Sleepers West (1941) Poster

(1941)

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8/10
The Narrowest Margin
duke102916 April 2007
"Sleepers West," originally titled "Sleepers East," is one of the most enjoyable of the seven Michael Shayne detective mysteries from Sol Wurtzel's B-picture unit at Fox. This entry, however, is not based on any of the scores of Shayne pulps written by Brett Halliday, but on a novel by Frederick Nebel, notable as the first star writer of the legendary BLACK MASK magazine in the 1920's. Although Nebel licensed his most famous character, Torchy Blaine, to the movies in the 1930's, he held Hollywood in contempt and avoided adapting any of his material to the screen.

The film's premise has Shayne covertly escorting a secret surprise witness to a high-profile San Francisco trial aboard a cross-country passenger train. While trying to keep her location and identity a secret, he also has to contend with sinister on-board forces that are trying to silence her. The setting of a sleeping car has traditionally been an intriguing background for thrillers from Hitchcock's "The Lady Vanishes" to Sidney Lumet's "Murder on the Orient Express," and the restrictions of narrow dining cars and narrower sleeping berths, the incessantly repetitive sound of the train's mechanics, and the readily available supply of red herrings add an air of claustrophobic excitement to the proceedings.

If the film's plot of a secret witness threatened by sinister forces sounds familiar, it is because that entire premise was later borrowed without attribution for the highly-acclaimed 1952 Noir thriller, "The Narrow Margin" directed by Richard Fleischer. It was remade in 1990 with Gene Hackman under the same title and credited the '52 film as the source. Despite the fact that "Sleepers West" is largely ignored and forgotten, as is the entire Shayne series, one must wonder why it receives so little attention.

A possible explanation lies with Fox's conception of the Shayne persona. The original Halliday stories were largely ignored by the studio's screenwriters, and the tough, no-nonsense character of Shayne himself was reshaped for the wise-cracking, breezy style of actor Lloyd Nolan, who bears little resemblance to Halliday's hard-boiled gumshoe.

No matter. "Sleepers West" and the other series entries are great escapist fun, filled with sharply witty dialogue and some of Hollywood's most idiosyncratic character actors at their peak, including Mary Beth Hughes, George Chandler, Eddie Brophy, and, in possibly the best role of his lengthy career, Louis Jean Heydt. "Sleepers West" also gives significant screen time to some of best black comedians of Hollywood's Golden Age as Pullman porters. Those of you who remember and appreciate the unsung talents of Mantan Moreland, Ben Carter (Moreland's old nightclub partner), Fred "Snowflake" Toones, and Sam "Deacon" McDaniel are in for an enjoyable 74 minutes.
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7/10
good Michael Shayne
blanche-212 March 2013
"Sleepers West" is a very enjoyable Michael Shayne mystery from 1941. Lloyd Nolan is Shayne, of course, and Mary Beth Hughes is the surprise witness he's trying to get to court before anyone can get at her.

He doesn't have a tremendous amount of luck there, as he runs into his ex-fiancé, reporter Kay Bentley, at the train station, and she's going to be on the same train. And Helen Carlson, the witness, isn't very cooperative. After being brought on board on a stretcher in a black wig, she rips off the wig and wants a drink.

Neat and fast-moving story with Shayne working to clear a criminal who, for once, is innocent, while other people have their own agenda for wanting him found guilty.

Nice, energetic film with the likable Nolan and wisecracking Lynn Bari.
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7/10
Death and an old girl friend may be after Michael Shayne on this particular train
Terrell-44 February 2008
For the first 40 minutes of Sleepers West, one of the Michael Shayne quickie B movies starring Lloyd Nolan, I thought we might be in the middle of tense Narrow Margin territory. Mike Shayne is hiding a secret witness on a train barreling through the night between Denver and a high profile trial in San Francisco. Her testimony can prove the innocence of a man framed for a murder...a murder that involves some very powerful people who want the case closed fast and permanently. And on that train is a killer determined to identify the witness and stop her from testifying. That's not all. Also aboard is a smart, shrewd and sexy newspaper reporter, Kay Bentley (Lynn Bari), an old romance of Mike's who is determined to find Mike's witness and get a scoop. Then there's the tall guy with a suitcase full of cash who might just be a poor shrump...or a killer, too. If that's not enough for Mike, his witness, Helen Carlson (Mary Beth Hughes), is a lush piece of frosting who enjoys a drink, has lazy eyes and lips as plump as Angelina Jolie's collagen injections.

