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The Falcon Strikes Back

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Director
  
Edward Dmytryk

Sequel
  
The Falcon in Hollywood

Duration
  

Language
  
English

6.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Crime, Drama, Mystery

Music director
  
Roy Webb

Country
  
United States

The Falcon Strikes Back movie poster

Release date
  
April 1, 1943 (1943-04-01) ( Premiere-New York City) May 7, 1943 (1943-05-07) (U.S.)

Writer
  
Edward Dein (screenplay), Gerald Geraghty (screenplay), Stuart Palmer (story), Michael Arlen (based upon the character created by)

Cast
  
Tom Conway
(Tom Lawrence),
Harriet Hilliard
(Gwynne Gregory),
Jane Randolph
(Marcia Brooks),
Edgar Kennedy
(Smiley Dugan),
Cliff Edwards
(Goldie Locke),
Rita Corday
(Mia Bruger)

Similar movies
  
The Falcon in Danger
,
The Falcon in Hollywood
,
The Falcon in Mexico
,
The Falcon in San Francisco
,
The Gay Falcon
,
The Falcon's Brother

The falcon strikes back


The Falcon Strikes Back (a.k.a. The Falcon Comes Back) is a 1943 American crime film directed by Edward Dmytryk and stars Tom Conway as the title character, the amateur sleuth, the Falcon. Supporting roles are filled by Harriet Hilliard, Jane Randolph, Edgar Kennedy, with Cliff Edwards filling in for Allen Jenkins as the Falcon's sidekick, "Goldie" Locke. It is the sixth film in the Falcon series and the second for Conway, reprising the role that his brother, George Sanders had initiated.

Contents

The Falcon Strikes Back movie scenes

Plot

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Amateur sleuth Tom Lawrence (Tom Conway) known as "The Falcon," is approached by Mia Bruger (Rita Corday) to help in finding her brother, who had gone missing. When Tom goes to a cocktail bar, he is attacked and knocked unconscious. When he revives, he finds himself in his car on a country road. A motorcycle police officer stops him and arrests him, because Police Inspector Timothy Donovan (Cliff Clark) has put out a "all-points" bulletin for his arrest in the case of a murdered bank official and the theft of $250,000 in war bonds.

Although the Falcon has an alibi with his fiancée, reporter Marcia Brooks (Jane Randolph) and assistant, "Goldie" Locke (Cliff Edwards) supporting him, Donovan is skeptical and attempts to incarcerate Tom, who makes his escape. Returning to the bar, it is now the headquarters of a woman's knitting society, run by Geraldine Lipton (Wynne Gibson). When the trio of sleuths head off to Lipton's resort hotel, they find a number of suspicious individuals, hotel manager Gwynne Gregory (Harriet Hilliard), former criminal Rickey Davis (Erford Gage), a nurse to invalid Bruno Steffen (André Charlot) and Mia.

When Tom approaches Mia, she pretends that she doesn't know him and dives into the pool but as she hits the water, she is killed by a gunshot. Looking for the killer, Tom runs into puppeteer Smiley Dugan (Edgar Kennedy), who alerts Donovan that the Falcon is at the hotel. Picking up a cigarette case that might be a clue to the murderer, Tom has to work quickly before Donovan arrives.

Marcia reports that the fingerprints on the cigarette case belong to a notorious thief known as "the Duchess". Tom phones his houseboy, Jerry (Richard Loo), telling him to pose as the Chinese Trade Commissioner wanting to buy war bonds. After Steffen confides to Jerry that he plans to buy war bonds from Gwynne, Tom exposes Mrs. Lipton as the Duchess, and accuses her of stealing the bonds, but Donovan, with a warrant for murder, arrests Tom, Marcia, Goldie and Jerry instead.

Finding a way to escape once again, Tom returns to the hotel, and confronts Mrs. Lipton, who was being blackmailed by Rickey into selling the war bonds. When Rickey is killed, a terrified Gwynne confesses that she was involved because Rickey was her husband. When he is trapped in an elevator with Gwynne, Tom realizes that the killer is still in the hotel. Findng a way out, Tom rushes to Mrs. Lipton's room to find the puppeteer threatening the hotel owner. When Tom tries to apprehend him, Dugan falls to his death. Donovan, now convinced in Tom's innocence, arrives to arrest Mrs. Lipton for the theft of the war bonds.

Production

With the working title of "The Falcon Comes Back", principal photography took place from January 19 till early-February 1943.

Reception

In his review of The Falcon Strikes Back, Theodore Strauss wrote, in The New York Times,"There is something highly irregular about "The Falcon Strikes Back," now at the Palace, and we don't mean murder. Item: The role of the Falcon is no longer played by George Sanders, but by his brother, Tom Conway, who looks like Sanders, sounds like Sanders, but is less of an actor—the result is a sort of double exposure, slightly out of focus. Item: Edgar Kennedy, after all these years of two-reel comedy madness, turns out to be a dangerous maniac after all, which is like discovering that Donald Duck really belongs in the ward for violent cases. Aside from these two troublesome matters, "The Falcon Strikes Back" is hardly worth bothering about. The Falcon rounds up a gang of bond thieves amid the standard quota of murder and mayhem, but the lack of suspense is terrific."The Falcon's Brother earned a profit of $128,000.

References

The Falcon Strikes Back Wikipedia
The Falcon Strikes Back IMDb The Falcon Strikes Back themoviedb.org