Change Your Image
wwwj34
Reviews
Dick Tracy Meets Gruesome (1947)
Delivers the entertainment
I first saw this movie on late-night TV in the 1970s, and have seen it a few more times since. It has held up very well, except for the bank robbery scene, which really does get annoying on repeated viewings.
The very effective opening sequence introduces us to the menacing Gruesome (Karloff), his partner in crime Melody, and creepy new associate X-Ray (Skelton Knaggs). Gruesome collapses after inhaling some experimental gas and ends up in the morgue. He awakens and lights a cigarette; Pat Patton, at this desk nearby, notices something in the air but goes back to his writing, and is soon knocked cold by Gruesome, who makes his escape. There's a deft mixture of suspense and comedy in this scene, capped by Patton's line to Tracy, "If I didn't know better I'd swear we were doing business with Boris Karloff!"
By contrast, the bank robbery looks like a 50s sitcom, as the release of paralyzing gas causes everybody on the premises to freeze-frame in a cartoony manner. It's easy to understand why the scene was handled this way; a more realistic treatment that showed the bank customers clutching their throats and writhing as they crumbled to the floor might have been deemed too grim. But I wish this scene hadn't been played entirely as a joke, because it dispels the dark mood established by what went before.
Most viewers probably don't consider the talky scene in which Tracy meets Professor I.M. Learned to be a highlight, but it's one of my favorite parts. I can't tell if June Clayworth (who plays Learned) was much of an actress, but she is just right as the mousy scholar who might or might not be trustworthy. Learned's confrontation with Tracy is alive with ambiguity, and fun to watch.
There are many nice touches. Gruesome always has a toothpick in his mouth, and it shifts like the darting tongue of a reptile. When Gruesome and X-Ray bluff their way into a hospital by impersonating doctors, a desk guard asks Gruesome if he knows how to work the elevator. "Like the fingers on my hand", Gruesome replies, making a trigger-finger gesture.
Strong cast, brisk pace, and nice visual style lift this movie a cut above the average programmer.
The Tin Man (1935)
waste of some excellent talent
This is the first Thelma Todd-Patsy Kelly short I've seen, and it appears that they were victims of a scheme to cast them as a female Laurel and Hardy. Not a good decision, since Patsy isn't convincing as a Stan-like nitwit, and when Thelma beats her up for her mistakes she seems sadistic and much less likable than Ollie (or Moe for that matter). The plot is a shapeless hash about a mad scientist creating a robot (played by a guy covered in construction paper).
This short has one really beautiful scene. Wanting to distract the menacing robot or to somehow boggle its mind, Patsy has an idea: she'll perform an amazing trick with five spoons. First she lines them up end to end on a table, then indicates by elaborate gestures how she will tap the first spoon, and how it will strike the second spoon, and the second spoon will hit the third one and so on, ending with the last spoon flipping into a glass. Her pantomime & timing are superb, and it's a wonderfully unexpected tactic against a robot. Patsy executes the trick, with the result that the final spoon goes down the low-cut back of Thelma's dress. The whole sequence, which lasts maybe 12 seconds, is the one inspired sight gag in an otherwise ordinary film. I always enjoy seeing Clarence Wilson, but he isn't give much to do here. I'd be interested to see if there are perhaps better entries among the Thelma Todd-Patsy Kelly comedies.