The Lone Wolf accepts a 24-hour no-trouble challenge from Inspector Crane, then gets framed for murder and kidnapping. He chases thieves with stolen Treasury plates while evading police.The Lone Wolf accepts a 24-hour no-trouble challenge from Inspector Crane, then gets framed for murder and kidnapping. He chases thieves with stolen Treasury plates while evading police.The Lone Wolf accepts a 24-hour no-trouble challenge from Inspector Crane, then gets framed for murder and kidnapping. He chases thieves with stolen Treasury plates while evading police.
Ernie Adams
- Newsstand Clerk
- (uncredited)
Irving Bacon
- Projectionist
- (uncredited)
Stanley Brown
- Policeman on Train
- (uncredited)
Edmund Cobb
- Cop In Charge of Vault Opening
- (uncredited)
Art Gilmore
- Newsreel Announcer
- (uncredited)
Jesse Graves
- Train Steward
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
THE LONE WOLF TAKES A CHANCE is another in the long-running series and pretty much par for the course as these things go. Our hero (with his trusty sidekick in tow) takes a challenge that he'll stay out of trouble for 24 hours, except that trouble soon comes knocking in the form of some stolen printing plates and a whole host of murder. This has the usual lightness of touch which makes it a watchable little movie, even if it is brimming with cliche and contrivance. Moviegoers may enjoy spotting Lloyd Bridges in a tiny bit part that marks his first screen role. The flirtations with noir, including a femme fatale, are adequate.
There was a bit more comedy in this film from The Lone Wolf Series. The Lone Wolf as played by Warren William and his valet Jamison who is Eric Blore after being innocently trapped in a device to discourage bank robbers bet Inspector Thurston Hall that they can't go 24 hours without getting in some kind of trouble. That's a stupid bet on William's part because this whole series is The Lone Wolf getting into all kinds of scrapes and the police not believing he's gone legitimate.
This time trouble comes in the form of private detective Regis Toomey being shot and falling nine stories to his death outside William's hotel room. Toomey was on a case involving a gang trying to rob a newly designed train car invented by Lloyd Bridges. It opens with a combination and an attempt to break in without knowing the combination will result in poison gas killing you. A bit extreme I think, but the first cargo this car is carrying is treasury plates and lots of crooks would like to get their hands on those.
It's the usual run of things for William and Blore trying to catch the crooks in this case a gang led by Henry Wilcoxon and Walter Kingsford and trying to stay a step ahead of the cops who always think William is the bad guy. It's not much of a challenge in the case of Fred Kelsey who is Thurston Hall's sidekick and the butt of every gag in the film. Kelsey is one of those dumb flatfoots who graduated from the Keystone Police Academy and it's almost cruel what William and Blore do to him in every film.
Fans of the Lone Wolf series and Warren William should definitely like The Lone Wolf Takes A Chance. Incidentally he does lose the bet and pays off, sort of.
This time trouble comes in the form of private detective Regis Toomey being shot and falling nine stories to his death outside William's hotel room. Toomey was on a case involving a gang trying to rob a newly designed train car invented by Lloyd Bridges. It opens with a combination and an attempt to break in without knowing the combination will result in poison gas killing you. A bit extreme I think, but the first cargo this car is carrying is treasury plates and lots of crooks would like to get their hands on those.
It's the usual run of things for William and Blore trying to catch the crooks in this case a gang led by Henry Wilcoxon and Walter Kingsford and trying to stay a step ahead of the cops who always think William is the bad guy. It's not much of a challenge in the case of Fred Kelsey who is Thurston Hall's sidekick and the butt of every gag in the film. Kelsey is one of those dumb flatfoots who graduated from the Keystone Police Academy and it's almost cruel what William and Blore do to him in every film.
Fans of the Lone Wolf series and Warren William should definitely like The Lone Wolf Takes A Chance. Incidentally he does lose the bet and pays off, sort of.
A former Private Detective is shot outside the very hotel window of Michael Lanyard, Inspector Crane is determined to stop Lanyard from interfering with the case, even arresting him.
Those opening sequences with the cat and pearls were very funny, they help to set the tone for the film.
