The Cat and the Canary (1939) Poster

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8/10
Probably the best version of the story
dbborroughs5 July 2004
This tale of greedy relatives out to get a fortune had been filmed at least two times before Bob Hope took a crack at it, and the world is a better place for it.

Though not the perfect haunted house film, this is a very funny movie. One of the reason that this isn't perfect is that the wisecracks get in the way of the mystery, or if not the mystery, the suspense. Such is the danger of comedy thrillers, either its too funny so its not scary, or too suspenseful and the comedy destroys the tension at the wrong time, here its simply too much humor before it turns serious.

Fortunately here funny is good, so even if the suspense gets the short end of the stick, its still an enjoyable time at the movies. What more could you want, especially since it gives Bob Hope ample chance to do what he does best.

See this movie. Its a lot of fun. 8 out of 10.
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7/10
Some frights but plenty of laughs!
dougandwin31 July 2005
This has to be classed as one of Bob Hope's better films, even though it was one of his first in a starring role. He uses the script to perfection with his one-liners while playing the role of a pretty scared coward, and he is admirably supported by Paulette Goddard as the future heiress. In a very good supporting cast there are a number of stalwarts like George Zucco, Elizabeth Patterson and Gale Sondergaard who add so much to the atmosphere of the film. Take it for what it is - a fun scary romp, and you will be spending a most pleasurable 75 minutes, Oh, and by the way it has the required sliding panels, mists, falling bodies, etc that go such a long way in providing Hope with suitable cracks. Enjoy.
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7/10
Can Bob Hope stop the Cat?
Space_Mafune21 August 2003
Bob Hope murder mystery/old dark house parody film with someone trying to knock off an heiress. A fiendish figure named The Cat appears but all is not what it seems. This was good fun..I quite enjoyed it although it could have benefited from a few more legitimate frights..certainly a good starting point for Hope who went on to make many more delightful films like this.
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Hope at His Wittiest!
BaronBl00d12 June 2000
Most of Bob Hope's films rely heavily on the humour of the times, with references to political and cultural events figuring in significantly. Sometimes this detracts from his films, because the humour is not always self-evident. Not is the case with his performance in the remake of Paul Leni's The Cat and the Canary. Hope has one great one-liner after another in this old dark house mystery-comedy. The story is pretty familiar: a group a relations must stay a night in a house, listen to a will, and then remain there for the evening to see if the inheritor remains sane throughout the evening. Of course, we the audience are treated to secret panels, an occasional murder, hooded culprits, and a great mystery. The Cat and the Canary works so well for a number of reasons. First, it is a very atmospheric film taking place in the swamplands of Louisiana. The film is by no means big budget but does do the most with what it has. The surrounding swampland have an authentic feeling to them and the house itself is magnificently eerie. The cast is quite good with Bob Hope saving the film from tiresome formula with his special brand of humour and his excellent timing. Despite his great performance, he is almost upstaged by Gale Sondergaard as a dark, brooding servant. George Zucco also has a nice supporting role. All in all a nice way to spend an evening.
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7/10
Another Millionaire leaves a wacky will
bkoganbing11 August 2012
The late Uncle Cyrus left quite a collection of greedy relatives looking to be the number one heir at the reading of his will at his home on an island in the Louisiana bayou swamp. Among the possible legatees are Bob Hope, Paulette Goddard, John Beal, Douglass Montgomery, Elizabeth Patterson, Nydia Westman and housekeeper Gale Sondergaard. Presiding over the reading of the will is lawyer George Zucco. Besides Bob Hope a lot of the names of the cast spell out sinister.

As usual the deceased always makes out a will with wacky provisions. Winner of the prize is Goddard, but she has to spend some time at the creepy mansion, essential in these kind of films. And if she's driven to madness or killed there is a secret provision for a second heir among the crew that only Zucco knows.

The Cat And The Canary is a nice blend of both comedy and melodrama with of course Hope in charge of the comedy. He's a successful radio star as in real life at that time and Uncle Cyrus's money while nice isn't going to be the difference in where his next meal is coming from. And he's liking what he sees in Goddard so he's protective of her in his own comedic way.

