
“By Day, a Polo-Playing Socialite...By Night, King of the Racket Mob!”
A respected citizen with secret ties to the local mob is faced with revealing his criminal connections to save two innocent people from execution
Release Date: 5/6/1938
Runtime: 61 minutes
Languages: English
Director: Lew Landers
00Companies: RKO Radio Pictures
Countries: United States of America
CinemaSerf
"Tommy" (Richard Bond) and girlfriend "Annabelle" (Anne Shirley) are a loved-up young couple dreaming of marriage who are robbed in the park of their life savings by a couple of opportunist mobsters. He recognises one of the thugs but instead of calling the cops, they try to deal with it themselves. That's their first big mistake and before long they are sweating it out in a police cell accused of complicity in a murder by the new D.A. "Rogers" (Walter Abel) who is bent on cleaning up the city. Meantime, city grandee "Fillmore" (Chester Morris) is playing a game of double-dealing as he also runs the gang that's at the centre of the youngster's problems. With them facing the chair, might he have a change of heart or are they toast? It's not a bad little effort all round, this film, though clearly the budget wasn't much. Eduardo Cianelli works well as the ruthless challenge to the more moderate "Fillmore" and Lee Patrick also delivers as the moll with a vicious streak a mile wide, but there's far too much dialogue and the denouement a bit too conveniently flat after not enough action. That said, Morris was always competent with these kind of roles and the ensemble do enough to pass an hour easily enough.

Chester Morris
Gene Fillmore

Richard Bond
Tommy Brown

Anne Shirley
Annabelle Porter

Eduardo Ciannelli
Rocky

Lee Patrick
Dorothy Palmer

Walter Abel
Special Prosecutor Warren Rogers

Paul Guilfoyle
Henchman Batsy

Eddie Acuff
Henchman Bill
George Shelley
Henchman Frank

Anthony Warde
Henchman Larry

Jack Carson
Henchman Johnny

Vinton Hayworth
Henchman Shorty
1988