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The Murder in the Museum

  • 1934
  • 1h 5m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
240
YOUR RATING
The Murder in the Museum (1934)
WhodunnitMysteryThriller

When a city councilman is murdered while investigating allegations of drug dealing going on in a somewhat disreputable sideshow, the niece of the chief suspect teams up with a newspaper repo... Read allWhen a city councilman is murdered while investigating allegations of drug dealing going on in a somewhat disreputable sideshow, the niece of the chief suspect teams up with a newspaper reporter to find the real killer.When a city councilman is murdered while investigating allegations of drug dealing going on in a somewhat disreputable sideshow, the niece of the chief suspect teams up with a newspaper reporter to find the real killer.

  • Director
    • Melville Shyer
  • Writer
    • F.B. Crosswhite
  • Stars
    • Henry B. Walthall
    • John Harron
    • Phyllis Barrington
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    240
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Melville Shyer
    • Writer
      • F.B. Crosswhite
    • Stars
      • Henry B. Walthall
      • John Harron
      • Phyllis Barrington
    • 14User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos1

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    Top cast28

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    Henry B. Walthall
    Henry B. Walthall
    • Bernard Latham Wayne, alias Prof. Mysto
    • (as Henry B. Walthal)
    John Harron
    John Harron
    • Jerry Ross
    Phyllis Barrington
    Phyllis Barrington
    • Lois Brandon
    Tom O'Brien
    Tom O'Brien
    • Alfred Carr
    Joseph W. Girard
    Joseph W. Girard
    • Police Commissioner Brandon
    • (as Joseph Girard)
    Symona Boniface
    Symona Boniface
    • Katura the Seeress
    Donald Kerr
    • Museum Tour Guide
    Sam Flint
    Sam Flint
    • Councilman Blair Newgate
    John Elliott
    John Elliott
    • Detective Chief Snell
    • (as John Elliot)
    Steve Clemente
    Steve Clemente
    • Pedro Darro
    Lynton Brent
    Lynton Brent
    • Concessionaire with Gun
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Cheatham
    Jack Cheatham
    • Detective Jack
    • (uncredited)
    George Chesebro
    George Chesebro
    • White-Hatted Reporter at Grilling
    • (uncredited)
    Karla Cowan
    • Museum Ticket-Seller
    • (uncredited)
    John Webb Dillion
    • Desk Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Dorety
    Charles Dorety
    • Man with Novelty Gun
    • (uncredited)
    Kit Guard
    Kit Guard
    • Short Carr Henchman
    • (uncredited)
    Henry Hall
    Henry Hall
    • Mr. Judson
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Melville Shyer
    • Writer
      • F.B. Crosswhite
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.1240
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    Featured reviews

    7JohnHowardReid

    Pre-Code Spice in a Sideshow Setting

    Another of Henry B. Walthall's 1934 movies (he played in twelve that year), this interesting curio, Murder in the Museum, is one of a handful directed by Melville Shyer, who made some 150 films as an assistant director. Mr Shyer handles this assignment with more than routine competence, even using track shots effectively on occasion. True, he is slightly let down by obviously sparse set dressing, and lackluster silent hero, John Harron, soon demonstrates why he quickly went down the ladder to playing uncredited bits. But super-svelte Phyllis Barrington (in her last of twelve movies) makes an engaging heroine and the support cast is filled out by tip-top people like John Elliott, Symona Boniface, Joe Girard and Donald Kerr, plus two wonderful shimmy dancers and other rakish sideshow denizens. Once the action moves away from the carny setting, alas, the plot becomes less interesting. All told, however, by producer Willis Kent's rock-bottom standards, Murder in the Museum stands as a classy production.
    6Hitchcoc

    Interesting

    This reminded me of Lon Chaney movie where we are brought into a kind of freak show atmosphere with unconventional characters. The neat thing is that they are like all of us, and that's the tragic element. Because the world they live in has so much of an impact on them, it is hard for them to reach above and beyond to happiness. This is actually a pretty decent movie with fair cinematography and decent performances. Another reviewer mentioned Todd Browning. I'd love to hear more about him and his life. His movies are really quite engaging. So this could typify the genre he worked in, even though it wasn't his.

    I was pleased that the conclusion wasn't some offhanded, anything to get a finish to this thing kind of work but dealt with the pain and reality of the characters.
    5CatherineYronwode

    Restoring Carmelita and Fateema

    Regarding the variant versions of this film, it should be noted that one IMDb comment-maker thinks the version with exotic dancing features a section filmed later and spliced in. I do know that the version from Alpha Video as of this year (2006) does NOT contain the entire sequence -- but the sequence CAN be found in another Willis Kent movie available from Alpha Video, namely "Confessions of a Vice Baron" (1943), which is a Willis Kent Productions pastiche of scenes taken mostly from films that starred Willy Castello, but also includes a number of non-Castello movie clips as well. I have checked out the question of the missing footage from the Alpha Video DVD version of "Murder in the Museum" and located it. I would like to describe it, for the benefit of my fellow "trainspotters."

