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Nick Carter, Master Detective (film)

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Director
  
Duration
  

Screenplay
  
Language
  
English

6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Crime, Mystery, Drama

Running time
  
59 minutes

Country
  
United States

Nick Carter, Master Detective (film) movie poster

Release date
  
1939

Writer
  
Bertram Millhauser (screen play), Bertram Millhauser (based on a story by), Harold Buckley (based on a story by)

Music director
  
Daniele Amfitheatrof, Edward Ward

Cast
  
(Nicholas 'Nick' Carter, aka Robert Chalmers), (Lou Farnsby), (John A. Keller), (Doctor Frankton (as Stanley C. Ridges)), (Bartholomew, the bee man), (Streeter - President of Radex)

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Tagline
  
THE WIZARD OF CLUES!!! Nick Carter lives again in the fierce brutal...dangerous era of TODAY!

Nick carter master detective 1950


Nick Carter, Master Detective is a 1939 film starring Walter Pidgeon in the title role. Carter investigates espionage at an aircraft factory. Pidgeon and Donald Meek went on to reprise their roles in two sequels, Phantom Raiders (1940) and Sky Murder (1941).

Contents

Nick Carter, Master Detective (film) movie scenes

Plot

Nick Carter, Master Detective (film) movie scenes

Nick Carter boards an airliner with John Keller, the inventor of a revolutionary new aircraft. The pilot makes an unscheduled landing so that his confederates can try to steal Keller's plans, but Carter holds them off, and stewardess Lou Farnsby manages to fly them to safety. Carter, posing as "Robert Chalmers", the new assistant to Hiram Streeter, the boss of the California factory, has Lou reassigned to the infirmary.

During his investigation, Carter receives the unwanted help of Bartholomew, who fancies himself an amateur sleuth.

A test flight of the new aircraft ends in disaster; the wings are ripped off during a high-speed dive, and the test pilot is killed. It is found that bolts attaching the wings were cut. Later, Carter finds Keller's body in a running car in a closed garage. Carter suspects Keller was strangled, and the scene staged to look like a suicide.

Finally, Carter notices that each time a part of the blueprints goes missing, a worker has a serious accident and has to be sent home. He surmises that sections of the plans have been photographed, and the film hidden under bandages. He goes to apprehend the plant's doctor, Frankton, but Frankton is forewarned. Unable to leave the factory in time, he has the unsuspecting Lou escort a "patient" home. When Carter arrives, Frankton tells him that Lou will be killed unless the doctor shows up at a prearranged rendezvous soon. Carter lets him leave, but secretly has the roof of his car painted with a white cross. This enables Carter to track Frankton in an airplane to a section of the Los Angeles docks. Frankton, his associates, the complete plans and Lou race to a waiting ship. Carter engages in a firefight with the crew using a Tommy gun borrowed from the police. He prevents their getaway, but he and his pilot are shot down. A harbor patrol gunboat arrives (at the instigation of Bartholomew), and the villains are forced to surrender.

Cast

  • Walter Pidgeon as Nick Carter / "Robert Chalmers"
  • Rita Johnson as Lou Farnsby
  • Henry Hull as John A. Keller
  • Stanley Ridges as Dr. Frankton
  • Donald Meek as Bartholomew
  • Addison Richards as Hiram Streeter
  • Henry Victor as J. Lester Hammil
  • Milburn Stone as Dave Krebe
  • Martin Kosleck as Otto King
  • Frank Faylen as Pete
  • Sterling Holloway as Bee-Catcher
  • Wally Maher as Cliff Parsons
  • Edgar Dearing as Denny
  • William Newell as Cabbie
  • Eddy Chandler as Workman
  • Harry Tyler as Locker Guard
  • Reception

    According to MGM records the movie earned $276,000 in the US and Canada and $180,000 elsewhere, making a loss to the studio of $93,000.

    Frank Nugent wrote in The New York Times, "No, this isn't Nick Carter as we remember him, but it's an amusing fiction for all that, with enough action to compensate for the arch unoriginality of the plot and with pleasantly casual performances all around. ... They [Pidgeon and Meek] make a gay crime-solving combination".

    Time Out more recently stated, "Tourneur's second film in Hollywood, it's briskly and competently done, but the best thing about it is Donald Meek's performance as Bartholomew the Bee Man, a mousy little apiculturist who fancies himself as a private eye."

    References

    Nick Carter, Master Detective (film) Wikipedia
    Nick Carter, Master Detective (film) IMDb Nick Carter, Master Detective (film) themoviedb.org