Big Town After Dark
Big Town After Dark
NR | 12 December 1947 (USA)
Big Town After Dark Trailers

A crusading newspaper reporter battles big-city gambling interests.

Reviews
Nonureva

Really Surprised!

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Comwayon

A Disappointing Continuation

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Stoutor

It's not great by any means, but it's a pretty good movie that didn't leave me filled with regret for investing time in it.

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KnotStronger

This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.

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dougdoepke

Pretty good little programmer. No one expects Oscar bait from Pine-Thomas's budget productions. Still, the cast appears motivated, while the script, though convoluted, has a couple good twists. I'm particularly impressed with an animated Reed who too often delivered wooden performances, but not here. Seems he's playing editor of a city newspaper that's trying to take down the town's gambling casinos. At the same time he's working to keep his staff together while trying to accommodate the boss's ambitious daughter. But things aren't always as they seem, as he eventually finds out. Kudos to director Thomas—half of the Pine-Thomas producing team—who shows skill at directing. I wouldn't be surprised if his presence behind the camera had a lot to do with motivating the cast. My only gripe is with the under-use of the great Hillary Brooke. Her regal presence always adds to movie proceedings. Here, however, she doesn't have much to do after the opening scene.Anyway, nothing memorable here, just a good little time-passer based on a popular radio program of the time.

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classicsoncall

Although rather intricately plotted, "Big Town After Dark" finds itself in rather unbelievable territory for most of it's run. The appearance of some of my favorite character actors of the era saves the picture for me, with the likes of Hillary Brooke, Joe Sawyer and Vince Barnett on hand. I always enjoyed seeing Brooke in a bunch of those Abbott and Costello TV episodes playing the next door neighbor, but she also popped up in a fair amount of these 1940's programmers. In this one, she's a newspaper reporter with a recently published novel who gives notice to her editor boyfriend Steve Wilson (Phillip Reed) of the Illustrated Press. With no time to gloat over painting Wilson into a corner at the newspaper, she's immediately replaced by the niece of the publisher, who has a few secrets of her own. The rest of the story plays out in a gambling joint called the Winner's Club, with publisher Amos Peabody (Charles Arnt) suckered for a fifty thousand dollar stake in the club courtesy of his niece Susan's (Ann Gillis) elaborate scam. All of this would have been unbelievable enough, but the coup de grace occurs when it's revealed that Susan is actually married to the owner of the Winner's Club, Chuck LaRue (Richard Travis). Up to that point though, she'd been playing every guy who'd give her a tumble, including Wilson and Larue's own henchman Jake Sebastian (Robert Kent). Too bad little Suzie didn't think this one out far enough, she never got to spend her uncle's money.Somehow it didn't seem to be much of a prerequisite for these era films to maintain a semblance of real time continuity. Case in point - editor Wilson decides to run the full story on the fifty grand shakedown, and the very next minute LaRue calls to ask him why? How did he know? But I guess it's this kind of goofy stuff that keeps me coming back to these early flicks. That and getting a kick out of seeing which players eventually show up.

