Name Line

"Enemy to those who make him an enemy.   Friend to those who have no friend."

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Boston Blackie Movies

Meet Boston Blackie

This is the first movie in the Boston Blackie series.   Boston Blackie tangles with mystery, women and murder to smash a foreign spy ring in a Coney Island freak show.




Studio: Columbia
Release Date: February 20, 1941
Running Time: 61 minutes   B/W
Director: Robert Florey
Executive Producer: Irving Briskin
Producer: Ralph Cohn
Cinematographer: Franz Planer
Editor: James Sweeney
Screenwriter: Jay Dratler
Production Dates: December 6 to December 27, 1940

Rating: * * *

Starring:
Chester Morris as Boston Blackie
Rochelle Hudson as Cecelia Bradley
Richard Lane as Inspector Farraday
Charles Wagenheim as The Runt
Constance Worth as Marilyn Howard
Jack O'Malley as Monk
George Magrill as Georgie
Michael Rand as Mechanical Man
Eddie Laughton as Freak Show Barker
John Tyrrell as Freak Show Doorman
Harry Anderson as Dart Game Barker
Byron Foulger as Blind Man




An interesting choice for the first entry in the series, since it feels very much like the viewer should already be familiar with the characters. Boston Blackie, the suave crook-turned-detective created by writer Donald Boyle, had been popping up since 1919 sporadically in films for two decades by the time Columbia launched this first Boston Blackie film.   Alternate Title: The Return of Boston Blackie.

SYNOPSIS:

Boston Blackie, wherein the ex-jewel thief and safecracker and his underworld crony The Runt meet a mysterious young lady named Marilyn Howard while disembarking from an ocean liner upon returning from Europe. The New York police department, who believe that Blackie stole the Mansfield pearls, which disappeared shortly before he left for Europe. To obtain a set of Blackie's fingerprints, Faraday places Blackie under arrest and confines him to the ship. When Martin Vestrick is murdered Blackies stateroom, Blackie knows Farraday will think he did it so he and The Runt slip off the ship and go looking for Marilyn who they are sure did it. Blackie and the Runt trail Marilyn to Coney Island, followed in close proximity by Inspector Farraday, who thinks (as he always does) that Blackie is somehow tied in with the killing. Blackie finds Marilyn at a Coney Island freak show. Blackie joins Marilyn on a ride through the tunnel of love. When Blackie accuses her of murdering Vestrick, Marilyn claims that she killed him in self-defense. Marilyn is about to tell Blackie about the foreign spies which Vestrick was working with when she is stabbed by two men. With her dying breath, Marilyn mutters something about the show's mechanical man. The two men chase Blackie but he steals a car belonging to Cecelia Bradley and escapes. He tells his story to Cecelia a she wants to help. Before long, our hero and heroine are mixed up with a gang of foreign spies operating out of a funhouse. The Nazi saboteur plot, lots of red herrings, and the relentless police detective out to nab Blackie. It makes for a superior entry in the series.




Cast:
Chester Morris Boston Blackie
Rochelle Hudson Cecelia Bradley
Constance Worth Marilyn Howard
Richard Lane Inspector Farraday
Charles Wagenheim The Runt
Jack O'Malley Monk
George Magrill Georgie
Michael Rand Mechanical man
Eddie Laughton Freak show barker
Eddie Fetherston Freak show barker
John Tyrrell Freak show doorman
Harry Anderson Dart game barker
John Harmon Weight guesser
Ethan Laidlaw Brakeman
Richard Fiske Police officer
Budd Fine Police officer
Bill Lally Police officer
Bruce Sidney Customs officer
Charles Sullivan Cabby
Ralph Peters Cabby
George McKay Baseball barker
Sam Bernard Telescope man
Lee Shumway Immigration officer
Ed Mundy Fire eater
Ed Wolff Giant
Philo McCullough Tunnel of love announcer
Byron Foulger Blind man
Walter Sande Young police officer
Stanley Brown Max
James Blaine Police captain
Nestor Paiva Martin Vestrick
Schlitzzy Metz Bird woman

Other Crew:
Second Unit Director: Milton Carter
Art Department: Lionel Banks
Sound Department: George Cooper
Musical Direction: Sidney Cutner




Complete Movie Review:

