An actress is murdered in the midst of shooting a dance sequence for her latest picture, with Inspector Steve Trent on the case.An actress is murdered in the midst of shooting a dance sequence for her latest picture, with Inspector Steve Trent on the case.An actress is murdered in the midst of shooting a dance sequence for her latest picture, with Inspector Steve Trent on the case.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Phillip Trent
- Larry King
- (as Clifford Jones)
Charles Brinley
- Electrician
- (uncredited)
A.S. 'Pop' Byron
- Detective #3
- (uncredited)
Stephen Chase
- Wallach
- (uncredited)
Jack Cheatham
- Motorcycle Officer
- (uncredited)
Edmund Cobb
- Electrician
- (uncredited)
Kernan Cripps
- Gateman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
It's the third of four movies that Ralph Bellamy starred in for Columbia as Inspector Steve Trent. In this one, flighty movie star Gail Patrick is shot while performing a dance number in which her character, Helen Stanley is shot.
It's a nicely set-up mystery, with a lot of suspects which Bellamy muscularly eliminates one by one -- Ward Bond, in an early substantial part is eliminated when he's shot while phoning Bellamy with a vital clue. It's not really a fair mystery, since the clue which lets Bellamy crack the case is withheld from the audience. Instead we get the usual tropes of mysteries of the era, directed unenthusiastically by Ross Lederman, especially gloved hands emerging from from drapes. The cast includes Shirley Grey and Vincent Sherman.
It's a nicely set-up mystery, with a lot of suspects which Bellamy muscularly eliminates one by one -- Ward Bond, in an early substantial part is eliminated when he's shot while phoning Bellamy with a vital clue. It's not really a fair mystery, since the clue which lets Bellamy crack the case is withheld from the audience. Instead we get the usual tropes of mysteries of the era, directed unenthusiastically by Ross Lederman, especially gloved hands emerging from from drapes. The cast includes Shirley Grey and Vincent Sherman.
This movie was remade in 1938 tilt who killed Gail Preston. Rita Hayworth had the lead. Only differences are this is set on a movie set. Rita's was in a night club.
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If you want to kill an actor on set, just sneak in real bullets for a shooting scene. It's not foolproof, but it will get the job done.
In "The Crime of Helen Stanley" that's exactly what was done. Helen Stanley (Gail Patrick) was killed during a shooting scene while filming a movie. The initial suspect was her ex-husband, but once he committed suicide he was out of the picture. There were no shortage of suspects as Helen wasn't a very well liked woman. No suspect was guiltier seeming than Lee Davis (Kane Richmond), a cameraman whom she used to date but who was now engaged to her sister. You had to think that he couldn't be guilty because he was in love, and Hollywood never made cold-blooded killers out of people in love.
Trying to solve the case was Inspector Steve Trent (Ralph Bellamy). He followed every clue and, like all movie detectives, he had a nose for who was telling the truth and who was lying.
"The Crime of Helen Stanley" would've been better had I not already seen a murder on a movie set in "The Death Kiss." It was different, but not different enough to distinguish itself.
Free on YouTube.
In "The Crime of Helen Stanley" that's exactly what was done. Helen Stanley (Gail Patrick) was killed during a shooting scene while filming a movie. The initial suspect was her ex-husband, but once he committed suicide he was out of the picture. There were no shortage of suspects as Helen wasn't a very well liked woman. No suspect was guiltier seeming than Lee Davis (Kane Richmond), a cameraman whom she used to date but who was now engaged to her sister. You had to think that he couldn't be guilty because he was in love, and Hollywood never made cold-blooded killers out of people in love.
Trying to solve the case was Inspector Steve Trent (Ralph Bellamy). He followed every clue and, like all movie detectives, he had a nose for who was telling the truth and who was lying.
"The Crime of Helen Stanley" would've been better had I not already seen a murder on a movie set in "The Death Kiss." It was different, but not different enough to distinguish itself.
Free on YouTube.
