The lifestyles of Arlene and Valkyr Bradford, half-sisters from a respected San Francisco family, diverge markedly as Arlene takes up with criminals.The lifestyles of Arlene and Valkyr Bradford, half-sisters from a respected San Francisco family, diverge markedly as Arlene takes up with criminals.The lifestyles of Arlene and Valkyr Bradford, half-sisters from a respected San Francisco family, diverge markedly as Arlene takes up with criminals.
- Joshua Mayard
- (as Douglas Dumbrille)
- Detective Sgt. O'Hagen
- (as Charles Wilson)
- Joe Hogue - Editor
- (as William Davidson)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBette Davis remarked that she looked back at this film with fondness, making it one of the few from the early part of her career that she would look at that way.
- GoofsWhen Joe the newspaper editor nudges Tony toward the desk, his hand is on Tony's arm. But on the next immediate cut, Joe now has his hand on Tony's back.
- Quotes
Spike Smith: Say, Society, who's the gal dancing with Tony
Archie Van Ness: She's the only real Bradford daughter. Arlene's her stepsister.
Spike Smith: Say, she must be respectable. I've never seen her before.
Archie Van Ness: Say,I've picked Arlene off the blotter for everything from speeding to being picked up in Chinatown raids.
Izzy Wright: Oh, that I were young.
Archie Van Ness: And old Bradford's got more millions than there were Indians out here when her family landed.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Green Fog (2017)
- SoundtracksWhy Do I Dream Those Dreams?
(1933) (uncredited)
Music by Harry Warren
Played by request by the nightclub band and as background music
There's a lot to enjoy in this Warners B during their high-speed dialogue period. Miss Lindsay sums up the solution speaking as fast as Glenda Farrell, Miss Davis gets one of her best entrances, Hugh Herbert gets a key role in which he's funny and not an absolute idiot, Alan Hale has a disappearing Irish accent, and the story has a tremendous number of red herrings packed into its 68 minutes. It's a bit unusual in having no clear point-of-view character; perhaps that's a foreshadowing of the cynical Universal soapers that William Diertele would direct at Universal in the 1950s. It's minor, very minor, but it was key to Miss Davis' career. Apparently she didn't fight her bosses to get out of this part because she wanted the loan-out for OF HUMAN BONDAGE and worked very well with Dieterle.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Fog Over San Francisco
- Filming locations
- 2180 Washington St., San Francisco, California, USA(Bradford mansion - burned down 1955)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 8 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1