This was the first of three films that Hope and Goddard did. Immediately afterward Paramount put them in The Ghostbreakers which certainly had some similar themes. They worked well together too bad they were not able to collaborate more.

This was a nice film for the career of Bob Hope which was zooming into high gear right about now.
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10/10
A Classic
bigvalbowski17 July 2001
The silents brought us a number of classic comedians who were skilled at making the audience laugh without uttering a word. With the advent of sound, some of these comedians found the transition hard and most still relied on their old silent routines for their jokes. Bob Hope was the first comedian who's mouth provided the punchline. The Cat and the Canary was his first leading part and yet it's not designed purely for his advantage, this is a great picture, both funny and exciting.

Bob Hope is the star. He's hilarious. He's sympathetic. He's also a coward, which isn't such an asset when you're staying in a house filled with escaped lunatics, suspicious servants, and numerous trapdoors. Hope plays a radio personality who involuntarily becomes the bodyguard to a woman, Joyce, who recently inherited a lot of money. The house is filled with other guests that are upset at having lost out on the inheritance. To make matters worse, if Joyce dies within a month, the money goes to whoever was the substitute inheritor and that person's name lies in an envelope safely hidden in a safe. As guests start dying, the tension increases, as does Hope's one-liner's. "I've got goosepumps. In fact, my goosebumps have got goosebumps."

Today, the plot seems like one from an episode of Scooby-Doo but it's still fun and surprisingly smart. The cast is small but solid and the murderer is never guessed until the end. A few red herrings are thrown in but when the guilty party is revealed, it does make sense, a necessity rarely used in Hollywood today.

As a vehicle for Hope it works a charm. As a movie in itself it should be recognised as a classic.
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7/10
The archetypal 'Old Dark House' movie.
BA_Harrison26 January 2017
A group of relatives converge on a decaying Louisiana bayou mansion for the reading of a will. With only one of the hopeful heirs, vivacious beauty Joyce Norman (Paulette Goddard), inheriting the entire estate, and the whole clan trapped in the gloomy building for the night, it isn't long before someone turns to murder. Easily spooked actor Wally Campbell (Bob Hope) does his best to solve the mystery that unfolds while trying to protect Joyce from the killer.

There may have been 'Old Dark House' films before The Cat and the Canary (including, of course, the 1927 silent version of the same story), but this 1939 murder mystery is the one that clearly defined the genre, knowingly presenting all the tropes one might reasonably expect, from the creepy housekeeper to the escaped lunatic to the house riddled with secret passageways—even the portrait in the library has eye-holes that allow the killer to observe unnoticed. It's all very 'Scooby Doo' but a whole lot of fun, with a great cast who go with the flow, and bags of atmosphere, aided no end by the delightfully creepy setting.

Even Bob Hope's rather dated, vaudevillian delivery of his glib one-liners doesn't spoil matters — there's just too much spooky silliness on offer to make the film anything other than a very enjoyable time-waster.
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10/10
Still holds up!
guil1224 October 1999
CAT AND THE CANARY still is a great mystery/comedy film. With it's two young stars Bob Hope and Paulette Goddard, who go on to make yet another two films together, THE GHOST BREAKERS and NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH, there is great fun and thrills as they spend the night in a spooky old house with several guests that disappear or are found killed mysteriously. Paulette inherits the place through a will, including a jewel necklace which she promptly places under her pillow before going to bed. There is a scary scene with the damsel in distress in bed sleeping, and a hairy grotesque hand slowly starts to creep over her pillow. A wonderful performance by the supporting cast including Gale Sondergard as an evil-looking housekeeper, George Zucco, again in a thriller, and Elizabeth Patterson and Nydia Westman as the two dizzy relatives. This film put both of the leads over the top and onto major star caliber. Rarely on television, it can be seen around Halloween on American Classics.
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7/10
Bob, Paulette and a Haunted House - what could be better?
blanche-25 November 2014
It may sound strange, but there was something so cute and appealing about Bob Hope in the '30s and '40s. I loved that guileless, spineless sweet character he played.

Here Hope is in top form in "The Cat and the Canary," the 1939 version also starring Paulette Goddard, Gale Sondergaard, John Beal, Douglass Montgomery, George Zucco, and Elizabeth Patterson. A group of relatives have to spend the night in a haunted house after the reading of their late relatives' will.