If Sleepers West, a great, odd-sounding title, settles down to standard B movie fare toward the end, the ride at least is a lot of fun. Lloyd Nolan remains the reason to see this comedy/ mystery. Lynn Bari adds style and sexiness and has a great voice. She was a good actress who could handle comedy, drama, weepies or romance. Over a long career, she'd shrug and do the movies she was offered, and never was able to break out of the B's.

Blue, White and Perfect (1942), directed by Herbert I. Leeds, is the fourth and last in the Michael Shayne Mysteries - Volume I. In some ways, it's the best of the four. Once again we have an economical set, this time on an ocean liner steaming from Los Angeles to Honolulu. There's espionage involving industrial diamonds, murder, fist fights and a nice near- drowning in a flooding ship's compartment. The story is as complicated than the other three were, but it hold ups for the length of the movie. In this one, the ruthless Mr. Big is well disguised until the end. The confined quarters of the ship means there are lots of scrambles up and down stairways and people following each other at night in the halls. Lloyd Nolan continues his pitch-perfect portrayal of Shayne as cocky, funny, tough when he has to be and veering closely, but not close enough, toward getting married. Shayne's escape from marriage this time is cleverly handled by a corpse with a knife in its back.

Don't blame yourself if you get confused over some of the characters in these films. Mary Beth Hughes appears in three of them, Helene Reynolds in two and Marjorie Weaver in two. And they're all in leading roles never playing the same characters. Lloyd Nolan must have been as confused as Mike Shayne sometimes appears to be. And let's hear it for double- breasted suits. That's what Shayne always wears, and they look good on him.
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6/10
No strangers on this train
bkoganbing17 May 2018
In this entry in the Michael Shayne series, Lloyd Nolan gets the job of escorting Mary Beth Hughes to San Francisco on the sleeper train from New York. Hughes is beautiful but most uncooperative. She's a key defense witness in a murder trial, but all the restrictions Shayne has placed on her is cramping her style. Hughes is a most sociable girl.

Also on the train is Lynn Bari an old girlfriend of Shayne's who's a Lois Lane like reporter. She's got a new fiance Don Douglas who's from San Francisco and is a rising mover and shaker there.

Whether Hughes believes it or not there are people who want her to complete the journey and will go to any lengths to see it doesn't happen. There's a nice cast of familiar character players and the trick is to see which are the good and the bad guys.

Some nice snappy patter dialog is a must for this kind of film and it has it with an actor that can deliver it. Lloyd Nolan in his long career never gave a bad performance, even if the film was a stinker he never was. He fit so well in the role of Michael Shayne.

There are also a few side plots in this B film unusual for a movie not in the A list category. This one will make you a fan of Michael Shayne and Lloyd Nolan.
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6/10
Surprising B-movie
gridoon202415 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
And I mean surprising in two different ways. Firstly, on a plot level: it seems for a long while that the action will take place on a speeding train for the entirety of the movie, until an unexpected event changes the course (no pun intended). Also, there are some people on that train who are not who they seem to be. But if you had trouble following the story in "Michael Shayne, Private Detective", don't worry, it's much easier to do that here. Secondly, it's surprising on a character level: I'm talking specifically about Mary Beth Hughes' and Louis Jean Heydt's characters, who have more depth than you'd expect for a 72-minute B-movie to achieve. Lloyd Nolan is even more comfortable in his second go-round as Michael Shayne, and Lynn Bari (with her good looks, characteristic voice, and spirited line delivery) makes a perfect screen partner for him. **1/2 out of 4.
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7/10
"My, she's a little mentally round-shouldered."
utgard1421 August 2014
Private eye Michael Shayne must escort a special witness by train. It turns out to be more trouble than he bargained for. Fun entry in the Michael Shayne series. Lloyd Nolan's great, as usual. Lynn Bari is Shayne's ex, a lady reporter trying to snoop out a story. Clichéd character, sure, but Bari makes it work. Nice support from Edward Brophy, Don Costello, and Mary Beth Hughes. Ben Carter and Mantan Moreland provide comic relief. Lots of snappy patter in this one and a nice pace. I'm a sucker for trains so having most of this movie take place on one was a plus for me. All in all, it's one of the better Michael Shayne movies I've seen. Nothing extraordinary but a good B detective flick.
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7/10
A better than average Michael Shayne mystery
planktonrules8 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I've seen several Michael Shayne films and overall I'd have to say that Lloyd Nolan did a good job of playing the detective but that the studio gave him rather feeble scripts. Fortunately, this one is a bit better and is like a lesser version of the great Noir film, THE NARROW MARGIN.

