It doesn't appear in my viewing. You must have had the cc, closed caption, button on. It is in the lower right of the video task bar. It is nearly available on all youtube vids. From 2 years ago you've probably already figured it out.
@adventistanalyzer1056 Not any. Some don't have it available. The best part, in my opinion, is the auto translator, too. It opened the door for millions of good, modern & old gems in other languages. I love vintage movies. To me, they're like works of art. The writing, the acting, the plots, the costumes, everything is top notch (in most cases there is). Thank you, guys! ❤
Boetticher, better known as a director of Westerns, pulls off a great comic thriller here, with Chester Morris in good form, Janis Carter a stunning beauty and cracking action throughout. Thanks for sharing
The caption option is great! But the best part, in my opinion, is the auto translator, too. It opened the door for millions of good, modern & old gems in other languages. I love vintage movies. To me, they're like works of art. The writing, the acting, the plots, the costumes, everything is top notch (in most cases there is). Thank you, guys! ❤
@@misskim2058 Well Miss Kim I do have to admit Dorothy was one cute lady! I think back in the day I would of had a serious crush on her! However back in those times an actress or actor had to be better than most of todays actors because they had to act there were not these crazy special affects that cost millions of dollars. Each actor or actress had to act out a believable story!
One Mysterious Night, released USA 21 October 1944. Chester Morris as Horatio 'Boston Blackie' Black; Janis Carter as Dorothy Anderson; William Wright as Paul Martens; Richard Lane as Inspector Farraday; George E. Stone as The Runt; Robert B. Williams (as Robert Williams) as Matt Healy; Mark Roberts (as Robert E. Scott) as George Daley; Ed Allen, Policeman; James Blaine, Cop (unconfirmed); Kenneth Brown, Boy; Early Cantrell as Margaret Dean - Switchboard Operator; Joseph Crehan as Jumbo Madigan; Lew Davis, Exhibit Attendee; Edythe Elliott, Mother; Almeda Fowler, Bit Role; Jack Gardner as Frank-Reporter; Fred Graff, Reporter; Harrison Greene as Arthur Manleder; Fred Howard, Reporter; Dick Jensen, Policeman; Henry Jordan, Reporter; Edward Keane as Police Commissioner Howard; Tom Kingston, News Photographer; Lyle Latell as Detective Sergeant Matthews; Billy Lenhart, Boy; Anne Loos, Newsstand Clerk; George Magrill, Police Guard; Cy Malis, Policeman; Dorothy Malone as Eileen Daley; George McKay as Police Sergeant McNulty; Pat O'Malley, Police Sergeant; Constance Purdy, Woman in Daley's Office; Ben Taggart, Traffic Cop; John Tyrrell as Austin; Minerva Urecal as Miss Wilkinson; Robert Walker, Man in Office with Mathews; Cecil Weston, Mother.
@@robertcooke1774 70 years old here, Ha. Seems like you might have an appreciation for some of the best cinema. And with good taste for being a youngster, haha! There's so many great oldies but goodies out here on the internet today! Enjoy them all.
The "Blackie" movies are always special for me because of Richard "Dick" Lane who played Inspector Farraday. As a small child in the late 1940s/very early 1950s my maternal grandmother would sneak me off to the televised "rasslin'" matches at the old Long Beach Municipal Auditorium against my parents' wishes. It was there Dick Lane provided the blow-by-blow narrative for the ring action. I remember him vividly up in the press box with his big earphones shouting into his microphone, "whoa Nelly", every time the "rasslers" staged a big move. 'Fond memories!
Inspector Farrady: “We need to get in there” Hotel clerk: “Over my dead body” police Sargent: “don’t be so modest lady you still got some life left in you.” What satire🤭😂🤣😂🤣Great gem-thank you for uploading ❣️
There are some very attractive women in this rather routine movie. Boston Blackie, which you can still hear on radio classics programs, seems to have been a pretty good and entertaining show from the episodes I've heard. The movies seem to be relatively decent. Somebody certainly did a good job in finding attractive actresses to cast. In Dorothy Malone's case they discovered a future major star. Thanks for uploading this.