I don't know why the 2006 reviewer from New York has never examined his analysis of "The Crime of Helen Stanley," as his depiction is for an entirely different movie (all other reviewers are right on the money). This was the third of four Columbia whodunits starring Ralph Bellamy as Inspector Steve Trent, investigating homicide in a no nonsense fashion that doesn't involve comic relief, a rare approach for the 1930s (again for Columbia, he went on to emphasize the humor playing the cinema's first Ellery Queen in 1940). Gail Patrick plays the title character, a bitchy Hollywood actress who mysteriously fears for her life, protesting when her former lover takes up with her sister (Shirley Grey). Shot dead in front of the camera while twirling the dance floor, the prime suspect turns out to be her former husband, confessing his guilt before committing suicide. Inspector Trent continues his investigation, learning that the answers can all be found in the late actress' diary, which everyone would like to find. This was a Hollywood mystery along the lines of 1932's "The Death Kiss," always enjoyable to see the behind-the-scenes action in a real studio, in this case Columbia. The cast is made up of little known contract players, but there is Ward Bond, another prime suspect, and Bradley Page, always a red herring. Shirley Grey previously played opposite Boris Karloff in 1931's "The Public Defender," and a year later co-starred with Bela Lugosi in "Mystery of the Mary Celeste." Vincent Sherman, as Helen Stanley's bodyguard, later became better known as a director (1939's "The Return of Doctor X"), while Steven Chase, as the suicidal ex, played the doomed doctor devoured by "The Blob" in 1958. The first Trent feature was "Before Midnight" (1933), also just as good, the second, "One is Guilty," rather elusive, the last, "Girl in Danger," a weak finale. Ralph Bellamy's sterling career continued right up until his death in 1991.
Movie star Helen Stanley is jumpy, nervous. She checks the gun in her dressing room desk drawer. She calls up her friend Inspector Trent and urges him to come to the studio. By the time Trent arrives, Helen Stanley has been murdered while filming a dance scene. Inspector Trent investigates.
Gail Patrick is only on screen for about 15 minutes as the temperamental Helen Stanley, but that's plenty of time for Patrick to establish her character as one of those mercurial celebrities who race through life making enemies.
It's up to Ralph Bellamy, as Inspector Trent, to sort through those enemies and identify which of them is the murderer. His long list of suspects includes everyone on the set--cameraman, director, bodyguard, crew members. Shirley Grey has a nice role as a script girl who is engaged to cameraman Kane Richmond. Lucien Prival is the veteran movie director, Phillip Trent an assistant, Bradley Page an agent, Ward Bond a crew member--and all seemingly had reasons to do away with the much-hated actress.
Bellamy is fairly low-key as the pipe-chewing Inspector Trent. He offers a few nuggets of detective wisdom ("Those open and shut cases sometimes are the toughest ones to crack") but mainly hangs around the studio asking the obvious questions. That leaves the focus on plot, which along with all of those suspects involves a lost diary and a missing murder weapon. It all moves fairly quickly from one short scene to the next. Overall it's pretty standard, a reliably entertaining B mystery.
Gail Patrick is only on screen for about 15 minutes as the temperamental Helen Stanley, but that's plenty of time for Patrick to establish her character as one of those mercurial celebrities who race through life making enemies.
It's up to Ralph Bellamy, as Inspector Trent, to sort through those enemies and identify which of them is the murderer. His long list of suspects includes everyone on the set--cameraman, director, bodyguard, crew members. Shirley Grey has a nice role as a script girl who is engaged to cameraman Kane Richmond. Lucien Prival is the veteran movie director, Phillip Trent an assistant, Bradley Page an agent, Ward Bond a crew member--and all seemingly had reasons to do away with the much-hated actress.
Bellamy is fairly low-key as the pipe-chewing Inspector Trent. He offers a few nuggets of detective wisdom ("Those open and shut cases sometimes are the toughest ones to crack") but mainly hangs around the studio asking the obvious questions. That leaves the focus on plot, which along with all of those suspects involves a lost diary and a missing murder weapon. It all moves fairly quickly from one short scene to the next. Overall it's pretty standard, a reliably entertaining B mystery.
Did you know
- TriviaActors Philip Trent and Ralph Bellamy were very nervous about the heights they had to perform and required a crane to place them on a catwalk. When no stuntman could be found to perform a particularly dangerous stunt, an extra was used. He broke his back.
- ConnectionsFollowed by One Is Guilty (1934)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Murder in the Studio
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 58m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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