PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,8/10
404
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaOn a cruise ship a professional gambler comes to the aid of a young man victimized by a jewel thief. The young man turns out to be his son.On a cruise ship a professional gambler comes to the aid of a young man victimized by a jewel thief. The young man turns out to be his son.On a cruise ship a professional gambler comes to the aid of a young man victimized by a jewel thief. The young man turns out to be his son.
Mary Blackwood
- Edith
- (sin acreditar)
Wade Boteler
- Customs Officer
- (sin acreditar)
Don Brodie
- Reporter
- (sin acreditar)
Tex Brodus
- Passenger
- (sin acreditar)
Ralph Brooks
- Passenger
- (sin acreditar)
Edward Cecil
- Bridge Player
- (sin acreditar)
Allan Conrad
- Third Officer
- (sin acreditar)
Robert Elliott
- Detective Clancy
- (sin acreditar)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesWhen Dugan calls Mather "Philo", the allusion is to Philo Vance, a popular fictional amateur detective of the era (featured in twelve novels by S. S. Van Dine, and fifteen movies from 1929 to 1947).
- PifiasAt the poker game with Mrs. Bath, Schmelling commits a serious breach of poker etiquette by looking at her cards after she wins the hand because everyone else folded.
- Citas
John Francis Dugan: Dames are like the measles - annoying but curable.
- Banda sonoraIn Other Words, I'm in Love
(1935) (uncredited)
Music by Oscar Levant
Lyrics by Sidney Clare
Sung by Dick Webster twice and during the end credits
Played often in the score
Reseña destacada
This is an excellent little film with two stars much better known for their supporting roles. A young Claire Trevor is more lovely than I have ever seen her. This may be one of her few `straight' roles. She is not the scheming woman in a film noir, a prostitute, saloon girl or a drunk. Edmund Lowe, a first line star during the silent era who never quite made it past supporting roles in the talkies, is a very believable gambler/con man.
Virtually the entire movie takes place on board a cruise ship so there are none of the car chases, gun fights, mid depression hard luck stories, etc. that tend to carry many mid '30s mysteries/dramas. The script contains a good deal of intrigue and suspense that is carried of well by Lowe and his `accomplice', Trevor. Adrienne Ames, who looks very much like Gail Patrick plays a character that was made for Patrick, the snooty, unlikable wealthy woman. Ames and Eugene Pallette support.
The Plot Outline for this movie accurately describes what occurs so there is no need to dwell there. The most enjoyable parts of the movie for me were the situations where Trevor is determining what kind of person Lowe is and whether or not he can be trusted, is honest, etc. Keep in mind Trevor and Lowe meet on the cruise ship. Lowe tells Trevor up front that he is a gambler and Trevor is not quite sure what to think as Lowe goes about `setting up' Pallette and Ames primarily through card games to get his son out of a jam and return the stolen jewels. This occurs in spite of the ship's detective and eventually everyone else involved knowing Lowe is a gambler.
The ending may be a bit too neat in today's terms but one must remember happy endings were important in the early and mid '30s.
Virtually the entire movie takes place on board a cruise ship so there are none of the car chases, gun fights, mid depression hard luck stories, etc. that tend to carry many mid '30s mysteries/dramas. The script contains a good deal of intrigue and suspense that is carried of well by Lowe and his `accomplice', Trevor. Adrienne Ames, who looks very much like Gail Patrick plays a character that was made for Patrick, the snooty, unlikable wealthy woman. Ames and Eugene Pallette support.
The Plot Outline for this movie accurately describes what occurs so there is no need to dwell there. The most enjoyable parts of the movie for me were the situations where Trevor is determining what kind of person Lowe is and whether or not he can be trusted, is honest, etc. Keep in mind Trevor and Lowe meet on the cruise ship. Lowe tells Trevor up front that he is a gambler and Trevor is not quite sure what to think as Lowe goes about `setting up' Pallette and Ames primarily through card games to get his son out of a jam and return the stolen jewels. This occurs in spite of the ship's detective and eventually everyone else involved knowing Lowe is a gambler.
The ending may be a bit too neat in today's terms but one must remember happy endings were important in the early and mid '30s.
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- 11 ago 2003
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Detalles
- Duración1 hora 16 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principal laguna de datos
By what name was Compañeros de viaje (1935) officially released in Canada in English?
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