Watched the movie all way threw one somebody needs to slap that woman reporter she is as sorry as the bad guys stealing and taking pictures of that poor man🤬
Good production values for a B-type crime story of WWII years. The characters were polished, the plot was typical copy of comedy-style (Back and forth as "zany" style comedies), but the damsel was never in distress. There were 'teen's style scenarios (the lady protecting the entrance to the women's hotel entrance ( "...never in a thousand years...), the commissioner's hat smashing skits, and Chester Morris' impersonations gave him much enjoyment. It was planned entertainment not requiring the audience to think. A morale riser movie; and that was what was needed after 4 years of war.
Dorothy Malone was a natural beauty and a very good actress. Very engaging movie for a B. I wish Chester Morris had a A picture career. He was side lined when Clark Gable came around.
Eileen was not credited in IMDB n the film was omitted from Halliwell's Film Guide, 2nd edition, but I found the name of the actress in a Boston Blackie site: the lovely Dorothy Malone, who was married to Jacques Bergerac, who I just saw in Fear No More, n she was in TV's Peyton Place in the '60s.
@@FlipDahlenburg, That’s Nancy Guild, according to the IMDB page for that movie. I checked Ms. Malone’s cv first, and didn’t see any credit for that movie.
Harry Cohn, the head of Columbia Pictures, was happy when his little studio started competing with bigger studios like MGM and Fox, but he said his heart was in those "lousy little Bs" the studio churned out. And, a movie like this one was one such example. They cost next to nthing to make, were barely past 60 minuites and they cmpetently filled the bottom half of a double bill at the neighborhood theater.And, they servedd aas a training ground for a then-young director like Oscar "Budd" Boettecher. Solid and entertaining.
I like to freeze old movies on UA-cam to read the newspaper front page other than the headlines you are meant to focus on. Even though this was set during the war none of the front pages had any war news; really escapist fare here!
I really liked it when, starting at about 19:58, Inspector Faraday looks right at the camera and says..."No, no, not in a million years ! I can see the headlines now: BLACKIE ESCAPES FARADAY AFTER THREE HOURS IN JAIL." And the next scene shows the headline...LOL..! Faraday looking right at the camera was a hoot..!!
I like all these black and white oldies with Chester morris in the roll of Blackie but I have a question ....how come the girl reporter was always on hand for every crime committed ????
great to see the old days when the press was right there to record things as they happened (instead of stuck behind a desk rewriting other news reports)
Great movie however in reality diamonds are not rare nor are they actually valuable. It is merely the control by one company that causes them to be expensive.
They are relatively rare, especially colorless and flawless ones. Also certain vivid colors are rare. They would be less expensive without the diamond cartels and clever marketing. Value lies in people's perceptions of their wants and needs. Economics 1. Something is worth what people will pay for it. If there's an abundance of food steaks are cheap. If there's a famine gold and diamonds won't get you a loaf of bread.
natural pink diamonds are quite rare comparitively speaking. Now they have the technology to create diamonds artificially, so yes the prices of these will be much lower than natural or carbon, diamonds.
I am curious, what does 'VO' stand for? (I only know it to mean "Voice Over", not 'Director'.) ?Just curious - and, Thanks Very Much for posting these old gems with great film & sound quality, uninterrupted by ads/hyper-diatribes (which break up the flow of the story) - So Appreciated!!
I don’t understand why the always lovely Dorothy Malone doesn’t appear in the credits, given that she has a significant part, albeit not a major part. I’ll take Dorothy over Janis any day. 😊
How is it possible that Dorothy Malone could have such a biggish supporting role, and go Uncredited in the Opening Cast and still Nothing at the Closing...?
Another great classic. Now why did her crooked brother hide that rock in her extra purse? That's stupid. A woman can switch purses 5 times in one day and he thought there was no chance she'd use it? Okay then.
