Showing posts with label Sidney Toler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sidney Toler. Show all posts

Friday, June 11, 2021

A Night To Remember (1942)

 
A Night To Remember - 1942

Coming up next we have 1942's "A Night To Remember", the story of a young couple who move into a Greenwich Village apartment and find themselves smack dab in the middle of a murder investigation.

The film's cast includes Loretta Young, Brian Aherne, Jeff Donnell, William Wright, Sidney Toler, Gale Sondergaard, Donald MacBride, Lee Patrick, Don Costello, and George Chandler.

Mystery novelist Jeff Troy and his wife Nancy move into a Greenwich Village apartment.  Right away, things seem strange.  A mysterious scream sends them into each other's arms.


The scream came from the housekeeper, who was cleaning in the basement apartment.  Something crawled across her feet and pinned her to the floor.  It's not the first time that this has happened, either.  Jeff and Nancy are a bit nervous.  The basement apartment now belongs to them!



Soon enough, Jeff and Nancy come into contact with whatever this mysterious thing is.  Nancy feels something on her feet.  She also sets down a candle (their electricity hadn't yet been switched on), and the candle begins to move across the floor.  In the middle of the night, Nancy is awakened by something slowly pulling the blankets off of her.

It turns out the mysterious thing was just a turtle.  (This is, in fact, a tortoise, however, it is called a turtle in the film.)  The turtle is named Old Hickory.  The apartment used to be a speakeasy, and Old Hickory was the mascot.  He was left behind after it closed.  Jeff and Nancy decide to keep him around.


Things in the apartment get very strange, when, after returning from eating dinner out, Jeff and Nancy find that items appear to have moved and the bathtub has been used.  The next morning, a dead body is discovered in their garden.

Soon the place is overrun with cops and coroners, who are anxious to find out exactly what happened.

The apartment house is full of people who have a motive for murder.  All of these people were apparently being blackmailed by the killer and forced to live in the building together.  Now, they don't have to worry about it anymore.

After discussing that the killer may well be one of them, Polly Franklin announces in a loud voice, "Well, whoever it was, I want them to know I appreciate it."


The police are very interested in Jeff as as suspect, especially since, as a murder mystery novelist, he has some idea of the workings of a murderer's mind.  Anxious to keep himself out of their line of questioning, Jeff decides to solve the case himself.

His investigation leads them to the residence of Mrs. Devoe.  Information learned there alters the direction of the case and gives Jeff a better understanding of who the murder is and why he committed his crime.



Once the killer is identified and caught, the where, who, why, and how shock everybody to their core.  Of course, you'll have to watch the film to find out who it was.

Cast rundown:

Loretta Young - A Night To Remember
   Loretta Young................................Nancy Troy

Brian Aherne - A Night To Remember
   Brian Aherne.................................Jeff Troy

Jeff Donnell - A Night To Remember
   Jeff Donnell...................................Anne Stafford Carstairs

William Wright - A Night To Remember
   William Wright...............................Scott Carstairs

Sidney Toler - A Night To Remember
   Sidney Toler..................................Inspector Hankins

Gale Sondergaard - A Night To Remember
   Gale Sondergaard..........................Mrs. Devoe

Donald MacBride - A Night To Remember
   Donald MacBride............................Bolling

Lee Patrick - A Night To Remember
   Lee Patrick....................................Polly Franklin

Don Costello - A Night To Remember
   Don Costello.................................Eddie Turner

George Chandler - A Night To Remember
   George Chandler............................Taxi Driver

And that's it for A Night To Remember.  It's a pretty good murder mystery.  It's got drama, thrills, and a lot of comedy.  The basement apartment was used in the film "My Sister Eileen", which was released a few months previously.

As always, if you wish to leave a comment, please remember our posting rules.


Thursday, May 27, 2021

It's In The Bag! (1945)

It's In The Bag! - 1945


Coming up next we have 1945's "It's In The Bag!", a humorous film about the owner of a flea circus who finds he's suddenly inherited a fortune.  What he doesn't know is that the fortune's already been spent, and somebody is bent on getting their hands on what remains.

The film's cast includes Fred Allen, Jack Benny, Don Ameche, William Bendix, Victor Moore, Rudy Vallee, Binnie Barnes, Robert Benchley, Jerry Colonna, John Carradine, Gloria Pope, William Terry, Richard Tyler, Sidney Toler, George Chandler, and Emory Parnell.

An eccentric millionaire decides to leave his money to his only living relative.  But, he fears others might be after the fortune.  So, he hides the money in the stuffing of a chair.

It turns out his intuition was correct.  He's gunned down in cold blood right after the money is hidden.