Hope and the beautiful, vivacious Goddard are wonderful together -- so good, in fact, that they did it again in "Ghost Breakers." No one could do one-liners like Hope.

This movie is a lot of fun, with secret panels and things that go bump in the night. Delightful, funny, and spooky.
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10/10
Shaped my childhood nightmares
silent_alice13 March 2003
Oh my gosh, how scary is this film? I first saw it when I was about six, and I only remember the hand coming through the wall to strangle the woman in bed, and the body falling out of a cupboard. This was enough to make me stay away from cupboards and beds for many years to come! I saw it again recently and found it more comical this time around, especially Bob Hope's performance, but I'm still scared of cupboards!
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6/10
A great disappointment
westerfieldalfred29 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
I waited for years to see this film. Now that I've seen it and read the other reviews, I'm wondering if I watched the same film. The film is dull. Hope's one liners are few and the funny ones are fewer. (I laughed three times.) The sets are strictly poverty row. The cinematography is uninspired. There is absolutely no creepiness except for the ending. The actors simply walk through their parts. I have at least half a dozen poverty row old darkhouse films that are better in almost all respects. The original version was far better. It opened with a feeling of horror and sustained it. The Cat was far better realized. Excuse me now - I have to watch the 1927 version to wipe this stinker from my mind.
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9/10
"Some Fun!"
Spondonman13 August 2006
This has always been one of my top10 favourite films, since I first saw it in 1972, at least 14 times since. Bob Hope was still a little green at this stage, but you can almost see (and hear) him coming of age in CATC, his comic delivery technique and timing noticeably improved by the end. The spooky atmosphere generated onto the b&w nitrate stock by the Paramount cast and crew was palpable, compare it - if you can stomach it - to the 1979 remake!

8 people are summoned to a will-reading at a rather eerie old house; the one that wins the fortune seems to be going insane as one of her relatives sweetly puts it, whilst another just says she's going out of her mind. There's only 2 nice people here, Hope and Goddard, the rest are more or less on the make. She's the visual jewel in here - as Hope says, "Terrific". The scene with Goddard and the Cat in the library is my all-time Spooky Moment on Film - nowadays all the "artists" involved in the making of "horror" films don't trouble about niceties like Spookiness, but just get on with the Gore. That of course is the problem for most people coming to this, they've probably inured themselves over the years to see disgusting and vile-ent things - so much so that they would laugh at the most savage scene in this where someone gets knifed in the back. The 1927 Laura LaPlante version is good and nicely atmospheric too, but it's difficult comparing chalk and cheese to silent and talking pictures - they're both great comedy films on their own merits.

A wonderful piece of art, topped the next year with an even better follow up, Ghost Breakers.
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7/10
Warning: This is a spoof, not a remake...
binapiraeus24 February 2014
This is the 'talkie' remake (well, in fact, more of a spoof than a remake) of the famous silent mystery classic from 1927; this time we start directly on the evening the millionaire's will (who died 10 years ago, in this case) will be read to all the more or less greedy relatives. Again, the attorney (George Zucco, an 'old friend' from many a scary movie) notices at once that the safe has been opened, and again the strange housekeeper Miss Lu (Gale Sondergaard) receives the guests. This time, there IS electric light in the house - but it isn't too reliable...

And the last ones to arrive are actor Wally (Bob Hope) and beautiful artist Joyce (Paulette Goddard), our protagonists of course. The will is being read, and Joyce is the 'lucky one'; and again under the condition that she won't become insane - and what's more, that she won't die within a month... 'An invitation to murder', as one of her cousins remarks quite rightly...

Then the warden from the asylum comes and warns them about the escaped lunatic they call 'the Cat'; then the attorney disappears behind a moving bookshelf, Joyce is getting more and more nervous, and Wally's already shaking with fright - and so the 'horror' spoof goes on; only with the ending slightly altered to give Miss Lu a little more attention...