W 1944 roku POLACY walczyli z hitlerowskim wrogiem wykrwawiając się, podczas gdy Ameryka bawiła się świetnie In 1944, the POLES fought the Nazi enemy bleeding out while America had a great time
at 55:40 Inspector Faraday calls Mathews and orders his car and a squad of men except for one thing, he was holding the Phone upside down, he was speaking into the ear piece, the Phone cord could easily be seen coming out of the speaker that was at his ear🤣🤣🤣🤣
Perfect timing in every scene! Thank you!
Superb upload, no stupid fake AI colour, full credits, excellent Quality and most importantly, NO ADS. big well done uploader, new subscriber
My hearing isn't the best - so I am so grateful for subtitles added to these old movie. Thank you to whoever is responsible
It doesn't appear in my viewing. You must have had the cc, closed caption, button on. It is in the lower right of the video task bar. It is nearly available on all youtube vids. From 2 years ago you've probably already figured it out.
Classic Film!
you can always turn on the CC on any UA-cam video.
@adventistanalyzer1056 Not any. Some don't have it available. The best part, in my opinion, is the auto translator, too. It opened the door for millions of good, modern & old gems in other languages. I love vintage movies. To me, they're like works of art. The writing, the acting, the plots, the costumes, everything is top notch (in most cases there is). Thank you, guys! ❤
Me too.
TY for a great Boston Blackie movie, great series of movies with interesting plots & characters. This one centers around a blue diamond.👍😊
thanks for that, I will follow.
Do so enjoy the radio shows also
Boetticher, better known as a director of Westerns, pulls off a great comic thriller here, with Chester Morris in good form, Janis Carter a stunning beauty and cracking action throughout. Thanks for sharing
Thanks for the , I will follow it up.
Hi Nicolas. Thanks so much for the upload. Really enjoyed it. Nothing Like The Classic Old Black And White Movies. 🤗⚘🤗⚘🤗⚘🤗⚘
Louise Scanlon, Actually, I prefer the purple and white ones.
CLASSIC FILMS!
Good one! And they surely knew to write cool one liners back then.
Lôve these old forties movies. Such classics. Thank you 🙏 ❤very much appreciated.
Thanks for sharing this blzck n white classic movie which has never passes till the end of time !!!! 😂😂😂😂😂🎉🎉🎉🎉
The caption option is great! But the best part, in my opinion, is the auto translator, too. It opened the door for millions of good, modern & old gems in other languages. I love vintage movies. To me, they're like works of art. The writing, the acting, the plots, the costumes, everything is top notch (in most cases there is). Thank you, guys! ❤
Boston Blackie, Bulldog Drummond, The Lone Wolf and Philo Vance - the most fun! Thanks for sharing this excellent quality version.
Dorothy Malone was the true star of One Mysterious Night! She had a beauty that shone brighter than most of the actresses of her time!
Nah. You just have a crush.
@@misskim2058 Well Miss Kim I do have to admit Dorothy was one cute lady! I think back in the day I would of had a serious crush on her! However back in those times an actress or actor had to be better than most of todays actors because they had to act there were not these crazy special affects that cost millions of dollars. Each actor or actress had to act out a believable story!
Indubidubly 🙂
Nah. You just have a crush on her -- a serious crush!
