After his photo is accidentally taken, that someone will do everything in his power to get hold of the negative.After his photo is accidentally taken, that someone will do everything in his power to get hold of the negative.After his photo is accidentally taken, that someone will do everything in his power to get hold of the negative.
- Harold
- (as Wendell Phillips)
- Bessie, Receptionist
- (as Erin O'Kelly)
- Jimmy
- (as James Sheridan)
- Detective
- (uncredited)
- Detective
- (uncredited)
- Miller
- (uncredited)
- Drunk
- (uncredited)
- Inspector Lonigan
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaEagle-Lion's Manhattan-based New York headquarters serves as headquarters for Argus Newsreel.
- Quotes
Harry Avery: [Looking at Beaumont in a Nazi newsreel] Look at that guy.
[Now shows Beaumont from footage of Phil's camera]
Harry Avery: Take a look at this.
Phil Sparr: That's my shot from this morning.
Harry Avery: See any resemblance?
Phil Sparr: The same guy!
Harry Avery: Exactly. And that Nazi is Kurt Fowler, known as "The Butcher."
Phil Sparr: Fowler? He was reported killed in the bombing of Berlin. He's listed as dead.
Harry Avery: That's right. And your camera brought him back to life. That's what I call a great scoop!
Loring Smith, Baxter's boss, takes a look at the negative. Kollmar isn't a nervous husband. He's a Nazi bigwig thought dead, and wanted in as many countries as a piano has keys. Suddenly Baxter isn't a character in a Runyonesque 1930s comedy-thriller, he's in over his head in a film-noir world, where newsreel executives get shoved out of windows, and failed actors turned hood slap their girlfriends and leave scars, where gun-battles take place on the streets of Manhattan, full of newsies and comedy drunks and cars passing by, not knowing what is going on, because they're too busy to turn their heads and look at it. Baxter's not wise-cracking any more. He's too busy being handcuffed in a coal bin, wondering when he's going to be shot.
It's a startling bit of film-making from Eagle-Lion, climbing its way out of its PRC roots. Director Jack Donohoe had started out as a dancer, had acted in a few movies, did some choreography and stage directing, and would wind up directing some popular and trivial movies. He would end his career directing hundreds of episodes of Lucille Ball sitcoms. Here, in his first movie, he balances things just right.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 16 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1