Of course, there's no comparison on ANY level to the original mystery masterpiece; this is clearly romance and comedy entertainment of the late 30s, with a few scary moments thrown in - of the fans of the CLASSIC kind of mystery, only those with a very good sense of humor will find it interesting; otherwise, the good acting and funny lines will be quite entertaining for friends of the 'lighter' side of old Hollywood.
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5/10
Unlike most of the other reviewers, I was disappointed.
1726812 July 2006
For years I have heard that "The Cat and the Canary" was a very good movie. For some reason--rights, maybe?--I have never seen it before. Well, I finally caught up with it. As a number of previous reviews have pointed out, "The Ghost Breakers" was better--far better. Even the politically incorrect aspects of the second film worked. Hope and, especially Goddard (no wonder Chaplain was so bewitched), were much better the second time out.

I saw the Laura LaPlante silent version on Turner Classic Movies recently, so the identity of "the cat" was no surprise, although I suspect most viewers would have figured it out not too far into the movie. The best performances in the 1939 version were by Gale Sondergaard and Nydia Westman. On the other hand, John Beal and Douglass Montgomery gave confirming evidence of why they are now largely forgotten.

Still, I would rather watch Goddard and Hope in this "Cat" than the gore-fests--"Saw," anyone?--that are ground out like rancid sausages today for the mystery/thriller market.
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7/10
One More Take: The Cat and the Canary
Left_Hand_of_Dog10 July 2021
Alrighty folks, this is a quick and easy one. The Cat and the Canary is classic proto-gothic mystery stuff, straight out of an episode of Scooby Doo. You've got an old manor, supposedly haunted, a cast of characters gathered for a purpose (the reading of a will), and, Bum Bum Buummmm, a killer on the loose! Who could it be?? The scared old lady? The doting ex-boyfriend? The cat man, loose from the insane asylum? Tune in to find out!!!

The eyes of paintings replace themselves with those of the watchful scoundrel, secret passages steal people away from in front of bookcases, and suspicion abounds as all the characters, along with the audience, participate in a Whodunnit. You know all you need to know, just from this sentence.

So is it any good? Well, the black and white photography is great, particularly the lighting, so we're covered on the looks front. Bob Hope is fun to watch as the classic character Bob Hope (not really, but you know what I mean), flustered and quippy and affable, and the rest of the cast shines as well, the ensemble and their interplay being the highlight of the movie.

Narratively, it's about what you'd expect. Things play out, clues are found, the mystery deepens, and is resolved. If there's a kink in the machine, however, that keeps this fun movie from being totally solid, it lies within the details. Certain character motivations remain unanswered, and logical details about the functioning of the house itself and aforementioned supernatural elements are never properly elucidated. It's as if the movie put them in because that's what you do in a movie like this, and then hopes you'll forget to ask why and how. Scooby and the Gang would have explained these mechanics with aplomb in a nice end scene, so it's mildly frustrating that the movie sees fit not to.

However, at the end of the day, these things don't matter too much. You're not watching a movie like this for the superb logic of its machinations, most likely, but to indulge in some good old fashioned murder mystery fun, and at an incredibly light 70 minutes, it does all it needs to do in order to scratch that itch.

