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By Whose Hand?

  • 1932
  • Passed
  • 1h 5m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
237
YOUR RATING
Ben Lyon and Barbara Weeks in By Whose Hand? (1932)
Mystery

A man (Nat Pendleton) tries to hide aboard a moving train after murdering a jewelry magnate.A man (Nat Pendleton) tries to hide aboard a moving train after murdering a jewelry magnate.A man (Nat Pendleton) tries to hide aboard a moving train after murdering a jewelry magnate.

  • Director
    • Benjamin Stoloff
  • Writer
    • Harry Adler
  • Stars
    • Ben Lyon
    • Barbara Weeks
    • Kenneth Thomson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    237
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Benjamin Stoloff
    • Writer
      • Harry Adler
    • Stars
      • Ben Lyon
      • Barbara Weeks
      • Kenneth Thomson
    • 15User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Ben Lyon
    Ben Lyon
    • Jimmy Hawley
    Barbara Weeks
    Barbara Weeks
    • Alice Murray
    Kenneth Thomson
    Kenneth Thomson
    • Chambers
    Ethel Kenyon
    Ethel Kenyon
    • Eileen Ayensworth
    William V. Mong
    William V. Mong
    • J. W. Martin
    Dolores Ray
    • Bride
    • (as Dolores Rey)
    Nat Pendleton
    Nat Pendleton
    • Killer Delmar.
    Tom Dugan
    Tom Dugan
    • Drunk
    Dwight Frye
    Dwight Frye
    • Chick Lewis
    Billy Bletcher
    Billy Bletcher
    • Police Radio Dispatcher
    • (unconfirmed)
    • (uncredited)
    Kit Guard
    Kit Guard
    • Trainman
    • (uncredited)
    William Halligan
    William Halligan
    • Detective
    • (uncredited)
    DeWitt Jennings
    DeWitt Jennings
    • City Editor
    • (uncredited)
    Eddie Kane
    Eddie Kane
    • Eileen's Accomplice
    • (uncredited)
    Martha Mattox
    Martha Mattox
    • Spinster Train Passenger
    • (uncredited)
    Tom McGuire
    Tom McGuire
    • Train Conductor
    • (uncredited)
    Helene Millard
    Helene Millard
    • Mrs. Leonard - Widow
    • (uncredited)
    Lee Phelps
    • Ticket Agent
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Benjamin Stoloff
    • Writer
      • Harry Adler
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.5237
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    Featured reviews

    61930s_Time_Machine

    This defines the 1932 pre-code comedy crime movie.

    You probably shouldn't enjoy this because it's not a good film, in fact the script and some of the acting is terrible but it's got just enough early thirties energy and determination to be fun that it's 100% pure entertainment. A real trashy treat.

    Unless written by a Ben Hecht or a Robert Riskin etc. There was a line dividing early thirties B-movies between those which were written and acted so badly that they're unwatchable to those which tried too hard not to be dull but in doing so ended up being so stupid, silly and annoying that they're equally unwatchable. This picture made by Columbia's B team but with pretty decent production standards straddles the line perfectly.

    If you love early thirties pictures, particularly Warner's gritty features but can't be doing with those mushy theatrical productions, you'll probably like this. It's no classic but it's no MILLION DOLLAR LEGS either. Great fun.

    I've seen him in quite a few pictures but can't say I've ever really 'noticed' Ben Lyon before - he's tended to be a bit nondescript but in this he shines. His character, a less cheesy version of Dick Powell, is just right for this and he virtually single handedly brings this to life.
    5bob.decker

    An early inspiration for "Silver Streak"

    If you like movies that take place on trains, you might get a kick out of this Columbia programmer, in which a wide cast of characters become the usual suspects when murder is committed on an L.A. to San Francisco sleeper. Ben Lyon and Barbara Weeks make attractive leads, and some of the supporting players (Ethel Kenyon, Dwight Frye) are interesting to look at. Less successful is Tom Dugan's "comic" bit as a drunk who for obscure reasons attaches himself to the newspaper reporter hero outside a phone booth in Union Station and makes a general pest of himself. Rather below the standard set by Warners for this genre of picture, but entertaining nonetheless, and about 90% of the picture takes place on the train itself, for which Columbia had provided quite nice sets.
    9jcog

    Worth the wait

    Back in the mid-1990s, while researching, along with Greg Mank, the biography of Dwight Frye, it was believed that "By Whose Hand?" was a "lost" early talkie. Therefore, we were not able to screen it for the book. A few years later (approx. 1998), it was learned that the film, along with a number of other early Columbia titles, had been preserved but was unlikely to ever be released on DVD or shown on TV. That was until this morning, when TCM ran a beautiful print of "By Whose Hand?" The film is a breezy murder mystery (working title was "Murder Express") with Ben Lyon doing a fine job as the lead Jimmy Hawley, a crime reporter, who boards a train more to pursue the beautiful Barbara Weeks than to follow a lead that the escaped Killer Delmar (Nat Pendleton) might be on the train. There are many suspicious characters aboard the train, including Ethel Kenyon as a jewel thief, Kenneth Thomson as a womanizing jeweler, Helene Millard as a "grieving" widow, and the always enjoyable William V. Mong as a vengeful, bitter old man. Detective William Halligan has in his care (in cuffs) one Chick Lewis (Dwight Frye), who had squealed on his old buddy Delmar and is now being transported to prison near San Francisco. There are others on the train who somewhat spoil the mood - a goofy newlywed couple (Lorin Raker and Dolores Rey) and the usually good comic actor Tom Dugan, who somewhat overplays a drunk here and who becomes attached to Lyon. Oscar Smith plays a nervous porter with some good comedy moments.