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sol1218

**SPOILERS** A big smash with her first crime novel the Illustrated Press' ace police reporter Lorelei, who's knows as "Goldie Locks" to her friends, Kilbourne (Hillary Brooks) decides to quit her job at the newspaper and become a full time crime writer. Upset that his star reporter, as well as girlfriend, is leaving managing editor Steve Wilson, Phillip Reed, persuades Lorelei to stay for two more weeks until he finds a suitable replacement for her. In no time at all Wilson is contacted by the newspapers owner Amos Peabody, Charles Arnt, with the proposition of having his 20 year-old niece Susan, Ann Gillis, replace Lorelie.Susan being, by Uncle Amos, put through collage and journalism school is anything but interested in getting a scoop or story for her uncle's newspaper. While her naive Uncle Amos is paying the bills, for her collage car and rent, Susan is partying the night away and getting involved with a number of very shady characters in town most of whom she met, while gambling, at the notorious "Winners Club". Wilson who had since ditched the classy and on the ball Lorelei has been getting romantically involved with Susan who unknown to the love-sick managing editor is taking him to the cleaners and taking him there big time.Through Susan Wilson gets involved with a number of dangerous hoodlums notably the owner of the "Winners Club" Chuck LaRue, Richard Travis, that leads to Susan being disappeared, or kidnapped, by LaRue and held for a $50,000.00 ransom. LaRue is so slick and slippery that he has Susan's Uncle Amos pay him the $50,000.00 for her release by making it look like it's a legitimate stock transaction without Susan's name never being even mentioned!****SPOILER ALERTS****It soon becomes apparent that the sweet and innocent Susan is anything but a crime victim in that she was never kidnapped, by LeRue or anyone else. In fact Susan was laying low while everyone the police Uncle Amos Steve Wilson, as well as the reporter that she replaced Lorelie Kilbourne, where out desperately looking for her. Wilson who got worked over by LaRue and his hoods at the "Winners Club" earlier is now determined to run him out of the state together his sleazy gambling operation that's cheats it's customers out of their hard earned cash.With Amos Peabody, who's very close and friendly with the governor, pushing for the state legislators to pass a bill to put LaRue out of commission LaRue has a "Trojan Horse" placed in his, and the Illustrated Press', home. This spy and traitor is giving LaRue all the inside information on what Amos Peabody is up to and at the same time, this without LaRue's knowledge, screwing him behind his back as well.Wilson finally seeing the light, in what a sucker he was up until then, gets to have himself involved with the LaRue gang by putting his life on the line and forcing LaRue's hand in attempting to murder him. This all played into LaRue's master plan to off not only Wilson but Susan, who it turned out was a lot closer to LaRue then we at first thought, and her secret boyfriend LaRue hood Jake Sabastian, Robert Kent. In the end, when all the dust cleared, Lorelie realized what a mistake she made in quiting her job at the Illustrated Press. It was Lorelie's decision to go solo, as a crime writer, that opened the door to all the damage and destruction that happened with the advent of Susan Peabody suddenly coming on the scene. Wilson also realized what a first class jerk he was by throwing the sincere honest and beautiful Lorelie overboard for the childish sneaky and unstable Susan. Steve Wilson should thank his lucky stars that he not only survived the mess that he put himself into but that Lorelie came back into his life as well as his newspaper.

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rsoonsa

"Big Town", a shallowly disguised New York City, is of importance in a number of modes for popular United States culture, initially being a radio programme from 1937 until 1962, then on to television episodes, 1952/1956, and eventually as a comic book series, 1956/1958, with the protagonist in each manifestation being Steve Wilson, originally a reporter working for the Big Town Illustrated Press, later becoming its editor-in-chief, and played in this, the third of four films based upon the radio show, by Philip Reed who is featured in all of the four. In the production here, Wilson's almost girl friend and ace crime reporter Lorelei Kilbourne (Hillary Brooke), after her first novel has been accepted for publication, gives him two weeks notice of her resignation from her newspaper position but, to her chagrin, she is almost immediately replaced by the Illustrated Press owner's niece Susan (Anne Gillis), who by appearances also wedges herself into Steve's affections, although in reality he is using her to discover information of crooked Big Town activity involving an illegal gambling ring that preys upon college students. Susan is possibly not what she appears to be, and while Steve explores the girl's connection with local gambling kingpin Chuck LaRue (Richard Travis), owner of the Winners' Club, a night spot for gambling that is near to the campus where Susan attends, Lorelei also investigates her new rival's activities, with her efforts yielding more than she has expected, as all three of them may be in serious peril from the Forces of Evil. This is better than a routine "B" programmer, as it provides some incisive and hard bitten dialogue, a clever subtext based upon poker playing, and a generally edgy quality pervading the characterizations that lifts the work above the norm and, in spite of budget restrictions that rule out retakes, and a necessity for filling demands of its melodrama genre, there is plenty of "business" for a viewer to enjoy. Reed and Brooke make an elegant and worldly pair, veteran character players William Haade and Joe Sawyer perform as LaRue henchmen, and Vince Barnett has a substantial part in this Pine/Thomas production with producer William Thomas also directing and capably utilizing a crisply composed Whitman Chambers script in an always interesting, skillfully edited, briskly paced and well-cast film that additionally includes an effective original score by Darrell Calker, Gotham flavoured, of course, although the extensive location shooting is along Normandie Avenue on the east side of Hollywood.

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