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Smart Blonde

  • 1936
  • Approved
  • 59m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
775
YOUR RATING
Glenda Farrell, Barton MacLane, and Wini Shaw in Smart Blonde (1936)
Official Trailer
Play trailer1:07
1 Video
13 Photos
WhodunnitComedyDramaMystery

Female reporter Torchy Blane teams with her cop boyfriend Lt. Steve McBride to solve the killing of an investor who just bought a popular local nightclub.Female reporter Torchy Blane teams with her cop boyfriend Lt. Steve McBride to solve the killing of an investor who just bought a popular local nightclub.Female reporter Torchy Blane teams with her cop boyfriend Lt. Steve McBride to solve the killing of an investor who just bought a popular local nightclub.

  • Director
    • Frank McDonald
  • Writers
    • Kenneth Gamet
    • Don Ryan
    • Frederick Nebel
  • Stars
    • Glenda Farrell
    • Barton MacLane
    • Wini Shaw
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    775
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Frank McDonald
    • Writers
      • Kenneth Gamet
      • Don Ryan
      • Frederick Nebel
    • Stars
      • Glenda Farrell
      • Barton MacLane
      • Wini Shaw
    • 24User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Smart Blonde
    Trailer 1:07
    Smart Blonde

    Photos13

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Glenda Farrell
    Glenda Farrell
    • Torchy Blane
    Barton MacLane
    Barton MacLane
    • Steve McBride
    Wini Shaw
    Wini Shaw
    • Dolly Ireland
    • (as Winifred Shaw)
    Addison Richards
    Addison Richards
    • Fitz Mularkey
    Robert Paige
    Robert Paige
    • Lewis Friel
    • (as David Carlyle)
    Craig Reynolds
    Craig Reynolds
    • Tom Carney
    Charlotte Wynters
    Charlotte Wynters
    • Marcia Friel
    • (as Charlotte Winters)
    Jane Wyman
    Jane Wyman
    • Dixie - Hatcheck Girl
    Joseph Crehan
    Joseph Crehan
    • 'Tiny' Torgenson
    Tom Kennedy
    Tom Kennedy
    • Gahagan
    John Sheehan
    John Sheehan
    • Leon Blyfuss
    Max Wagner
    Max Wagner
    • Chuck Cannon
    George Lloyd
    George Lloyd
    • Pickney Sax
    Frank Bruno
    • Boze
    • (uncredited)
    Glen Cavender
    Glen Cavender
    • Trooper Sergeant
    • (uncredited)
    Eddy Chandler
    Eddy Chandler
    • Det. Marsotto
    • (uncredited)
    Alexander Cross
    Alexander Cross
    • Det. Klein
    • (uncredited)
    Joe Cunningham
    • City Editor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Frank McDonald
    • Writers
      • Kenneth Gamet
      • Don Ryan
      • Frederick Nebel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    6.4775
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    Featured reviews

    6planktonrules

    Not bad at all--an amiable entry into the Torchy Blane series

    This is the first of nine Torchy Blane films. Glenda Farrell plays Torchy and Barton MacLane plays her fiancé, the police lieutenant. In an almost unrecognizable supporting role, you have a young Jane Wyman--look carefully, it really is her. This is ironic, as in the last Torchy Blane film (TORCHY BLANE...PLAYING WITH DYNAMITE), Wyman herself played the role of Blane. In total, Farrell played the lead in seven of the nine films--with Lola Lane playing Torchy in one of the films in the middle of the series.

    The film begins with Torchy rushing to meet a train so she can interview Tim Torgensen who just agreed to buy the business empire of Fitz Mularkey. However, just after they leave the train, Torgensen is shot and killed. Who did it is uncertain, but it happens right before Torchy's eyes. Naturally she calls her newspaper with the story, but in a pattern to be repeated in future films of the series, she helps her fiancé investigate the crime.

    Look quickly at the railway station. That's Wayne Morris behind the desk doing a tiny bit part just before he became a Warner Brothers star.

