Murder Is News (1937) Poster

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5/10
Middling Mystery
bill-barstad25 November 2010
Reporter solves murder! Yeah, it's another one of those.

Unlikable, rich, businessman Edgar Drake is murdered at his townhouse the night his wife, who plans to divorce him and marry Drake's high-powered lawyer, is to meet there with her son, who is worried what Drake might do now that her plans were just aired on a radio program.

I picked my suspect, stuck with him, and I was right. It's not a hard one to solve, though. The third act is pretty much standard fare with all the suspects gathered together by the reporter. A series of plot conveniences, clumsily scripted, are then used to hold it together and make it work. Production values aren't high. The story moves along briskly. The dialog isn't as bright as it is in other movies of this type like 'A Shriek in the Night' or 'Murder by Invitation', but I was never bored. The acting is mostly good, aside from Iris Meredith who is sometimes laughably bad.

John Hamilton, who plays the lawyer in the love triangle, is the Daily Planet reporter's chief suspect. Later in life Hamilton would play Perry White, the editor of another newspaper called the Daily Planet, in the 'Adventures of Superman' TV series.

I watched a copy I downloaded from The Internet Archive. It was of decent quality.
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7/10
Much like the American version but with mostly actors you've probably never seen before.
planktonrules7 February 2021
"Murder Is News" is a Canadian-made movie that pretty much looks, sounds and plays like its American version. According to the YouTube host of Hastings Mystery Theater, this film was made in Canada in order to fulfill a British law mandating that a certain percentage of movies shown in the British Commonwealth be domestically produced. But unlike many of such films made in the UK itself, "Murder is News" is clearly intended to look like the Hollywood version. And, overall, I think they did an excellent job of doing this and fulfilling the Commonwealth quota at the same time!

Like so many B-mysteries from the States, this one stars a plucky reporter. Unlike some films, however, he is NOT working completely on his own and the police are his friends. Too often, in such movies the police are bumbling idiots who cannot solve anything...and the smarty pants newsman does it for them. Here, the police simply don't have the authority to do more and they encourage Jerry to investigate as they stand by in case there is trouble.

When the story begins, Jerry goes to see Edgar Drake. Drake's high profile divorce is apparently big news and he promises to give Jerry a big story. But when he arrives at the meeting place, he finds that Drake is dead....and soon someone bonks him on the head and the body disappears. The police also soon arrive, as they received a similar call...but there just isn't much to go on, so Jerry is encouraged to investigate.

The film is an exciting and well made B. And, while I've seen at least a hundred similar movies, this one is a tad better because most of the characters seem less like obvious caricatures. Well made and worth seeing.
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6/10
An efficient time-filler!
JohnHowardReid30 August 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This reasonably entertaining "B" mystery will keep you occupied, if not on the edge of your seat, for 56 minutes. It's well acted, but somewhat short on action, a paucity which is pretty well disguised by the movie's smart pace under director Leon Barsha who has most of the players rattling off their lines at a jolly good clip. John Gallaudet – hardly a household name – heads the cast with reasonable efficiency. Iris Meredith makes an attractive heroine, but also not to be overlooked is the unbilled lass, Doreen MacGregor, who plays the cloakroom girl at the night club in this picture, her first of only three films. The others Special Inspector and Convicted were both released in 1938. Murder Is News is now available for viewing on a very good Alpha DVD.
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6/10
If You Can Talk Fast Enough
boblipton23 February 2024
Radio reporter John Gallaudet talks on air about a prominent man and his divorce. The man calls Gallaudet and invites him to his house to talk about the situation. When Gallaudet gets there, the man is dead, and Gallaudet becomes both a suspect and a target.

It's one of the ultra-cheap quota quickies that Columbia sponsored up in British Columbia, which jump-started the industry which is still going strong up there. Most of them are dire affairs, and this one is clearly very cheaply done, and everyone speaks very fast to make sure it doesn't come in over an hour. Nonetheless, a good story, a good mystery, and the high-speed motormouth made me wonder if any of the performers went into ice hockey commentary.
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4/10
Your every day run of the mill murder mystery, no more or no less intriguing than the rest.
mark.waltz15 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
The set-up of this Z-grade murder mystery is intriguing as it shows reporter John Gallaudet showing up to interview business tycoon William McIntyre in the midst of family scandal and finding his corpse instead. Knocked on the head after finding the body, Gallaudet decides he will find the killer at all costs and begins to question everybody who had encounters with the deceased. This includes an estranged wife, a step-son and various business associates, all with motives for murder. Some moments of fast moving double talk and bits of clever dialog marks this higher in my ratings than the hundreds of others in this genre, but ultimately, it's a case of cardboard characters you've seen hundreds of times before, the epitome of what is referred as the "paint by number" method of developing a plot and resolving it. Some aspects of it are intriguing, such as how the culprit is revealed, and then the sudden locking up of various parties involve in the investigation inside a huge closet. Adding another little mystery on and some last minute intrigue marks this up higher as well, making it a bit more clever than the average programmer that wear out their welcome after only a few reels.
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2/10
Well, I hadn't a clue what was going on.
robinakaaly18 September 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Oh for the days when the newshounds got to the murder scene first, got their grubby prints over all the evidence, phoned their editors, and only then the affable Irish police inspector. Running for only 55 minutes, this film had to go fast to get everything in, but then it was too fast to be comprehensible. It featured a crooked night club owner whose chance of a fortune will be lost if his victim's demise gets out before a big deal is fixed a wealthy victim and father about to divorce his wife, the scion of the wealthy family who preferred to be a big band trumpeter and who worries about his parents up-coming divorce, a less than distressed widow, a dubious (aren't they all) lawyer, an attractive secretary who is attracted to the announcer of the radio equivalent of Closer magazine, a reporter who fails to convince his editor, the aforesaid Irish policeman, and a rather nice little hatcheck girl. The film was set in New York but made in Vancouver. I hope the cast thought their journey there worth it.
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