The film begins with Shayne getting ready to go on a train. At about the same time, a lady is brought aboard on a stretcher and you find out later that she's actually in disguise--with a wig and posing as a sick woman. In reality, Shayne is bringing her to San Francisco to testify in a case where an innocent man is going to jail unless she appears in court. However, at the same time, there are political forces that will do just about anything to make sure she doesn't make it.

At the same time, there are several plots and subplots. Some, such as the scum-bag who boards the train looking for the lady, work well. Others, such as the major portion of the film about a female reporter don't work as well, as they seem to deflect from the plot as well as make the film seem "cute". I think that maintaining the gritty realism (more like THE NARROW MARGIN) would have made the movie even better, but still it was exciting and well done--a better than average B-detective film.
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9/10
You won't sleep through this movie!
'Sleepers West' has a complicated pedigree. In the early '30s, pulp-magazine novelist Frederick Nebel wrote a detective story called 'Sleepers EAST'. The Fox studio bought the rights and filmed this in 1934, but the film 'Sleepers East' is spoilt by some boring romantic elements that dilute the mystery plot. In 1941, Fox remade the story ... changing the plot to make this film an appropriate entry in their 'Mike Shayne' series. They also retitled it 'Sleepers WEST'. The directional change is appropriate to a private-eye story, as westward is the most noir-ish direction: the progression towards sunset ... and death. (Compare this with Rodgers and Hart's 'All Points West', in which the main character dies at the end ... or Lucille Fletcher's radio script and Twilight Zone episode 'The Hitch-Hiker', in which Death and his victim are both heading west on the highway.)

'Sleepers West' is a nice taut little B-picture, a splendid example of those second-feature low-budgeters that Hollywood did so well in the great studio era. Even the film's title pleasingly evokes the 1940s, when sleeping-cars ('sleepers') on American railway trains were commonplace. (On a British railway, 'sleepers' are the wooden ties that hold up the rails.) Movies that take place aboard moving railway trains are always enjoyable: the characters are hurtling along at top speed even if the plot goes off the rails.

Lloyd Nolan had a mug that usually cast him as criminals, but here he's perfect as Mike Shayne, the hard-bitten yet incorruptible private eye. Shayne is escorting Helen Carlson from Denver to San Francisco, where she's to testify in court. Helen's testimony will free a man who's been falsely convicted of murder ... but her testimony will also expose a powerful corrupt politician. So, of course the train to Frisco is chock-full of passengers who want to kill Helen. As if Shayne hasn't enough troubles, there's also one of those stereotypical 1940s 'girl reporter' types (well-played by the vivacious Lynn Bari), who keeps getting in Shayne's way at inconvenient moments.

There are lots of those great supporting roles that nostalgic movie-goers expect in 1940s films like this: I especially enjoyed the great Edward Brophy and the underrated (but prolific) character actor Harry Hayden. Unfortunately, another typical trait of 1940s Hollywood movies makes an unwelcome appearance here: the gratuitous Negro stereotype. In the days of Pullman sleeping-cars, there was a well-organised union of Pullman porters: all of them African-American men. It makes perfect sense that a black actor is cast as the porter in 'Sleepers West'. Regrettably, the role is played by Ben Carter: a plump, simpering, pop-eyed, high-pitched, effeminate black man whom I always find painful to watch on screen. Ben Carter's character portrayals were consistently much more annoying (and possibly more racist) than those of the notorious Stepin Fetchit ... though never quite so annoying as those of Edgar Connor, possibly the most offensive Negro actor in the (no pun intended) dark days of Hollywood stereotypes. Couldn't the railway porter in this movie have been depicted as an ordinary human being: a black man just trying to make an honest living, like pretty much everyone else?

Despite that one cavil, I eagerly rate 'Sleepers West' 9 points out of 10. They don't make 'em like this any more!
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Pretty Good Mystery
GManfred2 August 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This is a pretty good entry in the Mike Shayne series. I say pretty good because there are a couple of better ones than this one. It starts off on good footing - a witness is traveling to a trial on a train, in disguise and in the care of Mike Shayne. Naturally, there are a few others on the train with a great deal of interest in uncovering this witness. Then follows the usual hijinks and shenanigans that take place on a train with sleeping cars; people coming in and out of compartments looking for this one and that, shady characters searching for passengers, people breaking into compartments, etc.

