LADY CONFESSES, THE (director: Sam Newfield; screenwriters: Helen Martin/based on a story by Irwin R. Franklyn; cinematographer: John H. Greenhalgh, Jr.; editor: Holbrook Todd; cast: Mary Beth Hughes (Vicki McGuire), Hugh Beaumont (Larry Craig), Edmund MacDonald (Lucky Brandon), Claudia Drake (Lucille Compton), Emmett Vogan (Capt. Brown), Barbara Slater (Norma Craig), Dewey Robinson (Steve), Carol Andrews (Marge), Ruth Brande (Gladys), Jerome Root (Bill); Runtime: 66; PRC; 1945)
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz
A routine mystery story with a misleading title. The lady doesn't confess to the murder committed, she instead provides the alibi for the killer. This low budget film is watchable, but do not expect anything more than that.
Larry Craig (Hugh Beaumont) is going to marry Vicki McGuire (Mary Beth Hughes), but surprisingly after a seven year absence Larry's wife Norma (Barbara Slater) returns and confronts Vicki by arrogantly telling her that she will never give Larry a divorce, even though she wants nothing more to do with her rotten husband.
Larry goes to the nightclub Lucky Brandon (Edmund MacDonald) owns and acts drunk. Lucky gets rid of him but the club's singer, Lucille Compton, thinks he's too drunk to see Vicki, so she lets him sleep it off in her dressing room.
In the wee hours of the night, Larry is awakened by Lucille and is now sober. He goes with Vicki to see Norma and ask for a divorce. When they show up at her house, Captain Brown (Vogan) greets them and informs them that Norma was strangled to death with a thin wire. He suspects the couple because they had a motive for killing her and proceeds to check their alibis. He finds three of four people at the club back Larry's alibi, only Lucky denies Larry was with him and denies that Larry saw him sneaking back in to his club late at night.
Warning: spoilers to follow.
Under police questioning it turns out that Lucky was seeing Norma and that she lent him $10,000 to open the club. Vicki suspects Lucky, and goes on her own initiative to get a job in the club to find out why he lied about seeing Larry that evening. She gives the club photographer (Andrews) $50 to take her place for a few days; and, she finds out from Lucille that she was at one time seeing Lucky and that Lucky had gone to Norma's house. When the singer tries to shoot Lucky because he won't see her anymore, he takes the gun away from her and asks Vicki to take her home. But before she goes home she writes a note to Captain Brown, telling him she lied about the alibi she provided for Larry.
In her apartment, Larry sneaks in and strangles her with a thin wire because he says she can't keep quiet. Vicki goes to Lucille's dressing room and gets a note that she wrote addressed to Captain Brown and without reading it takes it to Larry. Fortunately, Captain Brown, who is taking Lucky down to the station, also comes to Larry's place just as he was going to strangle Vicki. He confesses to her that he killed Norma to marry her and that he killed Lucille to shut her up, and now he has to kill her. But Captain Brown plugs him. It turns out that Lucky was in Norma's place to pay back the loan and rekindle their romance, he therefore explains that the reason he lied was that if he gave Larry an alibi the cops would let Larry off the hook.
REVIEWED ON 5/2/2001 GRADE: C
Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"
http://www.sover.net/~ozus
ozus@sover.net
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ
The review above was posted to the
rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup (de.rec.film.kritiken for German reviews).
The Internet Movie Database accepts no responsibility for the contents of the
review and has no editorial control. Unless stated otherwise, the copyright
belongs to the author.
Please direct comments/criticisms of the review to relevant newsgroups.
Broken URLs inthe reviews are the responsibility of the author.
The formatting of the review is likely to differ from the original due
to ASCII to HTML conversion.
Related links: index of all rec.arts.movies.reviews reviews