Mary Ryan, Detective (1949) Poster

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6/10
A jewel of a little crime drama!
mark.waltz21 September 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Well written, if familiar in certain aspects, this seems like a last ditch attempt at a film detective series as most of them were going by the way of radio serials. Marsha Hunt gives her all to this enjoyable B thriller where she pretends to be a professional shoplifter to infiltrate a gang of organized shoplifters, so crass that they use a child to swipe merchandise out of a jewelry store. Hunt's Mary Ryan, easily infiltrates the gang, but the threat of being recognized by one of the women she previously questioned (June Vincent) threatens to expose her.

Hunt, a forgotten leading lady that managed to last longer than most in the business as an aging supporting actor, is simply fine, and the script is excellent as well. Unlike other films in this genre, the film doesn't resort to clichéd dialog or supporting characters, with the gang created as very clever and certainly a dangerous foe to be concerned about. Every detail is planned out and plotted perfectly, showing once again that sometimes the best films were the second features, given A's as ratings while on a B budget. Just be careful that when you unstuff your turkey, you check the dressing for diamonds!
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6/10
Marsha Hunt is excellent as Mary Ryan
bensonmum215 July 2021
The quick pitch: Policewoman Mary Ryan (Marsha Hunt) goes undercover to infiltrate a gang of thieves - first in prison, later as a member of the robbery crew.

There's nothing about Mary Ryan, Detective that will change your world. Instead, it's a mostly enjoyable little film with the immensely watchable Marsha Hunt as the titular Mary Ryan. Cute, capable, and engaging are a few of the adjectives I'd use to describe Hunt in this film. She has an undeniable screen presence (see the fur robbery set-piece for an example) that works for me. I'm not sure I would have enjoyed the film half as much without Hunt. I've read where she ran afoul of the McCarthy-era anti-communist crowd and found her opportunities limited as a result. How else do you explain the fact that she isn't better known today?

Other things I enjoyed about Mary Ryan, Detective include: snappy direction, good pacing, John Litel, and, thankfully, limited comic relief (I admit, however, that I did chuckle at smoked turkey bit).

Finally, I got a kick out of the whole gang of thieves. They come across about as cordial and polite as a group of Sunday school teachers. Not very realistic, but kind of what I'd expect from a film like Mary Ryan, Detective.

6/10.
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8/10
A Very Ingenuous Plotline With a Refreshing Touch of Humour
ipp-5048415 June 2024
This is an enjoyable piece. Once you acknowledge and accept that you have opted to watch a proverbial "B" film, without any great expectations of star stuff and lustre, you settle down to an entertaining sixty-seven minutes without searching for any of the classic touches that underpin crime films of this watershed period in the history of cinema.

The action, which is framed around a very, clever, ingenuous, plotline develops logically and coherently without any complicated twists and turns that normally tease the brain. You are carried along freely and easily with the drift and flow of the current. It is, in the final analysis, a well written tale that is as honest and as believable as they come. You are left, at the end, meditating on pertinent social issues such as child rearing and parenting, police methods and the ugly underbelly of smooth criminal masterminds operating beneath the façade of respectability.

It is a pleasure, for a change, to encounter a crime caper minus the incessant sound of gunfire, tiresome car chases and hackneyed beat jargon. We are exposed, instead, to a detailed step-by-step foray into the carefully worked out and well-executed modus operandi of the criminal mind. Marsha Hunt does justice to her titular role as protagonist as do the others in the supporting cast. I thought that June Vincent could have been given more screen time (she was brilliant in "Dark Angel" three years earlier) but I suppose time and budgetary constraints ruled that out.

Ultimately, the limited sixty-seven minutes are well managed as there are many dark shadows and noirish nuances to be seen. These are lit also up with some genuine moments of humour particularly towards the end.

An enjoyable treat. I was weaned on the great blockbusters of the 40s and 50s. This offering has taught me to respect the so- called humble "B Grader".
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