Several reviewers have compared this film to "The Narrow Margin", but from this point on, "Sleepers" and " Margin" differ significantly, as "Sleepers" begins to lose its luster as well as the slight amount of tension it has built up. I disagree with some reviewers that "Narrow Margin" was copied on this picture, as that movie was taut and tense right to the end, with Charles McGraw of the scowling countenance in the role played by Nolan here. "Sleepers" goes off on a tangent - the witness (Mary Beth Hughes) has fallen in love with a man who has stumbled into her compartment (Louis Jean Heydt, out of character as a good-natured slob instead of a sneak), they leave the train with the help of a passenger, and from here on the film limps to a crowd-pleasing, pablum ending so characteristic of B movies.

Lloyd Nolan is, as always, stalwart and more charismatic than at any other time in his career as Shayne, which is the main reason to watch this entertaining series. I just wished they could have come up with a better way to end matters, like "The Narrow Margin" did.
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6/10
Sleepers West
CinemaSerf6 December 2023
"Long Distance? I need to place call to the Denver Tribune... In Denver, yes..." "Shayne" (Lloyd Nolan) is escorting "Helen" (Mary Beth Hughes) on a train journey so she can give vital evidence that might acquit "Callaghan" of murder charges. Needless to say, she's a bit nervous and when she meets "Everett" (Louis Jean Heydt) and explains the purpose of their journey, he plants seeds of doubt in her mind and "Shayne" is now facing quite a task keeping her on message. Add to his woes the suspicious journalist "Kay" (Lynn Bari) who is also travelling and, well, it's all going to get a bit messy. The conclusion is all a bit rushed, but the scenes with Nolan and Bari are usually quite sparky as they spat and outmanoeuvre each other both on and off their train. Trains always make for a good conduit for crime-noirs and here, as it rattles along, we get a sense of a slightly claustrophobic menace building with other passengers equally determined that "Helen" will keep her trap shut. Permanently! It's not the most memorable of films and is just a bit on the long side, but it does move along entertainingly enough and passes the time ok.
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3/10
Annoying
writtenbymkm-583-90209721 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Spoiler Alert. I must be the only person in the world who doesn't like Lloyd Nolan. I find him intensely annoying and totally unbelievable as private detective Michael Shayne (who originally was a hard-boiled type). And in "Sleepers West," he just seems inept. A guy is on trial for his life, but he's innocent, and the real murderer is the governor's son (I think -- this was a very confusing movie). But a single witness can blow everything open. Naturally all the forces of evil will do everything to keep this witness from testifying. So what does Shayne do to protect her on a train en route to the trial? He sticks her in a compartment, says "Keep your door locked," and leaves her totally unattended as he wanders around the train and swaps sarcasms with his old flame, an eager girl reporter who wants the story. The witness has no other protection. And evidently Shayne doesn't even carry a gun. If the witness was so vital and her life so endangered, why wouldn't she have been guarded by lots of people, including a couple of heavies armed to the teeth right there in the compartment with her? I also didn't buy the witness's abrupt change of heart, from a tough alcoholic who didn't care about saving a guy's life to a girl with a heart of gold. I would've given this mess one star, but I added a couple of stars because I love trains. If you want to see a vastly superior comedy train mystery, find "Mrs. O'Malley and Mr. Malone."
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9/10
Great mystery.
wkozak22118 August 2021
This mystery is fun. It is loaded with lots of suspects. Also, some slimy characters. A bright spot is having been Ben Carter and Mantan Moreland which livens up the movie. They should have had more screen time to-gether. It is nice to see Mary Beth Hughes. She was very attractive and had natural talent.
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6/10
Decent Handling Of The Well-Worn Plot
boblipton5 January 2024
Lloyd Nolan is back as Mike Shayne, Private Detective. This time he's escorting Mary Beth Hughes from Colorado to San Francisco. She's a moderately hard-boiled showgirl, and her testimony will make all the difference in a trial. There's a wide variety of characters aboard the train, like reporter Lynn Bari, who's sometimes Nolan's fiancee, now engaged to high-powered attorney Donald Douglas, whose boss is running for governor. There's also Edward Brophy, who's supposed to be a detective, Don Costello, who looks rather suspicious, and Louis Jean Heydt, who claims to be running away from a dull life. But not everyone is who they claim. Some of them are looking for Miss Hughes, hoping to stop her from testifying.