Reformed safecracker Boston Blackie and his sidekick The Runt are docking at New York harbor upon their return from Europe when Blackie witnesses Marilyn Howard, an attractive fellow passenger, being threatened by a sinister looking man. After coming to Marilyn's rescue, Blackie is greeted by Inspector Faraday of the New York police department who believes that the former thief has stolen the Mansfield pearls, which disappeared shortly before Blackie left for Europe. To obtain a set of Blackie's fingerprints, Faraday places him under arrest and confiscates his landing pass to prevent him from leaving the ship. When Blackie returns to his stateroom to finish packing, he discovers the body of the menacing man, whose name is Martin Vestrick. Knowing that Faraday will accuse him of Vestrick's murder, Blackie pockets the dead man's landing pass, finds The Runt and leaves the boat and Faraday behind. Suspecting that Marilyn is involved in the murder, Blackie follows her to a Coney Island carnival freak show. After instructing The Runt to summon Faraday to his apartment, Blackie joins Marilyn on her ride through the tunnel of love. When Blackie accuses her of murdering Vestrick, Marilyn claims that she killed him in self-defense. Marilyn is about to describe the nefarious organization to which Vestrick belonged when she is stabbed by two men wielding darts. With her dying breath, Marilyn mutters something about the show's mechanical man and warns Blackie to watch the carnival signs. After killing Marilyn, the two men chase Blackie, who runs into the mechanical man's dressing room. When the killers knock on the dressing room door, Blackie slugs the mechanical man and jumps out the window onto the street. Hunted by Marilyn's killers, Blackie hijacks a car driven by Cecelia Bradley and loses his pursuers by driving the car onto a railroad boxcar. Later, when the train stops, Blackie drives out of the boxcar and hears a radio broadcast announcing that Marilyn Howard, an international spy, has been murdered in the tunnel of love. Blackie then introduces himself to Cecelia, who insists on helping him solve the murder. When Cecelia and Blackie arrive at Blackie's apartment, Faraday is waiting to question him about the murders, and Blackie gives him a set of fingerprints to prove that the prints on the gun that shot Vestrick are not his. Satisfied, Faraday leaves and Cecelia and Blackie return to the carnival to investigate. Blackie's alibi backfires, however, when the police lab verifies that although Blackie's prints do not match those found on the gun, they do match prints found on the darts that killed Marilyn. Meanwhile, at the carnival, Blackie is looking through a telescope to investigate some blinking lights emanating from an offshore boat when the mechanical man's thugs spot him. After slugging the thugs with the telescope, Blackie calls his apartment to ask The Runt for help. Faraday is waiting there, however, and after intercepting the message, he ties up The Runt and goes to the carnival to find Blackie. Meanwhile, Blackie disguises himself as a blind man in a wheelchair and watches as the weight guesser misjudges a man's weight by thirty pounds. Realizing that the number must be a signal, Blackie looks up and sees a neon sign flashing in code, and at that moment, Faraday arrives to arrest Blackie. When Faraday refuses Blackie's plea for time to solve the case, Blackie knocks the inspector unconscious, steals his badge and calls the police, claiming that his unconscious friend is Boston Blackie. Blackie and Cecelia then run into the freak show and overhear the spies discuss stealing the plans to a Navy bomb site. Blackie then returns to his apartment just as a police officer and Faraday, who has convinced the carnival police that he is an inspector, enter the building's elevator. After trapping Faraday and his companion in the elevator by turning off the power, Blackie offers to free them if they promise to suspend their chase for one night. They agree but upon releasing The Runt, Blackie locks the policemen in the bedroom and drives with The Runt and Cecelia to her apartment. After deciphering the license plate number on Cecelia's car, Faraday and the officer break out of the bedroom and put a trace on the plate. The next morning, The Runt awakens in Cecelia's apartment to find that Blackie is missing and goes to the boardwallk to find him. There, he is knocked unconscious by the spies. When Blackie returns to Cecelia's with news that he has broken the code and discovered that the spies plan to deliver the stolen plans at seven that night, she insists on accompanying him back to the carnival, so he locks her in the Murphy bed. After Blackie leaves, Faraday, who has traced Cecelia's address through her license plate, arrives and frees her. She then takes Faraday and his police officers to the boardwalk, where he arrests Blackie. When Faraday refuses to believe Blackie's story about the mechanical man and the spies, Blackie throws a ball at the mechanical man, and the barker shoots at them from the stage. Blackie and the police then rush backstage, find the stolen plans and arrest the spies. After Blackie tells the police about the offshore spy boat, he finds The Runt locked in a case used to saw people in half.


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