A police lieutenant aims to dismantle a tire bootlegger ring due to WWII rubber shortage, involving his brother's involvement in the racket and their shared love for a girl.A police lieutenant aims to dismantle a tire bootlegger ring due to WWII rubber shortage, involving his brother's involvement in the racket and their shared love for a girl.A police lieutenant aims to dismantle a tire bootlegger ring due to WWII rubber shortage, involving his brother's involvement in the racket and their shared love for a girl.
- Joe Genna
- (as Jack LaRue)
- Fritz Hummel
- (as Michael Ames)
- Mrs. Bronson
- (uncredited)
- Police Desk Sgt.
- (uncredited)
- Police Sgt. Naylor
- (uncredited)
- Joe Taylor
- (uncredited)
- Adolph
- (uncredited)
- Mechanic
- (uncredited)
- Air Raid Warden
- (uncredited)
- Slimey - Informant
- (uncredited)
- Mr. Bronson
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The racket has some solid protection in the town so Travis has to proceed with caution.
Eleanor Parker has a small role in this B film as she was moving up the Warner Brothers ladder. We all pay our dues.
One thing is certain, Americans are still obsessed with their cars now as in World War II. Didn't anybody tell these kids there's a war on.
Travis is surprisingly good in a role which calls for him to be a man of action. At 57 minutes there isn't much time to develop subtlety, but he's got a fun-loving brother in Charles Lang who thinks he's a sap for risking his life, a doting Oirish mother in Mary Gordon, and Eleanor Parker as a potential sister-in-law. Poverty Row had been running this sort of plot for a couple of years, but D. Ross Lederman directs with his usual anonymous competence to allow the Warner Brothers staff to offer the offer the banging guns and crashing cars that they excelled in for more than a decade.
The bulk of the story revolves around police attempts to crack the ruthless ring, and it devolves into Irish-American stereotypes that might be offensive if they weren't so quaint. A couple of brothers named Harrigan (Richard Travis and Charles Lang) are at loggerheads; one's an honest cop, the other a hooligan mixed up in the phony-rubber ring. To make matters worse, one's named Pat and the other Mike (and to make them worse still, the girl they're both sweet on is named Kitty Kelly - Eleanor Parker, in a sliver of a role). Good cop Pat pretends to go bad to infiltrate the gang, but there's already a bad cop on the force, one who's head man in the racket. The Last Ride is all pretty routine, barely saved by its glimpse into a vanished style of petty crime.
Did you know
- TriviaProduced in 1942 but not released until 1944.
- GoofsWhen the car containing the two witnesses blows up, it is a loud and tremendous explosion. However, the explosion only damages their car and not any of the cars parked next to it nor any of the surroundings.
- Quotes
[last lines]
Detective Lt. Pat Harrigan: This is no time for kiddin', Mike - how bad are you hurt?
Mike Harrigan: Bad enough... Take good care of Kitty, Pat - she's your kind of people... Funny, but... I'm going out kinda glad you're still a copper.
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $103,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 57m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1