One Mysterious Night, released USA 21 October 1944. Chester Morris as Horatio 'Boston Blackie' Black; Janis Carter as Dorothy Anderson; William Wright as Paul Martens; Richard Lane as Inspector Farraday; George E. Stone as The Runt; Robert B. Williams (as Robert Williams) as Matt Healy; Mark Roberts (as Robert E. Scott) as George Daley; Ed Allen, Policeman; James Blaine, Cop (unconfirmed); Kenneth Brown, Boy; Early Cantrell as Margaret Dean - Switchboard Operator; Joseph Crehan as Jumbo Madigan; Lew Davis, Exhibit Attendee; Edythe Elliott, Mother; Almeda Fowler, Bit Role; Jack Gardner as Frank-Reporter; Fred Graff, Reporter; Harrison Greene as Arthur Manleder; Fred Howard, Reporter; Dick Jensen, Policeman; Henry Jordan, Reporter; Edward Keane as Police Commissioner Howard; Tom Kingston, News Photographer; Lyle Latell as Detective Sergeant Matthews; Billy Lenhart, Boy; Anne Loos, Newsstand Clerk; George Magrill, Police Guard; Cy Malis, Policeman; Dorothy Malone as Eileen Daley; George McKay as Police Sergeant McNulty; Pat O'Malley, Police Sergeant; Constance Purdy, Woman in Daley's Office; Ben Taggart, Traffic Cop; John Tyrrell as Austin; Minerva Urecal as Miss Wilkinson; Robert Walker, Man in Office with Mathews; Cecil Weston, Mother.
Amazin’.
Eyes peeled for a young Dorothy Malone!
Thank you! 🌹
@@stevef9530 20 years old here
@@robertcooke1774 70 years old here, Ha.
Seems like you might have an appreciation for some of the best cinema. And with good taste for being a youngster, haha! There's so many great oldies but goodies out here on the internet today! Enjoy them all.
Entertaining. Love the gags and wisecracks! Good script and cast!
I love the hats and fashion
Love these "Oldies, but Goodies".😊
Love these CLASSICS!
I really enjoyed this movie. Thanks so much for downloading and sharing it on here 😊. I deeply appreciate your work and time put into it
Another gem from Sir Bud Boetticher!
Thanks for Sharing from Betty.. London UK
Thanks for the crisp picture !!!
Nice fast-paced film. Janis Carter was a stunning beauty!
Awesome print, thanks.
The "Blackie" movies are always special for me because of Richard "Dick" Lane who played Inspector Farraday. As a small child in the late 1940s/very early 1950s my maternal grandmother would sneak me off to the televised "rasslin'" matches at the old Long Beach Municipal Auditorium against my parents' wishes. It was there Dick Lane provided the blow-by-blow narrative for the ring action. I remember him vividly up in the press box with his big earphones shouting into his microphone, "whoa Nelly", every time the "rasslers" staged a big move. 'Fond memories!
"Whoa, Nellie!"
Now that's some history you got to see and experience !
That’s a lovely memory! Thanks for sharing it! 😊💕
Thanks for sharing those memories!
Thanks for sharing that😃😍
I didn't know this was going to be a comedy
Janis Carter was absolutely GORGEOUS!!!!!!
Inspector Farrady: “We need to get in there”
Hotel clerk: “Over my dead body”
police Sargent: “don’t be so modest lady you still got some life left in you.” What satire🤭😂🤣😂🤣Great gem-thank you for uploading ❣️
Not only was this fun to watch the dialogue was hilarious!
Ohhhh! Janis Carter and Dot Malone in the same movie 😍🥰💋♥️
There are some very attractive women in this rather routine movie. Boston Blackie, which you can still hear on radio classics programs, seems to have been a pretty good and entertaining show from the episodes I've heard. The movies seem to be relatively decent. Somebody certainly did a good job in finding attractive actresses to cast. In Dorothy Malone's case they discovered a future major star. Thanks for uploading this.
Watched the movie all way threw one somebody needs to slap that woman reporter she is as sorry as the bad guys stealing and taking pictures of that poor man🤬
Good production values for a B-type crime story of WWII years. The characters were polished, the plot was typical copy of comedy-style (Back and forth as "zany" style comedies), but the damsel was never in distress. There were 'teen's style scenarios (the lady protecting the entrance to the women's hotel entrance ( "...never in a thousand years...), the commissioner's hat smashing skits, and Chester Morris' impersonations gave him much enjoyment. It was planned entertainment not requiring the audience to think. A morale riser movie; and that was what was needed after 4 years of war.
