Destination Murder
Destination Murder | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Edward L. Cahn |
Produced by |
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Screenplay by | Don Martin |
Starring | |
Music by | Irving Gertz |
Cinematography | Jackson Rose |
Edited by | Philip Cahn |
Production company |
Prominent Features Inc. |
Distributed by | RKO Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 72 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Destination Murder is a 1950 American crime film noir directed by Edward L. Cahn. The drama features Joyce MacKenzie, Stanley Clements and Hurd Hatfield.
Plot
During a five-minute movie intermission, Jackie Wales leaves a theater, gets into a car, changes into a messenger's outfit, rings the doorbell of a man named Mansfield, shoots him, then rushes back to the theater and his date.
After her father is shot, Laura Mansfield sees the killer hurdle the house's gate. At the police station, she looks at suspects in a lineup. One of them is Jackie, who later offers her a ride. Laura lets him drive her home, then sees Jackie hurdle the gate as her dad's murderer did.
The police lieutenant in charge ignores her tip, so Laura dates Jackie to keep an eye on him. He loses money gambling and goes to a nightclub called the Vogue to get a payoff from the men who run it. Instead, the boss, Armitage, brutally beats Jackie while the club's manager, Stretch Norton, starts the music of a player piano to drown out the noise.
Laura is frustrated by Lt. Brewster's lack of action in solving her father's case. She takes a job as a cigarette girl at the club to learn more about Jackie's employer. Alice Wentworth, a gold-digging woman Armitage loves who flirts with Stretch, goes to Jackie with a plan. Write a letter confessing to the murder, implicating Armitage for hiring him, then get a $5,000 blackmail payment that Alice will split with him. The scheme works.
From the time they spend together, Laura ends up falling in love with Stretch and confessing her true identity. What she doesn't realize is that Stretch is the actual boss of the gang; Armitage works for him. Alice is persuaded to double-cross Jackie, then is killed by Armitage at the club. Jackie is also found dead.
Stretch then drugs Armitage, puts a gun in his hand and acts as if his partner is about to betray him, getting Laura to shoot him. Laura's life is in peril, at least until Lt. Brewster and his men rescue her. Laura admits she should have trusted the police to do their job in the first place.
Cast
- Joyce MacKenzie as Laura Mansfield
- Stanley Clements as Jackie Wales
- Hurd Hatfield as Stretch Norton
- Albert Dekker as Armitage
- Myrna Dell as Alice Wentworth
- James Flavin as Police Lt. Brewster
- John Dehner as Frank Niles
- Richard Emory as Police Sgt. Mulcahy
- Buddy Swan as Arthur - Blue Streak Messenger
- Bert Wenland as Dave, Blue Streak Messenger
- Franklyn Farnum as Arthur Mansfield, Laura's Father
- Steve Gibson and the Redcaps as Singing Group
Reception
Critic Hans J. Wollstein panned the film, writing, "In Destination Murder, former starlet Myrna Dell plays one of those hard-bitten, blonde schemers that no true film noir could be without. Unfortunately, both she and Stanley Clements, the only other interesting character in the film, are killed off fairly early on in the game. The result is a rather unsatisfying crime thriller where the 'Why?' is more of a mystery than the 'Who?'"[2] Herb Rau of The Miami News called the premise ridiculous and plot confused.[3]
References
- ↑ "Destination Murder: Detail View". American Film Institute. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
- ↑ Wollstein, Hans J., allmovie, film review. Last accessed: February 28, 2011.
- ↑ Rau, Rau (July 6, 1950). "At the Movies". The Miami News. p. 6B.
External links
- Destination Murder at the Internet Movie Database
- Destination Murder at AllMovie
- Destination Murder at the TCM Movie Database
- Destination Murder preview clip on YouTube (Warner Bros. Archive Collection)