    There are some plot twists and murders on the train which will not be revealed in case TCM airs this again. Suffice it to say Lyon and Weeks play off one another quite well. Their performances do not seem that dated for a 75 year old film. Dwight Frye is more subdued than usual and has a nice sympathetic moment with an actress playing his elderly mother prior to his boarding the train in an early sequence. Mong was beginning to become typecast as miserly old men, but here shows the skills of a veteran actor, even in a role without much dimension. Millard and Kenyon were good in their respective roles, but neither had much success in Hollywood. Barbara Weeks, however, is a fine actress who has never received her proper due from film historians. She gave up her film career (except for a few later appearances) while still in her twenties and was rumored to have died in 1954 (when she actually lived almost 50 years more - until 2003). Her grace, beauty, charm, and sense of humor all come across on screen and make one wonder why her career never really took off.

    "By Whose Hand?" is a film I have waited to see for many years and feared I'd never get the chance. Now that I have finally viewed it, I am pleased to say it met and even succeeded my expectations!
    7whpratt1

    Great Classic Train Ride Thriller

    This film was shown on Turner Classic Movies in the early hours of the AM and I was very glad to have been able to view this nice Classic Film from 1932. The story is all centered on a train ride with a prisoner aboard the Steam Engine powered train and some very shady characters both men and women. A detective on the train loses his prisoner and everyone went crazy trying to locate him, they searched the Pullman car with its bunk bed arrangements with a drawn curtain over each bunk. Some of the passengers were lovers and some couples were newly-weds and they all had to get out of their beds. There is lots of comedy even though there is murder, funny cigarettes give out and a few jewel thieves. Ben Lyon, (Jimmy), Hell's Angels" played the role of a reporter along with Barbara Weeks (Alice),"One Man Justice" who gave a great supporting role. There seemed to be plenty of blonde women on this train, it was during the 30's and everyone wanted Jean Harlow in their pictures or someone who looked like her. Ben Lyon was the star of "Hell's Angels" produced and directed by Howard Hughes. If you can catch this film on TV, you will enjoy a Classic Great Film from the PAST.
    10msladysoul

    Watch this movie; it'll be the best 63 minutes you ever spent!

    A Little Spoiler - Every pre-code fan should catch this movie, "By Whose Hand?". It was a very entertaining and rare 65 minute classic movie that was shown on Turner Classic Movies. This movie is another example of pre-code greatness. Crime, Love, Betrayal, and Murder all takes place on a train ride. Slick and Smooth Ben Lyon plays Jimmy Hawley, a newspaper reporter who is always got his eye out for a story. He gets kissed accidentally by pretty Alice (Barbara Weeks) and because of that he follows her to California on a train where a big story evolves right before his eyes. The train ride has plenty of suspects with a shady past, a jewelry distributor (Kenneth Thomson), a gorgeous moll named Eileen (Ethel Kenyon), a criminal, a bitter man, and the wife of a criminal who's going to help her husband get even with the man who framed him who's on the train. The jewelry man is killed and the beautiful moll is suspected because of her being seen with him and because of her past, the bitter guy who the jewelry man fired is suspected of killing out of revenge. The convict and his wife are suspects too even Alice (Barbara Weeks). Ben Lyon plays detective and points out the guilty and innocent. I won't give all all the details in case some of you haven't seen it.

    There is mention of dope cigarettes - weed - which was given to the man to fall asleep so he could be killed. There is also plenty of sexual innuendos that pre-code movies were known for. The newlywed couple was cute, especially, the blonde, little cutie. During the drama, the funny part is when the detective tells everyone to come out of their sleepers and he ask the newlywed couple what they were doing during the murder and the newlywed couple starts to blush and look guilty and giggles because they were having sex during the murder - they didn't say that but their face told it. That's what I like about pre-code, pre-code didn't have to be filthy and vulgar to be entertaining and sexy like movies today. Movies today should learn something from pre-code movies. This movie has everything and it's jam-packed for being just a 65 minute movie. That's what I love about pre-code, pre-code proved a movie doesn't have to be 2 hours long to be entertaining or to tell the story fully. There was a beginning, middle, and end, the pre-code movies get to the point without a lot of unnecessary parts which is good for an impatient person like me. Pre-code is entertaining all the way through. Please see this movie, I personally recommend it!

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    Related interests

    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Last movie of actress Ethel Kenyon.
    • Goofs
      Actor William V. Mong is identified on opening credits as playing "Graham" but throughout the film is repeatedly identified verbally by several cast members as J. W. Martin.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Train Engineer: [in the cab of the train, looking at his pocket watch] Twelve o'clock. Four hours ago we were in Los Angeles. Ah, nothing ever happens on this trip.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 6, 1932 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • La mano asesina
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 5m(65 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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