A crime reporter begins to investigate the disappearance of his bosses wife who had witnessed a murder.A crime reporter begins to investigate the disappearance of his bosses wife who had witnessed a murder.A crime reporter begins to investigate the disappearance of his bosses wife who had witnessed a murder.
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William Hartnell
- Dell
- (as Billy Hartnell)
Ian McLean
- Inspector Dodds
- (as Ian Maclean)
Reginald Barlow
- Distinguished Man
- (uncredited)
Robin Burns
- News Theatre Patron
- (uncredited)
Noel Dainton
- Senior Employee at Jeweller's Shop
- (uncredited)
Edgar Driver
- Photographer
- (uncredited)
Stanley Escane
- Role Undetermined
- (uncredited)
David Keir
- Train Passenger
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaEven though the film was made in 1943, there is no mention or evidence that World War II was at its peak, with London under attack from repeated and devastating Nazi bombing raids, and the entire population involved in some kind of war related defense activity. Not a single person, male or female, is seen in uniform, or even mentions the war, and the entire cast goes about their business, with nothing of importance apparently going on in London or in the world, except some guy doing away with his unwanted girl friend. During a visit to a newsreel theatre, there's no news of any kind on the screen, just what looks like some kind of Latin American musical.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Has Anybody Here Seen Canada? A History of Canadian Movies 1939-1953 (1979)
Featured review
I'm a mystery fan and although there is little mystery in this film (we know who did it from the beginning) I did enjoy this one. David Farrar, who fans may remember as Sexton Blake, and William "Billy" Hartnell, better known as the first Doctor Who are rival newspaper reporters with the latter usually getting the best of Farrar at his bosses frustration. Farrar's boss Ellington (John Stuart) is one of those hard-core editors who is married to the job and just wants the story. In fact he's so married to the paper that he's ignoring his wife. That's where the story starts. Tired of being stood up by her husband Mrs. Ellington goes to the flat of a friend, Paul Grayson, who is confronted by an old girlfriend with a gun. Grayson wrestles the gun from the girl and then shoots and kills her. When the police investigate a witness tells of the jilted girlfriend and the mystery lady who was with Grayson at the time of the murder. Farrar is the first to learn of the mystery lady and his boss, not knowing that it is his wife, is obsessed with having Farrar discover who it is. A bizarre informant who is dismissed as a wacko by Harnell is then sent to Farrar provides a key to finding the missing Grayson. No spoilers here; you'll have to watch the rest of the film to see what happens but I found it entertaining. It's definitely worth 75 minutes of your time if for no other reason to see a young Hartnell and to see a young Anne Crawford who died tragically in 1956.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 15 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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