Below the Deadline (1936) Poster

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6/10
Far better than I ever expected.
planktonrules20 August 2016
This crime film is from a shabby little company called Chesterfield Motion Pictures, a so-called 'Poverty Row' studio that actually just rented space at night at real studios and made super-quick and super-cheap B-movies. With a pedigree like this and mostly no-name actors, you'd assume this film would be crap. Your assumption is wrong. Instead, despite a few minor gripes, it's a dandy little crime film.

When the film begins, Molly (Cecilia Parker) and Terry (Russell Hopton) are planning on getting married. He's a cop and she works for a company that sells high-price jewels. Soon, there is a robbery of her employer and the robbers (in disguise) make it a point to point all the suspicion on Terry. He's been set-up but cannot prove he didn't do it. So, he does what most heroes do in this situation...he goes on the run to prove his innocence. An exciting (though clichéd) thing happens next--the train he's on has a wreck and when Terry awakens, he's badly injured...but has the presence of mind to plan his ID on a dead guy. The police assume the dead mangled guy was Terry and they drop the case. As for Terry, he finds himself in the hospital...and with a completely new face! Now he decides to go back and pose as Terry's brother and see if he can figure out who set him up to take the fall.

While the plot does sound very improbable, the story works well because it's well written. Also, for a cheap B, the acting ain't bad. Although Hopton was NOT a handsome guy by any standard and he looked FAR older than the character was supposed to be, he and the rest of the cast did quite well and I nearly give this film a 7. Very enjoyable despite it being totally ridiculous.

By the way, Hopton never really became a star and died of a drug overdose (ruled a suicide) in 1945. Very sad.
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5/10
Good Idea, But Some Flaws
boblipton27 October 2019
Ambitious cop Russell Hopton and jewel merchant's secretary Cecilia Parker are in love. Her boss is planning on a big shipment, which attractts Theodore von Eltz, the head of a jewelry-thief ring. Miss Parker attracts him too, so he works out an elaborate plan to frame Hopton for the robbery. It works. Hopton is arrested, escapes, and winds up in a train crash.

It's an elaborately plotted movie from ambitious Poverty Row producer Chesterfield. It's directed at a good clip by Charles Lamont, but there are a couple of problems. The first is that 36-year-old Hopton looks too old to play a 26-year-old Oirish beat cop, and the other is in the script by Ewart Adamson. It plods, making sure that every plot point is painstakingly laid out, and then further larded with not very interesting banter. At barely over an hour, it looks like it was padded.
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6/10
Decent little crime flick
Leofwine_draca30 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
BELOW THE DEADLINE is a dated but entertaining little crime flick from 1936, featuring a man wrongly framed for murder who has to take on a new identity in order to clear his name. That plotline in itself promises plenty of interest and this film delivers on that, with a strong-willed heroine and lots of sinister gangster types. A big and varied cast keeps the interest alive, and overall I'd describe this as ahead of its time.
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Pretty Good Programmer. (Plus a warning)
dougdoepke31 March 2018
(Warning- To IMDB streaming viewers. There are two contrasting films with the same name, "Below The Deadline". One is from 1946, the other 1936. In misleading fashion, IMDB's Watch List for viewer streaming places the older film under the description of the newer. Thus, I thought I was cueing up 1946 and instead I got the wholly different 1936. So be aware of that possibility if you're considering the IMDB viewer stream.)

The '36 flick is a decent if unexceptional crime story. A policeman and his girl plan to marry, but instead get mixed up in a diamond robbery for which the patrolman is blamed. Now he's got to clear himself, but how.

I can see why MGM had plans for Parker (on loan here). She's a charmingly engaging ingénue who carries the film. Leading man Hopton is an unknown, to me at least, and an apparent suicide victim (1945). As another reviewer points out, he's a bit of a miscast in terms of age and charm. He does, however, have a convincing Irish brogue. The settings are pretty well done for a poverty row production, along with smooth direction from Lamont. The story wobbles, but has a few twists that hold interest. All in all, it's a pretty good little time passer for old movie buffs, thanks mainly to Parker.
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7/10
Attention, Cecilia Parker fans!
JohnHowardReid12 January 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Sometimes the major Hollywood studios would test a new contract player's potential by lending her out to one of the Poverty Row concerns. As this "loan" really amounted to a major screen test, no money usually changed hands as both parties stood to benefit. In this case, the credit titles tell us that the star, Cecilia Parker, appears "by courtesy Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer" – and a fine job she makes of her role too. In fact, she appears to better advantage in Alpha's 69-minutes version than in many of her home studio movies. As the official release version runs only 61 minutes, I assume that the extra 8 minutes contain Parker scenes that were cut from the actual release print. No doubt this was the print Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer executives viewed when it was decided to groom Miss Parker for major stardom. This didn't actually happen. In fact, she was soon to find herself stuck in the "Andy Hardy" series as Andy's elder sister. So the Alpha version of Below the Deadline is a wonderful showcase for Cecilia Parker, and proves what a major star she may have become if M-G-M had taken more care with her. Although outshone, the other players in Below the Deadline are competent enough, while Charles Lamont has directed it all with fast-paced confidence and even a bit of style. The script offers a few interesting plot twists. It tends to be a bit technical, but I found it quite fascinating. On the other hand, the action climax is a bit tame, but you can't have everything!
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A good gem
searchanddestroy-112 August 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Charles Lamont - the director - was especially known for his comedies, such as the Abbot and Costello ones, not for film noirs. From him, I have already seen I WAS A SHOPLIFTER, INTERNATIONAL CRIME and ROAD AGENT, but this latest is maybe a western, I am not sure. Anyway, this little programmer is quite entertaining, although the story seems not so unusual. A cop is falsely accused of a stick up, pulled by thieves impersonating him. I won't repeat the story line told above. And I am also surprised no one has commented it yet. It has been released in Alpha Video DVD. It is available in stores.

Try it.
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