Yawn. Poorly Filmed Snooze Fest.
... View MoreThe greatest movie ever!
... View MoreSlow pace in the most part of the movie.
... View MoreAmazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.
... View MoreFinal Maisie film sees Maisie (Ann Sothern) ripped off by a con artist. She files a report with the police and mustachioed police lieutenant Barry Nelson thinks she's a natural detective. So he talks her into joining the police academy and learning to be a cop. This leads to one of the more amusing segments of the movie, where Maisie learns self defense. After becoming a cop, Maisie goes undercover to help stop a phony psychic (Leon Ames).The Maisie series comes to an end with a pleasant, enjoyable episode. Sothern is great as usual. Dependable Leon Ames is good as the fake psychic. Barry Nelson, here sporting a risible mustache, is OK. Maisie's love interests in these movies never seemed to match her charisma and Nelson is no exception. I enjoyed the Maisie series a lot. They're simple, fun stories with the adorable Ann Sothern at her most lovable.
... View MoreThe Maisie series came to an end with Undercover Maisie and strictly on a minor key. In this last film, Ann Sothern joins the police force and without proper training gets into a dangerous situation.Barry Nelson who plays her immediate supervisor figures that Sothern being from Brooklyn has street smarts and can deal with trying to catch some con artists so she's assigned to the Bunco Squad.Here's where this picture has a problem. For all the previous films Maisie is quite the shrewd woman. But even the smartest of us need training and she would never be put in the situation she was in for this film.In fact the gang which consists of Leon Ames, Clinton Sundberg and Gloria Holden make quite a chump of her. But that's all Sothern needs, she's going to catch these people if it's the last thing she ever does. And it nearly is.Far from the best of this series.
... View MoreFinal entry in the Maisie series is an inconsequential affair where our gal manages to find herself in a peck of trouble when she joins the police force.As always the main reason to watch these films is the bright and bubbly Ann Sothern and as usual she's far better than the material handed her. The plot is a standard issue flimflam about phony spiritualists bilking unsuspecting dupes out of their dollars. You can see the ending coming from a mile away but the supporting cast contains several excellent actors including Leon Ames and Gloria Holden. Ann's leading men in these are usually competent but not terribly charismatic actors and Barry Nelson is no exception. He gets the job done although he and Ann share little chemistry. Not a terrible way to end Maisie's journey but hardly the best place to see her. None are award winners but the original Maisie, Swing Shift Maisie and Maisie Was a Lady are the serial's best.
... View MoreI noticed in the opening credits that "Undercover Maisie" was written by a woman (Thelma Robinson), which probably accounts for the strong feminist stance of the movie: even at the end, when the conventions of the genre demand that Maisie get kidnapped and imprisoned by the villains, she fights them - ultimately successfully - all by herself, putting her self-defense training to practical use. But while this aspect of the film is fun to watch, the film itself is plodding and, at a full 90 minutes, too long (this kind of programmer usually works better at around an hour). Maisie has a few (too few!) memorable lines ("My head....my hand....my knees!"), but the best line in the film, and a quite suggestive one at that, is by far the last one, belonging to Barry Nelson, which is worth sitting around for. ** out of 4.
... View More