FINAL TAKE: The Cat and the Canary isn't going to blow anybody away, but at this point in history, that's almost the point. It's a comfy blanket of a type we no longer get anymore in movies, a relic of a bygone story archetype long since parodied to extinction, but it does said archetype earnestly. Some mechanical and character logic problems aside, it thoroughly entertains.
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10/10
The Cat and the Canary was a suitably atmospheric movie with entertaining wisecracks from Bob Hope
tavm11 September 2009
After years of only reading about this-Bob Hope's first starring role in an A picture after a few years struggling in some B's-I finally got to watch this rare showing of The Cat and the Canary on YouTube. Long unavailable on TV and video, this was a very pleasurable experience with the mostly clear print I saw on the site. While director Elliott Nugent provides the right sinister atmosphere for this third film adaptation of this classic mystery play that takes place in New Orleans in my home state of Louisiana (by the way, Crescent City residents would not take kindly to the way George Zucco pronounces their city's name here), Bob Hope provides perfect wisecracks in his role of a radio actor who's one of several possible heirs to a man that's been dead for 10 years. Besides him, there's also the stunning Paulette Goddard as the woman Hope falls for and is willing to protect despite his admitted cowardice (though it's not too emphasized here). As the housekeeper who was long loyal to the late house owner, Gale Sondergaard provides her own haunting beauty to the fore. I was also pleasantly surprised by a couple of familiar character actors who would become recognized on TV: Elizabeth Patterson (later Little Ricky's babysitter on "I Love Lucy"), and Charles Lane (who appeared as Homer Bedloe on "Petticoat Junction" and is another player that is in my favorite movie, It's a Wonderful Life). Even today in this age of more explicit horrors, The Cat and the Canary is great fun to watch. Oh, and I have to mention that one of my favorite lines from Hope concerns dead people coming back. "You mean Republicans?" he asks.
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6/10
Bad print affects viewing but enough to enjoy regardless.
hitchcockthelegend4 March 2008
A Bob Hope comedy spookathon for me last night as I doubled this with The Ghostbreakers to hopefully lift me out of the hazy blue cloud hanging over me? I started with this offering from director Elliott Nugent that at times sadly flatters to deceive, whilst also at others delivers some mirth courtesy of Bob Hope's cheeky coward act and Gale Sondergaard's quite deliberate camp performance as the mysteriously eerie housekeeper. This was my first viewing and I have to say it didn't deliver all that I had hoped for, the house was nicely set up with bookcases spinning and spooky pictures brought to life by some nice camera work, yet the moments of hilarity didn't outnumber my let downs. The print of the film is very poor and this only added to my distraction with the film. I will certainly revisit it again next year, but for now it's an above average film that maybe suffers from my expectation of it from the off? 6/10
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8/10
The Cat And The Canary 1939
sylned9 March 2005
I saw this movie in 1939 when I was just nine years old. It was a comedy, to be sure, but it scared the heck out of me. It was at night when I saw it and when I left the theater alone, I ran all the way home. That was just three blocks but a dark and spooky three blocks. For many nights I couldn't sleep because of a skeletal hand that kept reaching out of my headboard and was creeping ever closer to my throat. No scary movie, before or since, ever scared me as much as this comedy. It made a star of Bob Hope and he and his co-star, Paulette Goddard, appeared in a similar scary old house movie later that became more well known than Canary, but it was the canary that kept me awake every night for a week or two. I have never seen this film for sale or rent and never have seen it on TV and I have always wondered why. It was such a gem.
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7/10
Or, as I would call it, "The Ham and the Tomato".
mark.waltz15 August 2012
Warning: Spoilers
If you watch this movie with the idea that it is an old dark house mystery with a touch of comedy, you will find the film to be quite good. Even Bob Hope, in spite of spouting jokes that are either silly, dated, or just plain bad, underplays his role of a cowardly actor thrown into the midst of murder and mayhem. Paulette Goddard is the heir to the fortune of the deceased family patriarch who resided in a spooky estate with his cat-like housekeeper (Gale Sondergaard), and distant cousin Hope protects her, as best as a coward can. This film has enough sliding panels, spooky looking hands (apparently belonging to an escaped mental institution patient only known as "the cat") and many sinister innuendos from Sondergaard.

Future "Z" grade horror icon George Zucco ("Fog Island", "Scared to Death") is good as a dour attorney, while Nydia Westman (as a fluttery cousin), John Beal (a hunky cousin) and Elizabeth Patterson (as their spinster aunt-what else?) are among the others present. Sondergaard steals the show with her resemblance to "Snow White's" Wicked Queen extremely uncanny here. She keeps her tongue firmly in her cheek while obviously enjoying portraying this glamorous possible villain. While a remake of a silent classic, this is the prototype for many old dark house comedies yet to come.
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10/10
Entertaining re-make of earlier silent film version.
bmlittle11 May 2001
I am surprised that this film has not been commercially released on video. This film gives us Bob Hope in his earlier film career in a funny but sincere role. This is the first of a couple of films starring both Bob Hope and Paulette Goddard in a mystery/comedy environment. Paulette Goddard is charming and the pair play off each other well. The moods created by the settings are terrific . The film succeeds in providing us with a mystery to solve while keeping us laughing. Solid entertainment if you like old mysteries or are a fan of Bob Hope.
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7/10
"Let's all drink scotch and make wry faces."
utgard1411 November 2014
A group of relatives, including pretty artist Joyce (Paulette Goddard) and cowardly actor Wally (Bob Hope), gather at a creepy old mansion in the Louisiana bayou for the reading of the will of millionaire Cyrus Norman. In the will, everything is left to Joyce. As the relatives spend the night in the mansion, scary things start to happen and Joyce fears that her relatives might be trying to kill her.

