Obscure RKO programmer. The plot involves a seedy roadside motel and diner that serves as locus for a contrived series of individual stories. Thus, it's not just the night that's crowded. Best things are the authentic 1930's motel setting, along with such stellar performers as hardscabble mom Anne Revere, snake oil salesman JM Kerrigan, and a sweetly deglamorized Gale Storm in one of her first outings. Then too, except for a couple of well-scrubbed ladies, the rest of the cast is also far from Hollywood glamorous. That along with the seedy setting adds good realistic air. Too bad the unrealistic narrative undercuts that air.
Happily, director Reis helms the difficult material in good journeyman fashion—though the gun battle amounts to a laughable expenditure of Hollywood bullets. Perhaps the best thread is Anni (Storm) struggling between the allure of city life and the boringly secure diner. All in all, the 60-minute effort was probably near the bottom of RKO's production line, but the results still manage to oddly entertain.