Yeah but I was rooting for the gum chewing robber and his sister, who disappeared halfway in. The other crooks were dullards.
It did require them to think bcz they were trying to figure out who did it n then wondering how it would all end.
Thank you so much for uploading. Very enjoyable! 👏👏
Dorthor malone was a fabulous actress loved her in Peyton Place❤
Nice revisit, thank you.
My,that actor was nice looking man🤗
Fascinating. Boetticher's debut film. Of course he directed many outstanding westerns later in his career.
Those old are priceless treasures ❤.!
Charmingly played. Thanks for uploading.
"Over my dead body." "Don't worry, lady; you've still got a lot of life in you."
We need more such movies, thank you! Ron PTL USA
Good movie thank you
I love the fresh, bright and crisp picture quality of 40s'' movies. Wven 50s and 60 didnt match them.
Cool movie Nicolas,...😃guys played good for shop window models,...👍❤.
ThankYou,...you are welcome.
Thanks again to whomever.
Cute movie! Thank you 🌹
great little movie. I loved the quirky humour as well.
No ads.
They must have been removed, because I didn't see any.🦤
Great show, thanks!
My mother was once a switchboard operator, damn I guess that reveals my age
My mom had a coin purse just like the one BB pulled out at 12:28. Nice touch.
Dorothy Malone was a natural beauty and a very good actress. Very engaging movie for a B. I wish Chester Morris had a A picture career. He was side lined when Clark Gable came around.
Best Chester Morris movie ever
Shoved the whole pack of gum in ! Nice start Bailey.
Eileen was not credited in IMDB n the film was omitted from Halliwell's Film Guide, 2nd edition, but I found the name of the actress in a Boston Blackie site: the lovely Dorothy Malone, who was married to Jacques Bergerac, who I just saw in Fear No More, n she was in TV's Peyton Place in the '60s.
She's beautiful, and I believe she was in the movie 'The Brasher Doubloon', starring, I believe, George Montgomery.
@@FlipDahlenburg,
That’s Nancy Guild, according to the IMDB page for that movie. I checked Ms. Malone’s cv first, and didn’t see any credit for that movie.
Dorothy Malone in a small role but never small.
Harry Cohn, the head of Columbia Pictures, was happy when his little studio started competing with bigger studios like MGM and Fox, but he said his heart was in those "lousy little Bs" the studio churned out. And, a movie like this one was one such example. They cost next to nthing to make, were barely past 60 minuites and they cmpetently filled the bottom half of a double bill at the neighborhood theater.And, they servedd aas a training ground for a then-young director like Oscar "Budd" Boettecher. Solid and entertaining.
Great print 😊
Nice to see this again
"'Wish I had a bushy ol' mustache, the Jimmy Buffet kind..."
I like to freeze old movies on UA-cam to read the newspaper front page other than the headlines you are meant to focus on. Even though this was set during the war none of the front pages had any war news; really escapist fare here!
I do that, also. We've got issues, and I don't mean magazines😄😉
A quick synopsis would be appreciated!
I really liked it when, starting at about 19:58, Inspector Faraday looks right at the camera and says..."No, no, not in a million years ! I can see the headlines now: BLACKIE ESCAPES FARADAY AFTER THREE HOURS IN JAIL." And the next scene shows the headline...LOL..! Faraday looking right at the camera was a hoot..!!
One of the better BB.
I like all these black and white oldies with Chester morris in the roll of Blackie but I have a question ....how come the girl reporter was always on hand for every crime committed ????
Is Inspector Farraday in the Why-I-Oughta Hall-of-Fame?
I like the part where the spaceship came down and flew away with the woman
55.38 he's got the phone upside down.
Hahaha, yes indeed, very funny. Good observation Garden Gnome.
Dorothy Malone was a beauty!
great to see the old days when the press was right there to record things as they happened (instead of stuck behind a desk rewriting other news reports)
other people's *rehashed* news reports, that is !