Well, the lucky recipient of the $12,000,000 fortune he left behind is the owner of a flea circus, Fred Floogle, the millionaire's grand nephew.  The whole family is excited.  Fred tells his wife Eve, "Now I can get you what you've always wanted, mink underwear and a chinchilla sarong."

However, the Floogles are a bit confused when they go to the lawyer's office and discover that their inheritance is five chairs and no money.  The lawyer explains that Fred's great-uncle was a bit eccentric and made several bad investments during the last years of his life.

Fred and Eve are visited by every tradesman in town, and before they know it, they have completely overextended themselves.  New jewels, dresses, suits, and other accessories were all purchased on the assumption that they had $12 million in the bank.

When their inheritance arrives, Fred makes arrangements for it to be sent to a local auction house in the hopes that he can make $250.

The Floogles are visited by a police detective who informs them that Fred's great-uncle was murdered and that Fred himself is considered a prime suspect.  The way the detective figures it, Fred stood the most to gain by the old man's death.

Shortly after the detective leaves, Fred receives a package from his late great-uncle.  It's a phonograph record that details that the old man hid $300,000 in the chairs he gave Fred along with a list of men he feels are responsible for his death.  Fred jumps into action to stop the sale of the chairs, but is too late.  Now, he's got to track down each one.

However, his great-uncle's lawyer also wants the chairs, and we find out that he is responsible for the old man's death.

Fred traces one of the chairs to Jack Benny.  Fred visits Benny on the pretense of being president of a local chapter of a Jack Benny fan club.


Benny invites him in, and Fred is shocked to find that he's got to pay for checking his hat and is directed to a vending machine when he's invited to partake of a cigarette.

Fred eventually gets around to asking for the chair.  (This scene showcases the best of the professional feud between radio greats Fred Allen and Jack Benny).  Benny is upset to discover that Fred's fan club only has twelve members out of a town of six thousand.  He suggests that maybe the club is too exclusive, with Fred arguing that that is not the case.

Benny: Well, what about my movies?

Fred: Your movies?  Even the riffraff won't go see them.

Benny: Have they tried giving away dishes?

Fred: Yes, and people threw them at the screen.

Benny: I see.  Have they tried not giving away dishes?

Fred:  Yes, and people bring their own dishes and still throw them at the screen.

Eventually, Benny rents him the chair for ten dollars a day and includes a gift wrapping service in the deal.  It turns out that it is not the right chair.



Fred tracks down another chair in a nightclub.  To gain admittance, he has to sing as part of a quartet with such "washed up" stars as Don Ameche, Rudy Vallee, and Victor Moore.  Eventually, a fight breaks out among the nightclub patrons and another man ends up dead.

Another chair is in the possession of actor William Bendix and his infamous gang, which turns out to be quite a bloodthirsty group.


With Bendix's help, Fred is able to recover the money and get a confession out of the ones responsible for his great-uncle's death.  Using some particularly nasty methods, Bendix says, "When you gentlemen are ready to confess, please signify by saying 'Ouch'".

Money safely in his possession, Fred returns home but gets unnerved when people start crawling out of the woodworks once they realize his windfall of cash.

Cast rundown:

Fred Allen - It's In The Bag!
   Fred Allen....................................Fred Floogle

Jack Benny - It's In The Bag!
   Jack Benny...................................Himself

Don Ameche - It's In The Bag!
   Don Ameche.................................Himself

William Bendix - It's In The Bag!
   William Bendix..............................Himself

Victor Moore - It's In The Bag!
   Victor Moore.................................Himself

Rudy Vallee - It's In The Bag!
   Rudy Vallee..................................Himself

Binnie Barnes - It's In The Bag!
   Binnie Barnes...............................Eve Floogle

Robert Benchley - It's In The Bag!
   Robert Benchley............................Parker

Jerry Colonna - It's In The Bag!
   Jerry Colonna...............................Dr. Greengrass

John Carradine - It's In The Bag!
   John Carradine.............................Jefferson T. Pike

Gloria Pope - It's In The Bag!
   Gloria Pope..................................Marion Floogle

William Terry - It's In The Bag!
   William Terry................................Perry Parker

Richard Tyler - It's In The Bag!
   Richard Tyler................................Homer Floogle

Sidney Toler - It's In The Bag!
   Sidney Toler.................................Detective Sully

George Chandler - It's In The Bag!
   George Chandler...........................Elevator Operator

Emory Parnell - It's In The Bag!
   Emory Parnell...............................Mr. Buddoo

And that's it for It's In The Bag!.  It's quite humorous, especially the bits which portray the professional feud between Fred Allen and Jack Benny.  One of the film's screenwriters was Alma Reville, wife of Alfred Hitchcock.

As always, if you wish to leave a comment, please remember our posting rules.