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Midnight Shadow

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Midnight Shadow

A confidence man pretending to be a mentalist swindles a family.

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Release : 1939
Rating : 3.3
Studio :
Crew : Director of Photography,  Assistant Director, 
Cast : Laurence Criner
Genre : Mystery

Cast List

Reviews

Freaktana
2018/08/30

A Major Disappointment

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ThedevilChoose
2018/08/30

When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.

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Bea Swanson
2018/08/30

This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.

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Kayden
2018/08/30

This is a dark and sometimes deeply uncomfortable drama

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Michael_Elliott
2015/10/12

Midnight Shadow (1939) ** (out of 4) Margaret Wilson (Frances Redd) has a couple men wanting her affections but after her father shows off an oil well to them, he's murdered. Now the two men are suspects so the daughter hires a private detective to figure out who the killer is.MIDNIGHT SHADOW stands out because of its all black cast but sadly outside of this there's really nothing too special here. This film follows the "old dark house" theme that ran thought hundreds of films from this period but the majority of the horror elements are watered down in favor of the detective story, which is obviously watered down even more by the attempt at laughter. As with many films, this one goes for laughs as the detective and his assistant share insults and comic falls but this doesn't really work.I was surprised to see how good the majority of the lead performances were. This includes Redd who was quite believable in the role of the daughter. There are some weak performances to be found in smaller parts but nothing too damaging to the film. I also thought the actual mystery was well-done and at least keeps you guessing a little. MIDNIGHT SHADOW is a fair thriller that will mainly appeal to those wanting to see an example of an all black cast.

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kidboots
2010/05/24

This isn't as bad a film as some of the reviewers imply. "Race" movie productions had budgets that made Monogram look like MGM. Considering many of the players weren't professional actors - half the cast of "Midnight Shadow" only appeared in one or two movies at the most and those that did appear in more main stream movies, were mostly in uncredited, demeaning roles. Many of the cast seemed to handle their roles in a natural manner (ie Ollie Ann Robinson and Jess Lee Brooks) although a couple looked like a deer caught in the headlights (Frances Redd, who was a model and not an actress anyway.) There was no need for a musical interlude in this film as it was just a regular "who done it" and moved along briskly. These films were made for black audiences and tried to depict stories about everyday situations (not always about witch doctors and voodoo etc).When a well respected business man turns up dead, suspicion falls on his daughter's two suitors. They happen to be in the house when Margaret's father brings out his oil well deeds and both act suspiciously. The first suitor calls himself "The Great Prince Alihabad" and impresses Margaret's mother (Ollie Ann Robinson) as being shifty. The second is Buster (Edward Brandon) who has a very "hang dog" expression - Margaret (Frances Redd) is very fickle and is giving him the run around. In the synopsis that accompanied this DVD it said "Margaret decides to track down the killer herself with the aid of two bumbling private eyes". That is completely false. Margaret wasn't in it much to begin with and almost disappeared during the last half of the movie. The bumbling private eyes were in it however. Lightfoot and Junior Lingley (who is allowed to help out at his mother's (Ruby Dandridge) insistence). There was a funny exchange between them - "I let you get the dope on this case" "I didn't know it was a dope case" "Not that type of dope"!!! They do crack the case at the end - it is not who anyone would think!!! and they do have some interesting scenes with Sgt. Ramsey (an outstanding Jess Lee Brooks) at the end.These films were important. At a time when most white audiences thought Stepin Fetchit was a very real portrait of the Afro American character, "race" movies attempted to show black people as they really were.

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dwpollar
2001/09/15

1st watched 9/15/2001 - 4 out of 10(Dir-George Randol): Mostly badly acted mystery involving the murder of a man in a black community. Besides the antics of a couple of funny detectives this is otherwise a very uninteresting film. It does have some merit because it was a complete black production from an age where blacks were only given small and very predictable characters in the white-owned film world of the day. This film wouldn't have broken the barrier even if it was made by a big budget film maker because of the very simple story. I am glad that this has been put to video just for a historical reason if for nothing else and to give us a different perspective on this culture in these times.

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Arthur Hausner
2000/02/06

Whoever wrote this mystery must have shrunk from embarrassment. You will notice there is no screenwriter in the credits, not even an uncredited one. After a reasonable start, including the suspense of having an intruder enter the bedroom of an elderly sleeping couple, the movie goes downhill rapidly. And it has one of the most anticlimactic endings for a mystery I have ever seen. I would like to say you may enjoy the comedy, but I can't. There is a limit of ineptness beyond which a character comes off just stupid rather than funny. Richard Bates plays this kind of a character. He dresses in a Sherlock Holmes hat and pipe and looks for fingerprints with his magnifying glass. Except he looks everywhere except at the crime scene. That's the level of comedy in this movie. His partner, Buck Woods, isn't quite as stupid, but comes close. Their comedy relief was really bad. About the only thing I liked was seeing Ruby Dandridge (the mother of Dorothy Dandridge) in her first film. There was no musical entertainment in the film, quite unusual for a "race" film made for black audiences, since that was often a staple of such films.

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