Dressed to Kill (1941 film)

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Dressed to Kill
Dressed to kill poster.jpg
Original film poster
Directed by Eugene J. Forde
Screenplay by Brett Halliday
Manning O'Conner
Stanley Ruth
Based onThe Dead Take No Bows
1941 novel
by Richard Burke
Produced by Sol M. Wurtzel
Starring Lloyd Nolan
Mary Beth Hughes
Sheila Ryan
William Demarest
Cinematography Glen MacWilliams
Edited by Fred Allen
Music by Cyril J. Mockridge
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date
  • August 8, 1941 (1941-08-08)
Running time
74 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Dressed to Kill is a 1941 crime mystery starring Lloyd Nolan, Mary Beth Hughes and Sheila Ryan. The film is based on The Dead Take No Bows, [1] a mystery novel by Richard Burke.

Contents

Plot

Private investigator Michael Shayne and his singer fiancée Joanne La Marr hear a woman screaming from a room in their hotel. The hotel maid Emily has discovered two dead people: producer Louis Lathrop, owner of the hotel and the adjoining theater, and Desiree Vance, one of Lathrop's actresses. Both are dressed in medieval costumes, and Lathrop is wearing the head from a dog costume.

Police investigator Pierson arrives at the scene and learns from hotel manager Hal Brennon that the costumes are from Lathrop's only successful show, Sweethearts of Paris, from many years earlier. Desiree had been the show's leading lady, and Carlo Ralph played Beppo the Dog. Shayne suspects Carlo because of the dog-costume head on Lathrop.

David Earle, also an actor in Lathrop's show, tells the police that Lathrop had hosted a private party for the entire cast to celebrate its anniversary. Shayne examines the list of those involved in the production and discovers that the musical director was Max Allaron, an alcoholic who also lives at the hotel.

As the investigation proceeds, Shayne learns that Lathrop kept another woman in addition to Desiree and that the apartment has many entrances and exits. From Earle's daughter, he learns that cast member Julian Davis stole money from Lathrop, so he visits Davis and finds him with Phyllis Lathrop, Louis' wife. They confess to embezzling money from Louis but claim to be innocent of his murder. They hire Shayne to help them prove their innocence.

Shayne continues his investigation and talks to Allaron. He learns that Carlo died in World War I in France but then discovers a letter from Carlo in Desiree's room that proves that Carlo is still alive.

Shayne brings Davis to the Lathrop apartment, and they discover a hidden passage to the maid Emily's room downstairs. They find Emily's dead body and a note explaining that she had killed Lathrop because he had betrayed her years earlier for another woman. Emily was once known as actress Lynn Evans.

Shayne does not believe that Emily has killed herself, so he continues searching for the killer. When Shayne is back in Lathrop's apartment, Pierson is knocked unconscious in the next room by Allaron. Otto Kahn, the theater doorman, arrives and confesses that he killed Lathrop and Desiree. He is really Carlo, and he was married to Desiree before she had left him for Lathrop. He also killed Emily because she had discovered too much about him. Allaron has been blackmailing Carlo, whom he saw leaving the apartment right after the killings. While they are talking, Pierson regains consciousness, and together with Shayne, he overpowers Otto and Allaron.

Shayne asks Pierson to be his best man at the wedding later in the day, but Shayne then learns that Joanne has eloped with her ex-boyfriend because she grew tired of waiting for Shayne. [2]

Cast

Production

Dressed to Kill was the third in a series of Michael Shayne detective films. The first group of seven were produced by 20th Century Fox and starred Lloyd Nolan. The latter five were produced by Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC) and starred Hugh Beaumont. There were also three radio shows (1944–1953) and a television series (1960–1961) based on the Shayne character.

Reception

Upon the film's release on DVD in 2005, DVD Talk wrote "At just 74 minutes Dressed to Kill is innocuous fun, though like most of Fox's mysteries from the period it leans heavily on the charm of its actors rather than the ingenuity of its writing." [3]

Hal Erickson of Allmovie wrote that the film "benefits from a powerhouse supporting cast and the effectively moody cinematography of Glenn MacWilliams." [4]

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References

  1. "The Criminal Record". The Saturday Review of Literature. March 29, 1941.
  2. "Dressed to Kill".
  3. "Dressed to Kill (1941)". DVD Talk. 2005-08-31. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  4. "Dressed to Kill (1941)". Allmovie. Retrieved 2017-10-01.