The Falcon in Hollywood

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The Falcon in Hollywood
Directed byGordon Douglas
Screenplay byGerald Geraghty
Based onCharacters created
by Michael Arlen
Produced by
Starring
Cinematography
RKO Radio Pictures Inc.
Distributed byRKO Radio Pictures
Release date
December 8, 1944 (1944-12-08)
Running time
67 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$115,000 (profit)[1]

The Falcon in Hollywood is a 1944

Plot

While on vacation in Los Angeles, Tom Lawrence, aka The Falcon, meets Inspector McBride at the Hollywood Park Racetrack, asking him about casino owner Louie Buchanan. Lawrence helped put Buchanan away but does not know his present whereabouts.

Returning to his seat, Lawrence finds Buchanan standing behind him. Seated next to Tom is actress Lili D'Allio. When she leaves to make a bet, Peggy Callahan sits down in her spot; when she departs, she takes Lili's purse by mistake. Tom hails a cab, driven by wisecracking Billie Atkins to try to catch up to Callahan, an actress at the Sunset Studio.

Hearing a gunshot, Lawrence rushes to a deserted

prop room, Atkins identifies the deceased as leading man Ted Miles, who was married to Roxanna, the studio's costume designer. Bringing autocratic director
Alec Hoffman, whom she says she will marry, Roxanna exhibits no emotion when shown her former husband's body.

Everything seems to be tied to a current production produced by neurotic studio executive Martin Dwyer. Accompanied by Atkins, the Falcon pokes around the studio. Suspects are starlet Peggy Callahan, haughty prima donna Lili D'Alio and Louie Buchanan.

Police Inspector McBride questions Dwyer, who seems to have a rock-solid alibi, until his gun shows up in the model shop, hidden in a plaster head. When he states he reported his gun as stolen weeks ago, suspicion falls on Hoffman, who is arrested but gets out on bail. The "jinxed" film goes back into production.

As instructed, Callahan shoots Hoffman with a prop gun in a scene, unaware that it has been loaded with live ammunition. Hoffman is badly wounded. While McBride questions the crew about the shooting, Lawrence finds Callahan and Buchanan conferring in secret, with Buchanan promising to deliver the killer the next day at the

soundstage
, he and Lawrence engage in a furious gun battle. Dwyer is shot and falls to his death.

Lawrence concludes that Dwyer has sold each of eight investors a 25% interest in the film. He then tried to sabotage the film so he would not have to pay them off. However, when the director and cast started making a good film despite his efforts, Dwyer resorted to homicide. He murdered Ted Miles and Louie Buchanan because they knew too much.

Cast

Production

RKO studios doubled for the fictional Sunset Studio.[3]

Reception

In his review of The Falcon in Hollywood, Bosley Crowther wrote, in The New York Times, "A mild intra-mural excursion around a movie studio is the only intriguing feature of RKO's 'The Falcon in Hollywood,' latest in the well-worn mystery series, which came to the Rialto yesterday. For otherwise this obvious whodunnit about murder on a studio set is just another indifferent workout for Tom Conway as the suave, intuitive sleuth. The backgrounds of picture-making are uncommonly interesting and lead one to wonder sharply why they haven't been used to more avail. But the story itself is as feeble and hackneyed as a prop telephone."[4] In a recent review of the Falcon series for the Time Out Film Guide, Tom Milne wrote, "Conway, bringing a lighter touch to the series (which managed its comic relief better than most), starred in nine films after The Falcon's Brother, most of them deft and surprisingly enjoyable."[5] [Note 1]

References

Informational notes

  1. ^ The Falcon in Hollywood was one of the most popular of RKO's "Falcon" efforts, posting a $115,000 profit.[1]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Jewell and Harbin 1982, p. 197.
  2. ^ "Review: 'The Falcon in Hollywood'." Allmovie. Retrieved: September 6, 2016.
  3. ^ "Notes: 'The Falcon in Hollywood'." Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved: September 6, 2016.
  4. ^ Crowther, Bosley (December 9, 1944) "Movie review: The screen" The New York Times
  5. ^ Pym 2004, p. 377.

Bibliography

  • Jewell, Richard and Harbin, Vernon (1982) The RKO Story. New Rochelle, New York: Arlington House.
  • Pym, John, editor (2004) Time Out Film Guide. London: Time Out Guides Limited.

External list