A ditzy bail bonds duo (Adrian & Jencks) stand to lose all their money when they gamble on springing a big time executive from jail who unfortunately disappears after release. Then, while tracking him down, they get caught up in a related murder. Now they have to find the fugitive and solve a murder at the same time.
Actually the flick's almost two movies stitched together. The first half features Adrian tracking down the bail bond skipper. But the blonde toughie almost disappears as Fowley takes over the second-half whodunit part. I expect there's a backstory to the odd shift. Nonetheless, color galore is supplied by brassy sassy Iris Adrian as the bail bonds executive. I kept expecting her usual role to arrive with a plate of food or take a dinner order. Still, she's a powerhouse in an unexpected leading part. But pity poor Frank Jencks, her business partner, who she treats like a dim-bulb go-fer, while Douglas Fowley gets to play a good guy for a change. And watch for two other traditional baddies: the mustachioed Jolley and the hulking Stutenroth.
Director Herman films in straightforward fashion without much noirish embellishment or mood. Note how Fowley replaces Adrian in the second half as the detective. He's a more plausible crime-solver, but the ditzy blonde would have made a more creative impression, having her stumbling ways somehow catch the culprit. Anyway, for fans of Adrian, myself included, the programmer amounts to something of half-a-showcase, plus an unusually inventive reveal.