The Lone Wolf Takes a Chance
The Lone Wolf Takes a Chance
| 06 March 1941 (USA)
The Lone Wolf Takes a Chance Trailers

A reformed jewel thief fights to clear his name when he's framed for murder.

Reviews
mark.waltz

As dashing as ever, Warren William is very amusing as the independent crime solver who makes a bet with police detectives that he will stay out of trouble for 24 hours. Fat chance of that happening, because like "Murder She Wrote", bad things always happen when he's around even if he isn't involved. This comic mystery gets off to a hilarious start when a black cat ends up wearing valuable pearls that are believed mistakenly by the very effeminate male jeweler to be stolen. This is what leads William to make the deal with detective Thurston Hall, and valet Eric Blore makes the same bet with the seriously idiotic detective Fred Kelsey. Intrigue on a train results in murder, bringing the foursome together for a mixture of comedy and crime.A fun B picture, this has everything that audiences clamored for in World War II. The villains are comparable to Nazi's, and William is the epitome of that no nonsense American who could use his wits to get out of jams and deal with ruthless criminals and nitwits like Kelsey who gets more laughs simply by being overly serious and thinking that he's the smartest guy in the room. June Storey plays a fictional movie star who maybe involved with the villains. Look for a young Lloyd Bridges as a train passenger.

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classicsoncall

I get a kick out of watching these detective films of the era, they can be very entertaining but at the same time, some of them are quite brainless. The picture here fits in both categories. This Lone Wolf entry is based on a bet Michael Lanyard (William Warren) makes with Police Inspector Crane (Thurston Hall) that he can stay out of trouble for twenty four hours. By almost anyone's estimation that should be a safe one, but since that's the premise, you just know something will have to happen to cause the Lone Wolf's plans to go awry.A neat surprise for movie fans in this picture is the presence of Lloyd Bridges in his first credited screen role, even if he does spend a fair amount of time under duress while bound and gagged. He's been kidnapped by agents who want to get their hands on a new set of engraving plates that are stored in a virtually foolproof safe wired to a poisonous gas mix which is released if the safe is tampered with.If only the bad guys had been thinking as clearly as Lanyard there wouldn't have been any need to go the full seventy four minutes of the picture. Recall how Lanyard got the combination to the safe? - he just went back and watched the newsreel! Why couldn't one of the criminal masterminds figure that out for themselves? Gee, I don't know, not a lot of thought was put into this.Nor was anyone paying attention in the editing room. When Johnny Baker was shown bound and gagged in the locked safe compartment with the Lone Wolf attempting to open it, he clearly got his hands free enough to reach up to his mouth to remove the gag placed in it, but after a cut away, he's shown again with his hands tied and immobile. Fortunately Lanyard figures out the combo in time to make the save on his own, otherwise he might have simply asked Johnny for it! Well, I don't want to be too critical. The story was well played with a lot of humor thrown in, and the opening scene was fairly creative. An inattentive jeweler places a pearl necklace aside carelessly and it falls directly onto the neck of a black cat that scurries away. The whole time he's outmaneuvering the Wolf, his assistant Jamison (Eric Blore) and the police, I thought someone for sure would have called for apprehension of the cat burglar.

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bkoganbing

There was a bit more comedy in this film from The Lone Wolf Series. The Lone Wolf as played by Warren William and his valet Jamison who is Eric Blore after being innocently trapped in a device to discourage bank robbers bet Inspector Thurston Hall that they can't go 24 hours without getting in some kind of trouble. That's a stupid bet on William's part because this whole series is The Lone Wolf getting into all kinds of scrapes and the police not believing he's gone legitimate.This time trouble comes in the form of private detective Regis Toomey being shot and falling nine stories to his death outside William's hotel room. Toomey was on a case involving a gang trying to rob a newly designed train car invented by Lloyd Bridges. It opens with a combination and an attempt to break in without knowing the combination will result in poison gas killing you. A bit extreme I think, but the first cargo this car is carrying is treasury plates and lots of crooks would like to get their hands on those.It's the usual run of things for William and Blore trying to catch the crooks in this case a gang led by Henry Wilcoxon and Walter Kingsford and trying to stay a step ahead of the cops who always think William is the bad guy. It's not much of a challenge in the case of Fred Kelsey who is Thurston Hall's sidekick and the butt of every gag in the film. Kelsey is one of those dumb flatfoots who graduated from the Keystone Police Academy and it's almost cruel what William and Blore do to him in every film.Fans of the Lone Wolf series and Warren William should definitely like The Lone Wolf Takes A Chance. Incidentally he does lose the bet and pays off, sort of.

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sol

**SPOILERS**Always getting themselves into trouble playful and somewhat inebriated ex-Jewel thief Michael Lanyard, Warren William, and his faithful and somewhat nutty companion Jamison,Eric Blore,get in over their necks in this movie by having a murder rap hanging over their heads.After getting falsely arrested for attempted bank robbery, by chasing a black cat with a string of pearls around it's neck, Lanyard & Jamison take up a bet, a two week paycheck, from their arch enemies the bumbling Inspector Crane and his sidekick Det.Dicken, Thurston Hall & Fred Kelsey,that they can stay out of trouble for a 24 hour period; It just didn't happen. Lanyard gets innocently involved in the murder, by not letting him into is hotel room, of a detective who was left standing on the ledge of his bathroom as Lanyard was busy shaving. Lanyard thought the detective was working for Crane and was trying to get him to break the law.It turned out that the detective was protecting inventor Johnny Baker, Lloyd Bridges, who knows the combination to an armored train car safe that's transporting US Treasury engraving plates to San Francisco. On the run to prove his innocence in the detectives murder Lanyard together with Jaimson end up getting involved with a gang of hoodlums who kidnapped Baker and are trying to get him to give them the combination to the armored car safe that he invented.Lots of action and far less wit and savvy on the Lone Wolf's part in solving this crime and at the same time rescuing Baker from his own invention. Locked in the train-car vault with no one but Lanyard having any idea what the combination is the only way the Federal Authorities can open the safe is to break it open. That would release a deadly cloud of poison gas that would suffocate Baker who's locked and tied up inside.There's just too many ingredients in the plot here with a car train and plane chase as well as a haunted house that keep you off focus and confused to what's really going on in the film. Lanyard and Jamison on the run throughout the entire movie from the Keystone Kops-like police, who couldn't find an elephant in a telephone booth, end up saving the day and Bakers life by using both their brains as well as their shoe-leather. Checking out a newsreel of Baker opening up the train safe Lanyard just had the motion picture enlarged and copied the combination Baker was spinning when he opened the vault! The gang who kidnapped Baker and forced him to open the safe by threatening to murder his fiancée star Hollywood actress Gloria Foster, June Story, didn't have the smarts to figure out what Lanyard did!Losing the bet,by not being able to keep out of trouble for just one day, to Inspector Crane and Det. Sgt. Dickens Lanyard reluctantly has Jamison give the two cops their winnings, two week salary. Always a sore loser since he, up until then, never loses anything Lanyard has the two cops payed off with Treasury Notes, or twenty ten and five dollar bills, that he and Jaimson just printed up with the now recovered genuine US Government Treasury plates! One thing you've got to say about Lanyard is that this time around he was strictly legit. The money that he handed Crane & Dicken wasn't at all counterfeit.

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