Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe Crime Doctor must prove the innocence of a young man with a reputation for using poison.The Crime Doctor must prove the innocence of a young man with a reputation for using poison.The Crime Doctor must prove the innocence of a young man with a reputation for using poison.
- Addison Burns
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Dr. Carter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Detective Yarnell
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Walter Burns
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- George H. Fenton
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Avuncular type Warner Baxter playing Robert Ordway aka the Crime Doctor gets involved in the case of the murder by poison of a wealthy industrialist insofar as he tries to clear the name of his suspicious friend played by skinny and intense Lloyd Bridges. He leisurely sorts through a houseful of suspects much to cop Barton MacLane's irritation and who has a job keeping up with him throughout the picture. It can get a bit complicated with red herrings, a surreal dream sequence and a long flashback to precisely 31 years previous but all of it was necessary stuff. Favourite bits: Mrs Keppler's quick change vamoose; Jeremy Cowan's disposal of the fiery wastepaper basket through his window; Baxter's general imperturbable confidence; Lynn Merrick's towering hairstyle.
For those of us who mine this seam it's another fine example of the 1940's b&w detective comedy-mystery genre.
Soon thereafter Ordway decides to visit Jimmy at his place of employment. However, the maid thinks Ordway is either the coroner or with the police. You see, Jimmy's employer has just suddenly died and it looks like poison again. Ordway goes along with the ruse to get access to the crime scene and yes, it appears that Walter Burns drank poisoned coffee.
Next, the real police arrive, and this is where things get strange. The police go all "Boston Blackie" on Dr. Ordway. In spite of the fact that he has been a welcome help in other cases, they get tough with him, like he is in the way and completely unwelcome. They even imply he is helping Jimmy - who they try to arrest but escapes - evade arrest.
Well Jimmy did at least one thing he probably should not have done, he went ahead and married his fiancée Ellen against Dr. Ordway's advice. It doesn't help Ordway that the Burns mansion is filled with suspects - the young widow, the victim's brother and nephew who both circle like sharks, a maid who has been carrying a torch for the dead Mr. Burns for 30 years to the point that her mind has become effected, and a cook who turns out to be an imposter and flees the Burns household when Ordway calls her on her impersonation. The point is, by the end of the film you are suspecting all of these people including Jimmy and his wife.
The one odd thing in this film - Jimmy and Ellen have just gotten married a day or two earlier, yet their house looks like the set of "I Love Lucy" - it is completely decorated with frilly curtains, comfy couch, and well stocked kitchen as Ellen parades around in stylish house-dress and frilly apron like she has been a housewife for five years, not five days! Highly recommended as a good entry in the Crime Doctor series.
This case is not only strange, but quite baffling as the roots go back thirty years to the disappearance of Lynn's partner in an old musical theater and vaudeville house. The theater has been boarded up and shut down ever since.
Other than Dr. Ordway and the police everybody is a suspect in this one, not excluding Bridges who has a couple of scenes that make you wonder whether Dr. Ordway missed a bet with him. This Crime Doctor is a worthwhile bit of time spent viewing.
The Bridges character doesn't take Dr. O's advice, and when his boss is killed, it does look as though he was given the job so he could be framed. Ordway steps in to investigate, dueling wits with the detective in charge of the case (Barton MacLaine).
This "Crime Doctor" has some comedy in it, with Jerome Cowan as a musician who is careless with matches. There's also a hilarious, very fast change of identity.
This is a good series, and I hope to see more of it on TCM.
Despite its cheesy sets, the Crime Doctor series is one of the best written and most entertaining of the 1940s mystery series.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIn this movie, Gloria Dickson is married to a man, played by Jerome Cowan, who is habitually starting fires with carelessly discarded smoking materials. There are two scenes in the movie, including the final scene, in which he starts such fires. Her character comments, "I'm practically cremated." when describing living with him. Ironically, just two short years after this movie was released, Gloria was killed in a house fire - suspected to have been caused by a carelessly discarded cigarette.
- BlooperThe suspect steals the doctor's car and drives off, no one knows where. However, the next morning, the doctor leaves his home and gets into his car, which is in its usual place.
- Citazioni
Paul Ashley: I'm worried about you, Diana. Patricia would love to see you go over for my uncle's murder.
Diana Burns: You think she killed him?
Paul Ashley: That's a fine question coming from you. How could Patricia have killed him when you did? You're the principal heir, you know.
Diana Burns: I see. You're trying to blackmail me.
Paul Ashley: Don't be ridiculous, I'm trying to help. You know, you're very attractive, Diana, and in spite of your late husband's bad luck, I'd be willing to take a chance and marry you myself. That's the price for my help.
Diana Burns: Your help in what?
Paul Ashley: Keeping you out of jail and Jimmy Trotter in.
- ConnessioniFollowed by Shadows in the Night (1944)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 8 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1