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The Lone Wolf Takes a Chance

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The Lone Wolf Takes a Chance

A reformed jewel thief fights to clear his name when he's framed for murder.

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Release : 1941
Rating : 6.3
Studio : Columbia Pictures, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Director of Photography, 
Cast : Warren William June Storey Henry Wilcoxon Eric Blore Thurston Hall
Genre : Mystery

Cast List

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Reviews

AniInterview
2018/08/30

Sorry, this movie sucks

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SnoReptilePlenty
2018/08/30

Memorable, crazy movie

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Rexanne
2018/08/30

It’s sentimental, ridiculously long and only occasionally funny

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Logan
2018/08/30

By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.

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jaydeetee-19255
2016/07/29

I'm a big fan of Warren William and Eric Blore, as well as mystery/comedy movies of that era, so my 9 star rating may be a tad prejudiced by that...still, the movie is one of the best entries in those early Lone Wolf films.The plot at times is rather silly with the Lone Wolf and Jamison trying to save the life of an inventor (Lloyd Bridges)...what did he invent?...a railroad car that couldn't be broken into...if a criminal tried, bells & whistles would sound, and poison gas would fill the car...Huh?...what if some poor hobo, looking for a ride and a place to sleep happened upon that car?...Llyod would have got his butt sued...But the movie chugs along the rails at a fast pace, plenty of laughs and an enjoyable way to spend a little over an hour of one's time...I keep this movie on my cluttered DVR...it's a comfortable movie for me...when sleep comes slowly, I just turn this on and within 30 or 40 minutes I'm fast asleep...

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classicsoncall
2016/05/21

I get a kick out of watching these detective films of the era, they can be very entertaining but at the same time, some of them are quite brainless. The picture here fits in both categories. This Lone Wolf entry is based on a bet Michael Lanyard (William Warren) makes with Police Inspector Crane (Thurston Hall) that he can stay out of trouble for twenty four hours. By almost anyone's estimation that should be a safe one, but since that's the premise, you just know something will have to happen to cause the Lone Wolf's plans to go awry.A neat surprise for movie fans in this picture is the presence of Lloyd Bridges in his first credited screen role, even if he does spend a fair amount of time under duress while bound and gagged. He's been kidnapped by agents who want to get their hands on a new set of engraving plates that are stored in a virtually foolproof safe wired to a poisonous gas mix which is released if the safe is tampered with.If only the bad guys had been thinking as clearly as Lanyard there wouldn't have been any need to go the full seventy four minutes of the picture. Recall how Lanyard got the combination to the safe? - he just went back and watched the newsreel! Why couldn't one of the criminal masterminds figure that out for themselves? Gee, I don't know, not a lot of thought was put into this.Nor was anyone paying attention in the editing room. When Johnny Baker was shown bound and gagged in the locked safe compartment with the Lone Wolf attempting to open it, he clearly got his hands free enough to reach up to his mouth to remove the gag placed in it, but after a cut away, he's shown again with his hands tied and immobile. Fortunately Lanyard figures out the combo in time to make the save on his own, otherwise he might have simply asked Johnny for it! Well, I don't want to be too critical. The story was well played with a lot of humor thrown in, and the opening scene was fairly creative. An inattentive jeweler places a pearl necklace aside carelessly and it falls directly onto the neck of a black cat that scurries away. The whole time he's outmaneuvering the Wolf, his assistant Jamison (Eric Blore) and the police, I thought someone for sure would have called for apprehension of the cat burglar.

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blanche-2
2011/12/20

This Lone Wolf adventure starts out with a bet between Michael Lanyard, the Wolf (Warren William) and Inspector Crane (Thurston Hall) that Lanyard can't stay out of trouble for 24 hours. Guess who wins. A private detective (Regis Toomey) falls nine stories outside Lanyard's hotel room. The detective was working on a case involving a special train car designed by Johnny Baker (Lloyd Bridges) that is holding treasury plates and can't be broken into.Everyone, of course, thinks Lanyard is the bad guy though he's on the side of right as he and his butler Jamison (Eric Blore) enter the case, which involves murder and kidnapping. The film has a neat sequence on a train as Lanyard works to save the day.Nice entry into the series, with Warren William his usual laid back self and Eric Blore adding a lot of humor. Recommended.

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MartinHafer
2007/04/15

One of the biggest problems I have with most B-detective series films of the 1930s and 40s are how stupid the police are in the films. After a while it just seems a bit annoying that the police are stupider than tacos!! Because of this cliché, I was happy to see that not only were the police reasonably smart in this film, but the leading man (Warren William) was actually pretty stupid himself on occasion--particularly towards the beginning of the film. Early on, Michael Lanyard (William) is in his bathroom when a detective begins banging on his window from the outside--considering that Lanyard lives high up in a high-rise apartment building, this SHOULD have gotten Lanyard's attention! And, when the cop tries desperately to tell Lanyard that a man is being kidnapped in the adjoining apartment, Lanyard closes the window on the poor guy!!! Then, a shot naturally rings out and the cop falls to his death. People assume Lanyard is responsible--and in a way he really was! Now despite this brain aneurysm, Lanyard spends the rest of the film intelligently trying to solve the crime and he's very ably assisted by his valet, played by the wonderful Eric Blore. Blore was always excellent in the Lone Wolf films in which he appeared, but in this one he seems even funnier than usual AND actually proves to be pretty helpful--something B-detective sidekicks seldom are! By the way, the kidnap victim happens to be a very young Lloyd Bridges. He'd done a few other B-detective films, but only in tiny bit parts (such as a bus driver in a Boston Blackie film). Here, he gets a pretty good chance to act even though he is tied up most of the time!! The film has a good and complex plot that is relatively easy to follow, excellent acting and is just plain fun to watch. A very good example of the genre that would have merited an 8 if Lanyard hadn't been so gosh-darn stupid in the beginning!

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