Misplaced Pages

Boston Blackie and the Law

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
1946 film by D. Ross Lederman
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Boston Blackie and the Law" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Boston Blackie and the Law
Film poster
Directed byD. Ross Lederman
Written byJack Boyle (character)
Harry Essex
Malcolm Stuart Boylan (add. dialogue)
Produced byTed Richmond
StarringChester Morris
Trudy Marshall
Constance Dowling
CinematographyGeorge Meehan
Edited byJames Sweeney
Music byHans Sommer
Production
company
Columbia Pictures
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • December 12, 1946 (1946-12-12)
Running time70 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Boston Blackie and the Law is the twelfth of fourteen Columbia Pictures films starring Chester Morris as reformed crook Boston Blackie.

Plot

When Boston Blackie performs magic tricks at a Thanksgiving Day party for the inmates of a women's prison, Dinah Moran (Constance Dowling) volunteers to enter a booth. She disappears after he draws the curtain, but as a former magician's assistant, uses the opportunity to escape. Police Inspector Farraday (Richard Lane) takes Blackie into custody as an accomplice, but Blackie easily gets away himself.

A trip to the library reveals that Dinah was sent to prison for three years for a robbery that netted $100,000 (which was never recovered) and a dead victim. Her magician former husband, John Lampau, was acquitted. Blackie tracks Lampau down, still performing magic, but now under the name of Jani, to warn him. Dinah shows up minutes later, having heard that Jani intends to marry his new assistant, Irene (Trudy Marshall). Dinah has come to make sure she gets her half of the loot. In a scuffle, she grazes Jani's right hand with a gunshot before fleeing. Blackie arranges to impersonate Jani, while the magician hides in Blackie's absent friend's apartment.

That night, Blackie is awoken by sounds in Jani's apartment. When he investigates, a woman runs out of the unlit room.

Blackie eventually locates the money in Jani's safety deposit box and takes it, still disguised as Jani. Outside, Dinah forces him at gunpoint to give her the envelope containing the loot, but when she opens it, it is empty. Blackie had taken the precaution of pocketing the money. In the meantime, Blackie's friend returns home from a trip early and finds Jani's body in the closet. Farraday corners and arrests Blackie and his sidekick, "the Runt" (George E. Stone), for murder. Blackie easily escapes from his cell.

Returning to the theatre where Jani performed, he finds an armed Irene over Dinah's lifeless body. She admits she herself was after the money all along. She makes Blackie hand it over, before calling the police. When Farraday and his dimwitted assistant, Sergeant Matthews (Frank Sully), arrive, Blackie tells them he recorded Irene's confession when he turned on the radio for some music. When he plays it for them, Irene tries to run, but is caught and taken away. Blackie then informs Farraday that there was no recording; he merely used ventriloquism to reenact his part of the prior conversation to fool Irene.

Cast

References

External links

Boston Blackie films
Silent films
Sound films, starring Chester Morris
Actors in sound films
Films directed by D. Ross Lederman
Categories: