The Mystery Man (1935) & The Racketeer (1929) - Classic Crime Drama Double Feature DVD | Vintage Gangster Films Collection | Perfect for Movie Nights & Classic Film Enthusiasts
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DESCRIPTION
The Mystery Man (1935, B&W, 101 minutes): Robert Armstrong is fast-talking reporter Larry Doyle. Quitting his star position at a Chicago paper and celebrating with an all-night bender, Doyle wakes up to find himself in St. Louis! Taking all in stride and dispensing wise cracks like bullets, Doyle quickly becomes entangled with Anne (Maxine Doyle) and a mysterious killer terrorizing the city known only as "The Eel." After a pistol owned by Doyle falls into the hands of The Eel and is used in the latest murder spree, Doyle must crack the case before the St. Louis police arrest the wrong man! Starring Robert Armstrong and Maxine Doyle; Directed by Ray McCarey.The Racketeer (1929, B&W, 65 minutes): Though he rules New York City with an iron fist, well-heeled gangster Mahlon Keane has a heart of gold. At a charity benefit he meets and rescues fallen woman Rhoda (Carole Lombard). Smitten with her beauty, Keane later tracks Rhoda down and discovers that she is desperately trying to support her alcoholic ex-husband and his failing music career. Keane lets his heart get in the way of his business as he agrees to help her, and ends up fighting for his life! Starring Robert Armstrong, Carole Lombard; Directed by Howard Higgin.
REVIEWS
****** - Verified Buyer
4.5
This 'Crime and Punishment' double feature by Alpha Home Entertainment-- both films starring 1930s/40s Hollywood workhorse Robert Armstrong ('The Most Dangerous Game,' 'King Kong,' 'G-Men')-- offers a couple poverty-row artifacts of varying entertainment value and print quality. Top-billed we have Monogram Pictures' 'The Mystery Man' (1935), a cute but routine caper-comedy involving a newspaperman (Armstrong), a sassy dame (Maxine Doyle), a killer and a frame-up, and injected with ample doses of boozing and rapid-fire wisecracks. Enjoyably corny. 2 1/2 stars. Next, 'The Racketeer' (Pathe, 1929), a very early talkie, is less a gangster picture as its title suggests and more along the lines of a social drama with Armstrong and an 'undiscovered' Carole Lombard giving strong performances amidst a fairly banal story. 3-minus stars. As to the integrity of the transfers, TMM fares better than TR, with clearer image and sound, though there is plenty of damage to the source print evident and several annoying instances of hissing and purring throughout, resulting in muddied dialogue. TR is almost unwatchable by comparison (the best copy I've come across is from Platinum Disc's 'Mobster Movies' collection). Also note that both Amazon's and Alpha's specs are incorrect regarding running time: TR clocks in at 65 minutes and TMM at 60 (Alpha states 101) for a package total of 125 (Amazon states 90). Content rates somewhere south of 3 stars combined; presentation drags it closer to 2.
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