Daily Archives: December 13, 2021

Murder! (1930)

Murder!
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Written by Alfred Hitchcock, Walter Mycroft and Alma Reville from a play by Clemence Dane and Helen Simpson
1930/UK
British International Pictures
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Instant

Sir John Menier: I suppose you find the brandy helps steadying the nerves.
Handel Fane: Mine is very nervy work, you see, Sir John. You never know what may happen.

Hitchcock was still perfecting his craft but this movie, while not great, is growing on me.

As the story begins, we hear a woman scream.  When the police arrive they find Diana Baring (Norah Baring) in her flat catatonic with a poker by her side and a dead woman on the floor.  It develops that the two were actresses in the same play and had been feuding.  Much brandy had apparently been consumed.  Diana remembers nothing of incident.

She is arrested and tried for murder.  The jury makes short work of its deliberations with fellow thespian Sir John Menier (Herbert Marshall) being the last hold out before giving in and joining the others in a guilty verdict.  Diana is sentenced to the gallows.

It is not long before Sir John begins to have second thoughts so he starts his own investigation.  This movie has an unforgettable ending which I shall not reveal.

This is not Hitchcock at his best but I gave it another try and found a lot of humor I had never seen in it before.  There is a scene where Sir John is interviewing the cast and crew backstage during a performance and we see the various actors in the most outlandish costumes and entering the stage in the most outrageous.  One is left to guess what the play could possibly be about! Marshall is also very good.

The Devil to Pay!

The Devil to Pay!
Directed by George Fitzmaurice
Written by Frederick Lonsdale and Benjamin Glazer
1930/US
The Samuel Goldwyn Company
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Instant

Lord Leland: Now… now you’re blaming me for bringing you into the world!
Willie Hale: Heh, heh, I should be extremely mortified for your sake if I had to blame anyone else.

This is a pleasant romantic comedy made more pleasant by the dulcet tones of Ronald Colman.

The story begins in Africa where wastrel rogue Willie Hale (Colman) is auctioning off his house and possessions, which his father Lord Leland paid for, to pay his passage back to England.  Lord Leland is not too keen on accepting him back to the household but paternal love prevails and he is allowed to stay.  Willie then meets Dorothy Hope (Loretta Young), an heiress who is a friend of his sister and engaged to marry a Russian aristocrat. Their attraction is immediate.  But Colman has also met with ex-flame Mary (Myrna Loy), a sexy actress who would welcome a rekindling of their affair.

If you’ve seen many rom-coms of the era, you will have a pretty good idea where this is going.  There are the requisite number of misunderstandings before the requisite happy ending.

I enjoyed this for the stars and the witty script.  Loretta Young was only 17 when she made this film.  Colman was 38.

Clip – Colman negotiates for an Asta lookalike