    In the Alpha Video version of "Murder in the Museum", the cootch dancers are shown doing a come-on for their dance, then doing a "gyp" version of the dance for 10 cents (to appease snoopy vice-busters), and then a 25 cent "real" version of the dance is promised to male viewers who file into a room. We see only the first portion of the 25 cent dance by Caremelita, a traditional belly dancer in a bangled costume. No music is playing as she dances, and her body is partially obscured by various onlookers until the end of the scene. The movie then picks up with the gunshot that signals the promised "Murder in the Museum."

    The deleted footage from this sequence can be found in Alpha Video's DVD of the Willis Kent / Willy Castello pastiche movie "Confessions of a Vice Baron." To get to it, jump to Chapter Index 5 and fast forward through the school girl scene and the Willy Castello close-up; it is the next scene. A jump-cut is made from the barker's intro of the dancers, deleting the 10 cent "gyp" dance, and going directly to the 25 cent dance scene opening. We see the same footage of Carmelita dancing in front of the obscuring onlookers, but this time we get to hear the Turkish music. Then the scene opens up and we see Carmelita full view, on the same stage, but with no bystanders to block our sight of her as she continues to dance to the same music. When she finishes, there appears to be a soundtrack splice (the music jumps) and the off-camera barker says "And over here is Fateema!" and we see another young woman doing some traditional belly-dance moves. She is not shown on the same set as the sideshow midway (she is against a dark floral drapery curtain) and she is not wearing traditional Middle Eastern bangles -- rather, she has on silk or rayon "stripper" type clothes, unlike those seen on any of the earlier-shown dancers. The same music continues over her dance, followed by another musical splice-jump, and then the scene closes out with some more footage that was obviously part of the original "Murder in the Museum": One young woman asks the other to leave as they are "the only girls" in the audience, and her friend declines, with a slight hint of lesbian interest in the dancers; they both then leave, along with the boyfriend of one of the girls. "Confessions of a Vice Baron" then switches to clips from another movie.

    It is very clear from comparing the two DVDs that the entire Carmelita dance, with accompanying music, plus the gag with the girls in the audience, came from the original, uncut version of "Murder in the Museum," but i have my doubts that the Fateema dance sequence was originally part of this movie. Given the ease with which digital film can be edited, i hope that Steve Caplan at Alpha Video can be persuaded to restore the lost footage (with or without the possibly extraneous Fateema dance), making Alpha's version of "Murder in the Museum" even better than it already is.
    6boblipton

    It's Not The Met

    Social reformers and political enemies Joseph Girard and Sam Flint are at a dime museum, as are reporter John Harron, and Girard's niece, Phyllis Barrington. It's a thoroughly sleazy affair, promising all sorts of thrills for an additional dime, and delivering very little. Besides the girls in gauzy costumes, there's an armless man, fortune-teller Symona Boniface, stage magician Henry B. Walthall, knife thrower Steve Clemente, and similar acts. Suddenly a shot rings out and Flint is dead. Eventually the police show up and arrest Flint for havinga .45 revolver. When he says he lent the gun to the armless man for an act he was working on, they discovering a toe print on it and arrest the second man. But then it turns out the bullet was a .32 smoothbore. Meanwhile, Harron and Miss Barrington investigate.

    It's a Poverty Row movie produced by Willis Kent. The director is Melville Shyer, who spend most of his career as an AD and production manager. I don't think he held any rehearsals, because the lines don't sound very convincing. Still, it's always good to see top-billed Walthall, and Bobby Harron's younger brother.
    Richard_Harland_Smith

    If you liked FREAKS ...

    When reform-minded city councilman Newgate is gunned down while investigating dope peddling charges lodged against a seedy metropolitan side show, a key suspect's debutante daughter joins forces with a slick newspaper reporter to find the real killer.

    This 1933 Poverty Row whodunit was most likely inspired by Tod Browning's FREAKS (1932), and cleverly co-opts the whodunit format to provide a mediation on urban cynicism in Depression-era America. Instead of the expected lineup of affluent ne'r-do-wells peculiar to mystery thrillers, the unusual suspects here comprise a sobering cross section of disappointed and bankrupt men, from Steve Clemente's Mexican revolutionary turned knife-thrower to Henry B. Walthall's "Professor Mysto," a sad-eyed bibliophile reduced to performing sleight-of-hand in the disreputable Sphere Museum. Several of the characters refer to grudges borne and threats perceived (whether real or imagined), and with the dead "blue-nose city councilman" etched as more of an opportunist than a philanthropist, THE MURDER IN THE MUSEUM inclines intriguingly toward social criticism - but also offers entertaining flashes of pre-Production Code pulchritude and plenty of ripe, dime novel dialogue.

    Sadly, both Walthall (formerly a star of silent films) and lead John Harron (WHITE ZOMBIE) would die before the end of the decade - lending additional poignancy to this tale of financial and spiritual ruination. Three Stooges fans will get a kick out of seeing Symona Boniface cast here as "Katura the Seeress."

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    Related interests

    Jude Law in Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011)
    Whodunnit
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Quotes

      Jerry Ross: Listen, if I could just put a hole in the floor of that loft, I'll guarantee you I'll see plenty!

      Lois Brandon: Of course, why, you're positively clever!

    • Connections
      Edited into Confessions of a Vice Baron (1943)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 27, 1934 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Five Deadly Vices
    • Filming locations
      • International Studios - 1339 Gordon Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Willis Kent Productions
    • 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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