@@pipfox7834 rehashed Tweets done by the woke minority
You get that it's fiction? Yes?
sorry hahaha I fell asleep .....
3:00 in how many 3 Stooges shorts was this interior set used ??
°
I didn't know that Boston Blackie was a comedian. It was mildly amusing.
6:13 that's I Fleeceum's office !!!
I always wondered why he was called Blackie. In the original stories his name is Horation Black.
At 13:40. isn't the second switchboard operator Noel Neill? She doesn't appear in the credits, but that really looks like her.
Looks a bit like her, nice face.
@@FlipDahlenburg She may have also had a small part in 'The Falcon In Hollywood', 1944, as a bicycle messenger girl on a movie studio complex.
Great movie however in reality diamonds are not rare nor are they actually valuable. It is merely the control by one company that causes them to be expensive.
They are relatively rare, especially colorless and flawless ones. Also certain vivid colors are rare. They would be less expensive without the diamond cartels and clever marketing. Value lies in people's perceptions of their wants and needs. Economics 1. Something is worth what people will pay for it. If there's an abundance of food steaks are cheap. If there's a famine gold and diamonds won't get you a loaf of bread.
DeBeers.. 😁👍👍
Depends on who you give it too.
BS!!! just ask the queen.
natural pink diamonds are quite rare comparitively speaking. Now they have the technology to create diamonds artificially, so yes the prices of these will be much lower than natural or carbon, diamonds.
Anotther good one, Just for change 👋👋👋👋
Some cute '40s dames in this flick!
can you add all the boston blackie films
I am curious, what does 'VO' stand for? (I only know it to mean "Voice Over", not 'Director'.) ?Just curious - and, Thanks Very Much for posting these old gems with great film & sound quality, uninterrupted by ads/hyper-diatribes (which break up the flow of the story) - So Appreciated!!
45:43 and 45:52 KMD - Garbage Day #3 sample. Subroc produced it. RIP SUBROC & ZEV LOVE X
No boys would fit for a pin wheel today and the reporter back then had no cameras and no mike's. How times change.
They should say a comedy movie
55:40. The Inspector is holding the phone upside down.
Heehee can ya imagine if street signs really worked like weather vanes 😂😂😂😂
At 5:41 the police sergeant is holding the receiver upside down.
I don’t understand why the always lovely Dorothy Malone doesn’t appear in the credits, given that she has a significant part, albeit not a major part. I’ll take Dorothy over Janis any day. 😊
Because this was extremely early in her career, and was just a bit part. RKO would later drop her option.
@@templedrake6890 This was a Columbia movie.
@@williamsnyder5616 Your point?
I knew this was going to be a good movie when I saw that it was approved with certificate #10233.🙄
Dimonds are just Rocks!! I have enuff , in my head not to care 😆😅🤣
고전찬미 감사합니다
Absolutely beautiful women from the 1950’s . Nothing worse than a comedy that’s more stupid than funny.
Yes
Ah. The old 'Pinwheel Ploy'!
"Ta-Tah!" @17:41 🤣
Were all old movies only an hour long? Or perhaps just B movies?
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
What this movie is about?
The lovely Janis Carter was terrific in another film with Glenn Ford.
How is it possible that Dorothy Malone could have such a biggish supporting role, and go Uncredited in the Opening Cast and still Nothing at the Closing...?
Another great classic. Now why did her crooked brother hide that rock in her extra purse? That's stupid. A woman can switch purses 5 times in one day and he thought there was no chance she'd use it? Okay then.
W 1944 roku POLACY walczyli z hitlerowskim wrogiem wykrwawiając się, podczas gdy Ameryka bawiła się świetnie In 1944, the POLES fought the Nazi enemy bleeding out while America had a great time
at 55:40 Inspector Faraday calls Mathews and orders his car and a squad of men except for one thing, he was holding the Phone upside down, he was speaking into the ear piece, the Phone cord could easily be seen coming out of the speaker that was at his ear🤣🤣🤣🤣
👍😊