Seems familiar? Yes, it's a remake of 1934's Sleepers East -- sounds like they didn't think too hard about the title. It's based on a story by Frederick Nebel, and the basic situation has been used many times with many variations. This one is pretty good, with Brett Halliday's character slipping right into the proceedings, thanks to Nolan's typically solid performance. There are also a large number of supporting actors that 20th Century-Fox's B division could summon forth, like Oscar O'Shea, Harry Hayden, Ferike Boros, and Mantan Moreland. Just right for a snappy second feature!
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3/10
All the usual suspects, all the racial stereotypes, all the clichéd characters.
mark.waltz14 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
While this film flies by like an express train in the night, it is filled with so many eye-rolling clichés that it just comes off as entirely unbelievable. A night train from Denver to San Francisco doesn't result in any murders, and the only real plot is if Detective Michael Shayne (Lloyd Nolan) will get an important witness (Mary Beth Hughes) to San Francisco to clear an ex-con of murder and not get killed, kidnapped or put in a coma herself. Shayne's object is to keep her sober as she is probably one of the most healthy looking alcoholics in film history. While preparing to get on the train, he runs into an old flame (Lynn Bari), a reporter who discovers his mission and schemes to get an interview with the tipsy Hughes who has made friends with a mysterious man (Louis Jean Heydt) running away from his own problems.

While the plot line that exists leaves enough tension to keep the viewer hooked, it is the execution of the dozens of characters thrown in and out of the plot that leaves something to be desired. Every cliché in the book is present, and in the case of the black porters on the train, the results are down-right mind boggling that even in 1941 such blatant racism could be so obvious. That part of the plot line surrounds porter Ben Carter (as Leander Jones, no less) who discovers thousands of dollars in Heydt's sleeping car when he accidentally knocks over his suitcase. Carter immediately cries out what he could do with that in a crap game, and regrets the fact that he was born without any larceny in his heart. The amount of the money increases as the other porters begin to spread the gossip until they are all conversing stereotypically about the cash-filled suitase. The only purpose in this is for private detective Edward Brophy to overhear, and thus throw a wrench into the growing romance of Hughes and Heydt.

While the film explodes (literally) with the inclusion of a train crashing into the cab of a stalled van, it turns totally corny with the introduction of an overly friendly European farm woman (Ferike Boros) who welcomes everybody involved in the plot into her home as if she was throwing a spontaneous hoe-down. This shows a total lack of imagination on the part of the writers, as does the subplot of the engineer speeding the train up just so his last trip before retirement will show him with a perfect record. While the comedy is amusing, the film is not played as a spoof, so the plethora of unbelievable characters and outrageous situations just may cause you to roll your eyes. In my case, I was afraid my eyes would get stuck in the back of my head if I rolled them back any further.
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8/10
No "Narrow Margin", but nonetheless...
JohnHowardReid7 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Second up in the Michael Shayne, Private Detective series, this is the one most people pick as the best: "Sleepers West" (1941).

While the action is not half as colorful as in the 1952 re-make, "The Narrow Margin", the Shayne movie does devote a large amount of running time to an intriguing sub-plot involving Louis-Jean Heydt (of all people) with noir icon, Mary Beth Hughes.

Railroad buffs will also appreciate all the express train footage and allusions which, alas, are disappointingly sidetracked when the train is delayed.

Beautifully photographed by Peverell Marley (who seems at pains to show us how small in stature and long in nose Mr. Nolan actually is), this picture is also a must for Lynn Bari fans. She has never looked more attractive.
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A Lesser Shayne
dougdoepke9 April 2013
In terms of suspense and action, this is one of the weaker entries in the Shayne series. Most of the storyline is confined to a train ride carrying a secret witness to a west coast trial, who Shayne is supposed to protect from those who don't want her to appear. Unfortunately, not much use is made of the confined conditions to build suspense. Then too, we know early on the identity of the witness and who's on board to silence her, so there's not much mystery, either.