    Overall, the film is very typical of B-detective films of the era. While not nearly as interesting as the Charlie Chan or Saint films, it's pretty good for fans of the genre. For others, it's a pleasant little time-passer.
    6Mike-764

    Meet Torchy Blane

    Tiny Torgenson had just purchased the Million Club and various gambling/sporting enterprises from Fitz Mularkey (who has decided to quit the racket due to his upcoming marriage to Marcia Friel), but Torgenson is immediately killed arriving in New York. Morning Herald reporter Torchy Blane, who was with Torgenson when he was killed, goes with her boyfriend, Lt. Steve McBride, to the Million Club to tell Mularkey of what happened. Mularkey, being very good friends with Torgenson, decides he'll catch the murderer before the police get him, but McBride advises him to do otherwise. Torchy suspects Chuck Cannon (Mularkey's bodyguard) of the murder since Mularkey won't have much use for him after the racket, but McBride suspects one of the other purchasers of the Mularkey's interests. McBride's leads end up nowhere and he goes after Cannon, as does Mularkey. Cannon is later found murdered, and evidence leads McBride to think Mularkey is the killer. Torchy has other ideas however and tries to convince McBride. Okay entry in the series, yet based on this film you wouldn't think 8 more films would follow. Much of the film does seem like its parodying the blue collar-gangster films typical of Warner Brothers in the 30s. Farrell and MacLane have great chemistry together, which shows throughout. The script did seem like it was repeating itself and aiming at clichés typical of the movie mystery/newspaper reporter/stubborn cop/racketeers. Rating, based on B mysteries, 6.
    8csteidler

    Enthusiastic cast and fast moving plot in very funny mystery

    A taxi races along beside a moving train. The passenger leans forward: "Driver, let me off at the next crossing, will you?" She hops out, takes a few running steps, then leaps aboard the very last car as the train rolls by. –That's our first glimpse of Torchy Blane, ace reporter.

    This snappy opening is a good introduction to our heroine: fast talking, quick witted, and pretty much fearless. Boarding a moving train is typical of Torchy's style—she simply wants to snag an interview with an incoming businessman before his arrival in town, so she hops the train he's on. Sure enough, she gets the interview…and gets herself a mystery along with her scoop when the man is murdered a few hours later.

    Glenda Farrell is just about perfect as Torchy—sweet smile, rapid fire delivery, irrepressible charm. Also on the case is Barton McLane as Torchy's boyfriend, Lieutenant Steve McBride. Torchy appreciates his manliness ("All he needs is a leopard skin"), but she is consistently a step or two ahead of him in the investigation—which fact he grudgingly admires but finds annoying as well.

    Tom Kennedy is wonderfully goofy as an assisting cop named Gahagan who loves life and composes poetry ("I love the night!" he exclaims, more or less at random). And a young Jane Wyman is hilarious in a small role as a hat check girl who, among other adventures, comes home from a party with a St. Bernard: "I wish I knew where I got that dog," she muses.

    A nice plot keeps us guessing and ties up neatly; likable characters and lively dialog add up to a very entertaining quickie.

    My favorite exchange comes when Torchy is trying to talk her way into a murder scene. (She's there well ahead of Steve, naturally.) "I'm from the Herald," she argues to the cop guarding the door, "I'm Torchy Blane." His deadpan response: "I don't care if you're Flaming Youth, you can't go in there."
    8oldblackandwhite

    Little Programer Packs A Big Punch

    Dynamite comes in small packages. Which describes both short "B" second feature Smart Blonde and its cute, perky star Glenda Farrel as Torchy Blane. Initial entry in the highly successful Torchy Blane series, Smart Blonde runs on open throttle for its entire 59 minutes. It is smart, tough, breezy, lightning paced, with funny, snappy dialog delivered incredibly fast. This picture is nothing if not fast-talking. Glenda Farrell reportedly could speak 390 words per minute, and she demonstrates it throughout. But co-star Barton MacLane, who plays her tough cop boy friend Steve McBride, may actually have surpassed her in the motor mouth department in a couple of scenes. Most of the other Runyonesque characters in this entertaining mystery do likewise. If all the dialog in this movie had been delivered at a normal cadence, the running time would have been at least twenty minutes longer. This picture along with other Warner Brothers gangster movies of the 1930's makes you wonder if the studio had a course in fast talking for its stock players.

