Confidential

1935
Confidential
5.3| 1h5m| en| More Info
Released: 16 October 1935 Released
Producted By: Mascot Pictures
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

A Treasury agent gains the trust of a mob gunman while working under cover to smash a crime syndicate.

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joe-pearce-1 Donald Cook was a fairly important Broadway actor for a long time, but I could never see him as a lead in films, and he didn't play all that many of them. This is one of those few, however, and indeed he is very good in it; he SOUNDS like a lead, even if he doesn't look like one. And he delivers some very smart repartee in his gangster guise with great vocal dexterity and control - maybe a benefit of his stage acting technique. Anyway, although he is most remembered as James Cagney's honest brother in PUBLIC ENEMY, where his somewhat hangdog expression is appropriate, this would be a far better performance to remember him by. But Evalyn Knapp, an actress for whom I had similarly dim expectations based on perhaps two dozen other films I've seen her in, is really quite perfect in an unusual-for-her role as a fast-talking, quick-witted, somewhat in-the-dark secretary for a numbers racket, and her repartee with Cook, Warren Hymer, Theodore Von Eltz and J. Carrol Naish may be the best thing in the film; every scene she's in perks up simply because of her. Part of this is certainly due to the crack comedic dialog, which has no counterpart in the more dramatic scenes of the film, but even crack comedic dialog is useless if it isn't well-delivered, and Knapp and Cook are almost brilliant in that respect. Hymer is an excellent dimwit (he always was), and Naish, perhaps our greatest non-star character actor of the period (and certainly the most versatile of the entire Hollywood-based talking picture era) is ideal as killer Lefty Tate. As good as are the others, Naish on the screen simply displays an acting dimension quite beyond the others' reach, even as a fairly standard character in this kind of little 'B' crime film. The film is very fast-moving, which may be a detriment in the end, because after bouncing around several facets of the story line, we are suddenly thrust into about a five- or six-minute ending that almost shocks in its ability to tie up so many disparate threads without much regard for continuity. It's like watching CITIZEN KANE with its second hour telescoped into a six-minute conclusion. Despite this, though, it is a very enjoyable film (mostly for the performances) and a most satisfactory way to experience 67 minutes of good "B" film-making.Oh yes, absolutely the worst gaffe I have ever seen in film credits comes at the beginning of CONFIDENTIAL. I've seen actors' names misspelled, or listed with the wrong character being played, but this is one of those films that uses the excellent practice of showing each of the star actors with a four- or five-second snippet from the ensuing film and with their names printed at the bottom of the screen for identification purposes. Well, in this one, we see the first-billed Donald Cook on the screen and in big letters at the bottom of the screen we see "Donald Woods"!!! I have to assume that Donald Cook never saw the completed film or he surely would have raised holy hell to get that corrected.
Leofwine_draca CONFIDENTIAL is a cheap crime thriller charting the efforts of a number of Federal agents to bring down gangsters running a numbers game. It starts off in an electrifying way with a montage of scenes showing the crooks taking a hold in the city before introducing the protagonists, two-fisted heroes willing to put their lives on the line to take it to the enemy.The main plot sees an agent going undercover with the criminal gang. Once there he gathers evidence to bring the villains to justice, while at the same time taking time out to romance the pretty Evalyn Knapp. Inevitably he risks discovery at the hands of sinister 'Lefty' Tate, played with relish by popular actor J. Carrol Naish.Although Donald Cook makes for a bit of a stolid hero, CONFIDENTIAL is quite a good little film. With a running time of 65 minutes it moves smoothly from beginning to end with few slow spots, and saves all the action for the climax. The incidents littering the plot are rather predictable for the modern viewer, but nonetheless the film holds your attention despite the low budget. Warren Hymer's comic turn as the goofy 'Midget' is the highlight.
mikey-242-435767 This was probably a B picture when it came out. It is your standard cops and robbers flick with average acting, no big names and a very low budget. You can't see any walls moving in the print I watched but I bet you could on a better print! Not much happens. The feds infiltrate the mob and take them down. And our hero (Elliott) gets the girl in the closing act.There is some perfunctory startup footage about how the mob is going to take over everything that happens in the 2 Billion dollar gambling racket in their area (the U.S.?) and then the pedestrian action starts. There are a few killings and little else. It works through just like you would predict. All the bad guys get arrested and the good guys come out ahead including the top good guy ignoring that his love interest is up to her eyeballs in the illegal operation. But he is in love with her so he can ignore it and still feel good about himself. The film ends before we find out how he manages this mental feat.Not long. Not great. Not horrible. Pop the popcorn and start with this one then go on to something good. It is not a waste. Just like a long cartoon before the REAL movie starts...