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Thursday, June 1, 2023

BLACKMAIL (1947)

William Marshall and Ricardo Cortez
BLACKMAIL (1947). Director: Lesley Selander. 

Ziggy Cranston (Ricardo Cortez) calls in a private eye, Danny Turner (William Marshall), when he is blackmailed by a avaricious gal named Carla (Stephanie Bachelor). When Carla is murdered, Ziggy is less concerned that he might be accused of the crime than that there might be associates of the dead woman who still have the incriminating photographs. This turns out to be true, and one of those associates winds up dead in Ziggy's swimming pool. Thinking Ziggy did the deed, Danny wants no part of murder and calls the police, but when the cops, including Inspector Donaldson (Grant Withers) get there the body has disappeared. Ziggy's gal, Sylvia (Adele Mara), backs up his story that there was no murder and no body, but Danny determines to get to the bottom of things. Along the way he has to contend with casino owner Kellaway (Roy Barcroft of The James Brothers of Missouri), his punch-happy associate, Pinky (Tristram Coffin of King of the Rocket Men), the supposedly French chauffeur Antoine (Richard Fraser of The Tiger Woman), and other nefarious characters before he reveals the true killer at the climax.

"I didn't do it!" Ricardo Cortez and Adele Mara
Blackmail
 is another bit of film noir from Republic studios featuring many of their contract players. Star William Marshall, who was once married to Ginger Rogers, makes a very convincing movie-type private eye radiating toughness and insolence in equal measure although he isn't given many opportunities to love up the ladies. Cortez plays the part in such a way that you never quite know if he's on the level or making things up as he goes along. Adele Mara is okay if a little bland in this as Cortez' squeeze. The plot is a wild and confusing  concoction that has a few holes in it, although it's entertaining enough and fast-paced. Marshall should have made more of these but this was his only appearance as Danny Turner. Probably the best thing about the movie are the ferocious fistfights which approach the level of the fisticuffs seen in Republic serials.

Verdict: Fast-moving Republic private eye flick. **1/2. 

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