Dueling Mystery and Mirth in 1933's Whistling In The Dark
MGM was like Warners, and, I suspect, all of the
majors, in wanting to bleed as much value as possible out of bought properties,
in this case a play lately on Broadway (1932) and ready-equipped with players
(Ernest Truex and Edward Arnold) who could transpose their work to film, both
having had screen in addition to stage experience. Most of action is confined
to one room in a house taken over by would-be assassins of an honest
brew-maker, their scheme to arrange a perfect murder with forced assist of a
meek police consultant. Does this sustain over 74 minutes? Barely so by my
estimate, Arnold
being most help toward that. Among highest censor barriers were ones erected to
stop movie detailing of crime plans, lest those misguided among anaudience
duplicate same in real life. It was known to happen, and local gentry came down
hard where inspiration for lawbreak traced back to pics a suspect had gone to
see. Whistling In The Dark was an arresting enough yarn to re-use for a Red
Skelton feature of the same name in 1941, the latter more often shown on
TCM and available from Warner's Archive.
You did it again, John! I knew of the Red Skelton version and it's on my list of "movies to review" for my Scared Silly project (scaredsillybypaulcastiglia.blogspot.com for anyone interested) but I had no idea it was a remake of an earlier film. Merkel and Pendleton certainly make it required viewing for me, as well as required mention in my eventual Scared Silly book. Thanks again!
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At first glance of the top still, I thought that was Vincent Price being cowered by Nat Pendleton.
You did it again, John! I knew of the Red Skelton version and it's on my list of "movies to review" for my Scared Silly project (scaredsillybypaulcastiglia.blogspot.com for anyone interested) but I had no idea it was a remake of an earlier film. Merkel and Pendleton certainly make it required viewing for me, as well as required mention in my eventual Scared Silly book. Thanks again!
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