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Thursday, June 29, 2023

INSURANCE INVESTIGATOR

Audrey Long and Richard Denning

INSURANCE INVESTIGATOR (1951). Director: George Blair. Colorized.

Insurance investigator Tom Davison (Richard Denning) is called in when the head of a real estate company, Sullivan (Roy Gordon), is found dead on the staircase outside his office. His associate, Hammond (John Eldredge), suspects that Sullivan was drinking heavily and had a tragic fall, but Sullivan's daughter, Nancy (Audrey Long), doesn't find this credible. Davison decides to pretend to be Nancy's cousin, and she gets him a job at the real estate office, where he can spy on Hammond and another agent, Addie (Hillary Brooke), who's having an affair with Hammond. Then someone inadvertently steps into an elevator shaft and has a deadly fall ...

Reed Hadley and Roy Barcroft
Insurance Investigator is a $1.99 item from Republic studios, and plays, like many of these B productions, like a TV show. Denning is, as always, a likable player, but he adds absolutely no nuances to his performance and his Tom Davison is no different from his Michael Shayne, Mr. North, or other characters that he's portrayed. Audrey Long is appealing and professional as the (supposedly) grieving daughter who carries on a romance with Davison, or at least tries to. Reed Hadley and Roy Barcroft add a bit of tension to their scenes as the resident bad guys behind a nasty insurance scheme. We're supposed to believe that an unsuspecting person can open the door to the elevator even though the car is on another floor. Well, maybe ... George Blair also directed Exposed

Verdict: Even color doesn't add much to this cheapie. *1/2. 

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