Hope has lots of one-liners and funny comebacks. This was his first big hit movie. Goddard plays it straight but does a good job as the heroine. Hope and Goddard re-teamed a year later for the similar Ghost Breakers. They're both good movies but I prefer Ghost Breakers to this. George Zucco and Gale Sondergaard have supporting roles here. I hopefully don't need to tell you all how that's a big plus for any movie.

The Cat and the Canary began as a play but it's been filmed several times. The first was in 1927 and that version happens to be one of my favorite silent movies. The play and the first movie were highly influential, being imitated often in what would come to be known as the "old dark house" subgenre of horror/thriller. This 1939 version of The Cat and the Canary mixes things up by turning the original into a comedy. Today more people are probably familiar with this than the silent classic. I suppose there's no harm in that but I would recommend you seek out the earlier film as it's very good.
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9/10
Chills and laughs
KarloffsCat9 June 2005
I'm not a huge Bob Hope fan, but he seems perfectly cast here (as he is in the not quite so good 'Ghost Breakers' (1940) - also with Goddard!) The atmosphere generated in this movie is perfect for all you who like the early 'old dark house' movies. Creepy internal and external sets, secret passageways, lurking danger, mysterious housekeeper and house guests.

Hope is the focal point for the film and injects darkly comic humour at all the right moments, which not only provides laughs but also cranks up the tension beautifully.

This film is great to watch on a Friday night with a bottle of wine, but will also be a hit with the kids at Halloween! Superb entertainment.
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7/10
"What some guys won't do for a laugh!"
classicsoncall17 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
With "The Cat and the Canary", Bob Hope became a legitimate leading man in pictures and at the same time made the brash coward character his own. The formula consisted of using jokes to ward off fear in the face of trouble, a braggart who talks big but melts when face to face with danger. At the time this picture was made, Paulette Goddard was married to Charlie Chaplin, and when Hope met him during filming, Chaplin complimented Hope on his comic timing, calling him one of the best. It was a memory Hope cherished for the rest of his life.

So what we have here is a fairly formulaic haunted house mystery with the prerequisite dimming lights, black cat, peering eyes through a portrait, revolving bookcase and a mysterious hand. All those clichés are brought to bear in a story where a last will and testament provides for a single heir, leaving a handful of remaining relatives on the sidelines as they contemplate who might become a murder victim if they stay in the Norman mansion for the night. My antenna went up early when it was stated that the will was being read on the tenth anniversary of Cyrus Norman's death - why would it have taken so long? I guess we're not supposed to ask.

Hope displays excellent comedic timing here with co-star Goddard, finishing her sentences and becoming her protector when the creepy stuff starts to occur. I thought the name of the attorney for the Norman estate being Crosby (George Zucco), we might have been treated to a Bingster sight gag, but "The Road to Singapore" was one picture away and a year off, so the relationship hadn't materialized yet. Some coincidence though, huh?

With Lawyer Crosby eliminated as the victim of Miss Lu's (Gale Sondergaard) prediction, (eight in attendance, seven chimes, one will die), the mystery involves who the killer was and how he's discovered. That's for the viewer to find out, as long as your goosebumps don't get goosebumps.
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5/10
Catty
begob28 August 2016
At a winner-takes-all reading of a will in an isolated mansion, a surprise condition provides motive for murder ...

Corny murder mystery played for mild laughs, mainly through the hero's glib patter - although he does seem a bit edgy when telling one of the old ladies to shut up. Lots of running down corridors from room to room, people splitting up when they should stay together, and responses to cries for help that come slowly or quickly, according to the needs of the scene.

Nothing special about the production. The music is overbearing, but not hugely.

Overall, faintly amusing ancestor of Scooby Doo.
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