Fortunately, there is a sparkling cast, led by the breezy Nolan, along with a brassy Hughes and a bumptious Bari. In fact, Bari and Hughes are natural personality rivals, setting off some delicious undercurrents. Then there's an unheralded threesome of black porters, who contribute humorously to the overall lightweight mood. Look also for Louis Jean Heydt, a familiar face from that era, who does well with a larger than usual role. All in all, it's an entertaining 70-minutes, but not up to the series' trademark mix of suspense plus humor.
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5/10
I'm in the dry goods business
kapelusznik1816 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
****SPOILERS****Michael Shayne, Lloyd Nolan, got his hands full in delivering a very important witness to exonerate someone, Joe Callahan, that Shayne when he was a cop sent up the river for four years for robbery. The witness Helen Carlson, Mary Beth Hughes, is whisked literally under cover on the Denver to San Francisco train to get her to the court, not church, on time to testify in Callahan's defense. It's there where the trouble begins in that in exonerating Callahan would implicate the Governor of the state of California Clebe Wentworth in framing Calllahan for the murder that the Gov's son Larry committed! The trouble in all this is that the star witness Helen Carlson is not that dependable in testifying in that she's a cold stone drunk and on top of all that the Governor's goons are out to whack her before she makes it to SF to testify! And it's poor Michael Shayne's job to make sure that she get there alive!

We also have Shayne's pesky ex-girlfriend reporter Kay Bently, Lynn Bari, who's not only engaged-do you notice that back in those days in the movies that more women are engaged then married- to the Gov's right hand man Tom Linscott, Donald Douglas, whom Shayne takes an immediate dislike of! What comes from right out of the blue is Everette Jason, Louis Jean Heydt,who's escaping from his boring and secure life as a dry goods salesman with his life savings, $10,000,00, for a much better life of thrills and excitement as a big game hunter in South America. It's later that Jason hooks up with Helen Carlson and plans to check out of the country and elope to South America! Thus leaving both Michael Shayne and the person she's to testify for both out in the cold and strapped into the San Quentin gas chamber.

***SPOILERS***Llyod Nolan looking as if he suffering from a severe case of sleep deprivation sleepwalks through the entire movie in trying to get Helen to testify as well as keeping her from getting drunk as well as killed at the same time. Kay Bently does her best to screw things up for Shayne in being angry at him for keeping the big story of Helen testifying from her not realizing that a man's-Callahan- life is at stake and may well end up losing it because of her foolish actions. Much like the far better movie "The Narrow Margin" released ten years later the film is saved by the comedy relief of Pullman Porter Ben Carter who discovers Jason's $10,000.00 and thinks he embezzled it and keeps upping the amount in how much it is, from $10,000.00 to a half a million, that throws everything else in the movie completely out of whack!
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4/10
Unmysterious 'mystery' put me to sleep in the West
donofthedial30 November 2008
I just saw SLEEPERS WEST and it has little or no relation to a 'good film'. It's hilariously all over the map (haha) with completely improbable characters dropping in. The "farm woman" was a great example of that.

There are long stretches of the short film where the actors are pretty much on their own simply filling the film out while trying to be charming. The Louis Jean Heydt and Mary Beth Hughes characters just ramble their sad stories and histories to each other for no real reason. Nolan and Bari stay in there and keep throwing punches from beginning to end. At least Bari and Hughes are pretty. The train setting is nice. Some of the other MS films have snappy cars. I think I saw a LaSalle in MS-PD.

I ID'd 3 of the black actors, Ben, Mantan and Snowflake. They all were in so many films. And there was George Chandler as the rube with the car. He was head of the SAG once.

Bari and Hughes were in ORCHESTRA WIVES together.

That was one weird close up of LJH looking at MBH at one point.

Really not much one can say. Nice, crisp B&W! :) Anyway, it is pointless to attack and impossible to defend these paper-thin 'mysteries'. They are very disposable and if they had never been filmed, the world would be pretty much the same.
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5/10
A lobotomized Shayne?
RemiFasolati-881-77188229 December 2013
SLEEPERS WEST (1941) Lloyd Nolan Nolan (Mike Shayne) is transporting star witness on a train. So much of the movie takes place aboard a train. Comforting train noises all the way along, the clickety-clack of the rails.

Quite interesting and lots of unusual twists but* most of them lacking credibility.

One thing that bothered me was this thing they have in the 40's about how wily and sneaky women are, even the protagonists. A reporter, Shayne's old flame, lies often even when there was no reason to. And would make a sneaky face that only we, the viewers, could see.

Mike Shayne was totally ineffective. His job was to get the witness to trial yet he stuck her in a berth and never stayed with her. Instead he roams around the train, aimlessly, uttering one-word remarks to other characters. Mostly he just stared at his hands or his lap.

I like the genre but was very impatient with the plodding pace.

And I'm increasingly disappointed with the portrayal of women in that decade being duplistic and deceitful.
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