attorney depicted herein should be disbarred and strongly suggest that the American Bar Association do something about it." EPILOGUE: "Housewives of America, arise! Urge the American Bar Association to do something about this man!"
- SoundtracksMissus O'Malley and Mister Malone
(uncredited)
Music by Adolph Deutsch
Lyrics by Paul Francis Webster
Sung by chorus over main title
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $592,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 9m(69 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1