It's funnier than other Lone Wolf films that I've seen, and that is no bad thing, it certainly has enough suspense and mystery, but the humorous moments are joyous.
There are more than a few shades of The Lady Vanishes about this film, the sequences on board the train are perhaps the highlight of the movie, very, very good sequences.
Very well produced, this film looks great, and moves by at a pace, there are no slow moments, it really does flash by at a canter.
I thoroughly enjoyed it, 8/10.
Those opening sequences with the cat and pearls were very funny, they help to set the tone for the film.
It's funnier than other Lone Wolf films that I've seen, and that is no bad thing, it certainly has enough suspense and mystery, but the humorous moments are joyous.
There are more than a few shades of The Lady Vanishes about this film, the sequences on board the train are perhaps the highlight of the movie, very, very good sequences.
Very well produced, this film looks great, and moves by at a pace, there are no slow moments, it really does flash by at a canter.
I thoroughly enjoyed it, 8/10.
Michael Lanyard -aka the Lone wolf - is a reformed jewel thief but inspector Crane doesn't think so, and that view is exacerbated when Lanyard and his valet ( played by Eric Blore) is trapped behind bars of a bank when following a cat who has a necklace on it. Lanyard is soon proven innocent, but the inspector wages that he won't be able to keep out of trouble, and he is right. It's not too long before our hero ends up rescuing an inventor of special currency engraving plates from the forgers attempting to steal them.
Exciting Lone Wolf mystery with touches of A lady Vanishes and old deserted house story. The plot fires on its cylinders, adeptly moving on to each scene; there's a lively train sequence where Lone Wolf is trying to prove that the inventor is kidnapped, but that backfires, and a race to find the inventor ensues, and it rounds up with a nail biting climax. An enjoyable gem.
Exciting Lone Wolf mystery with touches of A lady Vanishes and old deserted house story. The plot fires on its cylinders, adeptly moving on to each scene; there's a lively train sequence where Lone Wolf is trying to prove that the inventor is kidnapped, but that backfires, and a race to find the inventor ensues, and it rounds up with a nail biting climax. An enjoyable gem.
I'm a big fan of Warren William and Eric Blore, as well as mystery/comedy movies of that era, so my 9 star rating may be a tad prejudiced by that...still, the movie is one of the best entries in those early Lone Wolf films.
The plot at times is rather silly with the Lone Wolf and Jamison trying to save the life of an inventor (Lloyd Bridges)...what did he invent?...a railroad car that couldn't be broken into...if a criminal tried, bells & whistles would sound, and poison gas would fill the car...Huh?...what if some poor hobo, looking for a ride and a place to sleep happened upon that car?...Llyod would have got his butt sued...
But the movie chugs along the rails at a fast pace, plenty of laughs and an enjoyable way to spend a little over an hour of one's time...
I keep this movie on my cluttered DVR...it's a comfortable movie for me...when sleep comes slowly, I just turn this on and within 30 or 40 minutes I'm fast asleep...
The plot at times is rather silly with the Lone Wolf and Jamison trying to save the life of an inventor (Lloyd Bridges)...what did he invent?...a railroad car that couldn't be broken into...if a criminal tried, bells & whistles would sound, and poison gas would fill the car...Huh?...what if some poor hobo, looking for a ride and a place to sleep happened upon that car?...Llyod would have got his butt sued...
But the movie chugs along the rails at a fast pace, plenty of laughs and an enjoyable way to spend a little over an hour of one's time...
I keep this movie on my cluttered DVR...it's a comfortable movie for me...when sleep comes slowly, I just turn this on and within 30 or 40 minutes I'm fast asleep...
Did you know
- TriviaFirst credited film role for Lloyd Bridges.
- GoofsWhen Wallace goes to climb out the hotel window he looks down and we see the street below, including the sign for the Orpheum Theater in Los Angeles. He then goes around the corner of the building on the outside, looks down, and we are shown the same shot as before, theater sign and all.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Secrets of the Lone Wolf (1941)
- How long is The Lone Wolf Takes a Chance?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Proezas do Lobo Solitário
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 14m(74 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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