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Trapped by Television
An inventor looking for backing for his television invention gets involved with a crooked businessman and gangsters who try to steal his invention.
Release : | 1936 |
Rating : | 5.8 |
Studio : | Columbia Pictures, |
Crew : | Director of Photography, Special Effects, |
Cast : | Mary Astor Lyle Talbot Nat Pendleton Joyce Compton Thurston Hall |
Genre : | Drama Science Fiction Romance |
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the audience applauded
The Age of Commercialism
How sad is this?
One of the most extraordinary films you will see this year. Take that as you want.
Mary Astor (Bobby Blake), Lyle Talbot (Fred Dennis), Nat Pendleton (Rocky), Joyce Compton (Mae), Thurston Hall (Curtis), Henry Mollison (Thornton), Wyrley Birch (Paul Thornton), Robert Strange (Standish), Russell Hicks, Howard C. Hickman, George Webb, Lloyd Whitlock, Bruce Sidney, Harry Stafford, Boyd Irwin (directors), Mary Blake (Miss Walsh), Wade Boteler (collection agency manager), Marc Lawrence (Griffin), Lillian Leighton (Mrs Leary), Eddie Fetherston (Jostler), Robert Gordon (messenger boy), Neil Moore (Mason), Max Wagner (Al), Ralph McCullough (truck salesman), Lillian Stuart. Director: DEL LORD. Screenplay: Harold Buchman, Lee Loeb. Story: Al Martin, Sherman L. Lowe. Photography: Allen G. Siegler. Film editor: James Sweeney. Special camera effects: E. Roy Davidson. Associate producer: Ben Pivar. Copyright 8 June 1936 by Columbia Pictures of California. New York opening at the Globe: 13 June 1936. Australian release: 23 September 1936. 64 minutes U.K. release title: CAUGHT BY TELEVISION.SYNOPSIS: An inventor (Lyle Talbot) is hard put to sell his cheapo television system until he falls in with a couple of enthusiastic amateurs (Nat Pendleton and Mary Astor). But his success is almost stymied by the machinations of a corrupt corporation executive, who is allied with a vicious killer (Marc Lawrence).COMMENT: Although it veers a bit uncertainly from slapstick comedy to stop-at-nothing thrills, this "B" still holds the interest despite its dated (even quaint) subject matter. The pace is fast, production values are surprisingly high and director Del Lord pulls no punches. The players respond enthusiastically, although our star, Mary Astor, battles against none too flattering photography and, for some reason, is outclassed in the beauty stakes by Joyce Compton who is also more alluringly made up and costumed. In some shots, Mary looks positively dowdy. However, for Joyce Compton (and Nat Pendleton) fans, "Trapped by Television" is a must.
With Christmas coming up,I started to look round on IMDb for movies to get my dad as X-Mas gifts.Taking a look at a fellow IMDber's page,I spotted an excellent review about a potboiler which had the then- ground breaking television medium as its main focus,which led to me getting up,and turning the TV on.The plot:Being ordered by his mobster boss to go round & collect a debt,a geeky gangster called Rocky O'Neil discovers that would-be scientist Fred Dennis is attempting to create an intriguing invention called the "television." Relating to Dennis's ambitions,O'Neil uses his streets skills to get Dennis's debt pushed aside.Catching the attention of would-be manager Barbara 'Bobby' Blake,Dennis finally gets the cash needed to complete his landmark invention.Getting ready to finally show his creation to the world,Dennis,O'Neil & Blake soon discover that there are some parts of the city's underworld,who would very much like to keep Dennis's TV off .forever.View on the film:Despite the lack of a full score giving the film a "hollow" soundtrack,the screenplay by Lee Loeb, Harold Buchman, Sherman L. Lowe & Al Martin keep the title moving at a lively pace,thanks to the writers steaming potboiler gangsters with fun Slap-Stick Comedy and wacky scientists.Made a few months before the BBC was to start TV broadcasts,director Del Lord shows a real excitement towards the new medium,with the warm glow of the TV being cast across the screen,as Dennis's device captures a screwball gangster fight,as Dennis,O'Neil and Blake find themselves trapped by the TV.
Nice guy inventor Fred Dennis (a solid and likable performance by Lyle Talbot) needs backing for his new television invention. He gets involved with shrewd and assertive crooked businesswoman Barbara 'Bobby' Blake (delightfully played with winning sass and spark by Mary Astor) while a bunch of gangsters plot to steal his invention. Director Del Lord, working from a compact script by Leo Loeb and Harold Buchman, relates the entertaining story at a snappy pace, offers a pleasing blend of comedy and drama, and delivers some rousing action at the very end. Moreover, it's acted with zest by an enthusiastic cast: Nat Pendleton as amiable lug Rocky O'Neil, Joyce Compton as Barbara's spunky gal pal Mae Collins, Thurston Hall as grumpy CEO John Curtis, and Marc Lawrence as ruthless mobster Frank Griffin. Allen G. Siegler's cinematography makes nice use of wipes. Plus it's a kick to see a motion picture made at a time when television was an exciting technological marvel. A fun little romp.
This film tries to blend comedy with drama, and the result is an uneasy tossed salad rather than a smooth pudding. Lyle Talbot is so stalwart and large it is difficult to feature him as a TV inventor -- but he more than makes up for this in the fight scene, where, with his usual technique, he just beats the dickens out of the other actors for five or ten minutes. Nat Pendelton is wonderful as the dim-witted bill collector turned science hobbyist. Mary Astor, playing closer to her "Thin Man" arch smile than to her "Maltese Falcon" dramatic style, is a scheming but lovable promoter of potato peelers who decides to back this newfangled thing called television. All in all, this makes a better comedy than a drama, but the direction pulls it both ways, and thus it fails to satisfy either audience altogether. Kudos to the prop department for building the most amazingly art deco television camera and receiver in the history of film -- complete with a flat screen monitor! Great stuff, that! Anyway, it's a fun film, won't put you to sleep, and might give you a few laughs until Lyle Talbot swings into action and starts the fight scene that you knew was headed your way the minute you saw his name in the credits and his broad shoulders in that unconvincing scientist's get-up.