Super-Sleuth
Super-Sleuth | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ben Stoloff |
Produced by | Edward Small |
Written by |
Gertrude Purcell Ernest Pagano |
Based on | play by Harry Seagall |
Starring |
Jack Oakie Ann Sothern |
Cinematography | Joseph H. August |
Edited by | William Hamilton |
Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures |
Release dates | July 16, 1937 |
Running time | 75 mins |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
Super-Sleuth is a 1937 film.[1] It was an early lead role for Jack Oakie.[2]
Plot
A movie detective believes he actually has the skills to solve a real life case. Bill Martin's boasts irritate the real detectives of the Los Angeles police, as well as studio publicist Mary Strand, who loves Bill but doesn't appreciate the actor's arrogance.
A mysterious killer known as the "Poison Pen" decides to murder Bill, annoyed with his last movie. Bill and Mary go to amateur sleuth Professor Herman for advice, unaware that the professor and the murderer are one and the same.
By mistake, movie co-star Ralph Waring is killed by the Poison Pen, and stand-in Larry Frank is suspected of the crime. To save Bill from the killer and from himself, Mary arranges for him to be locked up, but the gullible bill gets Professor Herman to bail him out of jail. Mary and the cops come to his rescue just in time.
Cast
- Jack Oakie as Willard "Bill" Martin
- Ann Sothern as Mary Strand
- Eduardo Ciannelli as Professor Herman
- Alan Bruce as Larry Frank
- Edgar Kennedy as Lieutenant Garrison
- Joan Woodbury as Doris Dunne
- Bradley Page as Ralph Waring
- Paul Guilfoyle as Gibbons
- Willie Best as Warts
- William Corson as Beckett
- Alec Craig as Eddie, doorman
References
- ↑ Super-Sleuth at TCMDB
- ↑ HAL MOHR TO DIRECT "CLASS PROPHECY;" JACK OAKIE CAST AS "SUPER SLEUTH": Bernadene Hayes Tested for "Stella Dallas;" Beauties in McLaglen Film Schallert, Edwin. Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File) [Los Angeles, Calif] 14 Nov 1936: 10.
External links
- Super-Sleuth at IMDB