    Stock players were exactly what Farrell and MacLane were. Usually in supporting parts, she the hard-boiled broad, he the burly, loud-mouthed gangster or cop. But the Torchy series gave both a chance to use their special talents in leading roles, and both made the best of it. The pair had crackling chemistry together, with cozy affectionate interludes only occasionally breaking their constant rat-a-tat wise-cracking. Torchy is a smart girl reporter who solves the cases Steve isn't sharp enough to dope out on his own. At least that's the way she sees it.

    Farrell and MacLane get solid support from a crew of other Warner Brothers stock players, especially Addison Richards as a shady, but on-the-level night club/race track operator around whom the murder mystery swirls, Wini Shaw as the beautiful singer who loves him, and Charlotte Wynters as the high class dame he loves. This role as a tough, but likable borderline hoodlum was a real change of pace for Richards. In 400 movie and television appearances from the 1930' to the 1960's the tall, lanky actor rarely played other than judges, district attorneys, doctors, high ranking army officers, and other dignified types. MacLane may have showed good chemistry with the pretty, vivacious Farrell, but it was Charlotte Wynters who became Mrs. Barton MacLane about a year after Smart Blonde's release.

    Smart Blonde is a delightful, stimulating little mystery potboiler, full of plot twists, intrigues, and explosive bursts of action. Characterization is colorful and well developed. As a big studio "B" picture, the sets and cinematography are nearly as good as in one of Warner Brothers' top productions. Director Frank McDonald, a life-long "B" picture specialist, keeps all on target throughout. To compress all that happens in the story into less than an hour running time, even considering the machine gun dialog delivery, should rate as a masterpiece of film editing for Frank MaGee. Acting was first rate all around but especially from the two likable leads.

    An enduring example of how the big studios of Old Hollywood could turn out good looking, entertaining pictures when only half-way trying.
    6bkoganbing

    Smarter Than Her Cop In Any Event

    Smart Blonde is the first film of the Torchy Blane series with Glenda Farrell as former showgirl turned reporter with a real keen sense of a scoop. She works the police beat where she constantly runs up against her boyfriend, homicide cop Barton MacLane.

    Depending on how you view things, Torchy's a help or a hindrance. But in this case she was literally on top of the story. Seconds after being interviewed by her, nightclub impresario Joseph Crehan is shot down in Union Station.

    Crehan was going to buy a nightclub owned by Addison Richards who was getting out of the business and getting ready to marry Charlotte Wynters and go into the real estate business with her and her brother Robert Paige, leaving his club singer Wini Shaw all in distress. Another one in distress is Max Wagner, Richards's gunsill because there's not much call for his line of work in real estate.

    One murder later of course Torchy's put it all together for MacLane and gets her paper the scoop. But the plot does take an interesting twist or two, it's not who you think it is.

    Jane Wyman has a small supporting role as a hatcheck girl with a tendency to gossip which aids Farrell in her story. This was of course at the beginning of Wyman's career which included a film as Torchy Blane herself when Farrell quit the series.

    Smart Blonde proves how popular the Torchy Blane series was at Warner Brothers and why it was so well received in the late Thirties.

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    Related interests

    Jude Law in Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011)
    Whodunnit
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Tom Kennedy, who plays the dumb cop Gahagan in this film, repeated the role in all the subsequent Torchy Blane series films. He was the only actor to appear in all nine Torchy Blane movies.
    • Quotes

      Torchy Blane: [Referring to Steve] Big stiff!

      Dixie - Hatcheck Girl: Ain't he masterful?

      Torchy Blane: Yeah, all he needs is a leopard skin.

    • Connections
      Featured in Inside the Dream Factory (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      Why Do I Have to Sing a Torch Song?
      (1937) (uncredited)

      Music by M.K. Jerome

      Lyrics by Jack Scholl

      Sung by Wini Shaw (as Winifred Shaw) at the nightclub

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 2, 1937 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • No Hard Feelings
    • Filming locations
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 59m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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