Mystery Liner

Mystery Liner

Gustav von Seyffertitz as Inspector Von Kessling
Directed by William Nigh
Produced by Paul Malvern
Screenplay by Wellyn Totman
Based on "The Ghost of John Holling" (1924 short story) by
Edgar Wallace
Cinematography Archie Stout
Edited by Carl Pierson
Production
company
Distributed by Monogram Pictures
Release dates
  • March 15, 1934 (1934-03-15) (US)
Running time
62 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Mystery Liner is a 1934 American Pre-Code film directed by William Nigh,[1] based on an Edgar Wallace story originally published in the Saturday Evening Post in 1924.[2] The film was entered as a feature attraction at the 1934 International Exhibition of Cinematographic Art in Venice, Italy, the forerunner of the Venice Film Festival.[3]

Plot

Captain Holling (Beery) is relieved of command of his ship after he suffers a nervous breakdown. His replacement, Captain Downey (Howard), takes over the liner just as it is about to be used for an experiment in remote control.

Professor Grimson (Lewis) has devised a system for controlling the ship from a land-based laboratory. However, as Grimson demonstrates the system, a rival group is listening in, hoping to use the device for its own purposes.

Cast

Mystery Liner

Critical reception

Leonard Maltin called the film an "intriguing but slow-paced B-picture" ;[4] while Allmovie called it "a rather nifty little science fiction-thriller/murder mystery from Poverty Row company Monogram ... Typical low-budget fare, Mystery Liner is nevertheless well photographed by Archie Stout and for the most part capably acted" ;[3] and TV Guide noted "a fine example of a well-made thriller created on the programmer assembly line...Veteran director William Nigh does a typically professional job with the few resources at his disposal and cinematographer Archie Stout (who would eventually win an Oscar for his work on John Ford's The Quiet Man, 1952) contributes some exceptional camerawork."[5]

See also

References

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