Gangster Benson is on a train with G-man Evers and newswoman Marvis. First these two have to get the gangster, then they have to get each other.Gangster Benson is on a train with G-man Evers and newswoman Marvis. First these two have to get the gangster, then they have to get each other.Gangster Benson is on a train with G-man Evers and newswoman Marvis. First these two have to get the gangster, then they have to get each other.
James Adamson
- Red Cap
- (uncredited)
Oscar Apfel
- Man in Wash Room
- (uncredited)
Eddie Baker
- Motor Officer
- (uncredited)
Harry Bernard
- Pullman Passenger
- (uncredited)
John Bleifer
- Jerry - Gangster
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaGloria Stuart and Charles Lane both lived passed 100.
- ConnectionsReferenced in She Was an Acrobat's Daughter (1937)
- SoundtracksRow, Row. Row Your Boat
(uncredited)
Traditional
Sung a cappella by Brian Donlevy and Gloria Stuart as a round
Featured review
I watched this in preparation for "Europa." Both are essentially railroad movies.
This is about a gangster who has come out of hiding to take a train trip to from Los Angeles to Chicago to collect on a sweepstakes ticket. On the train, several disguises become apparent among other passengers as well. It is not remotely interesting except for one actor, the Pullman Porter. He is Stepin Fetchit, a man who in later years became reviled for his scraping and bowing, his complete acceptance and deserving of the bottom class. I've seen him and his cohorts before. There was one in almost every movie of this era. They make me squirm, not so much for what they are but because it makes me wonder what I easily accept now that my grandchildren will revile.
But here, my god, he is a blast. He had me rolling on the floor and I have to actually send you to this for a masterful performance.
Yes, he plays a stereotype. But it has a few mitigating factors. First, every soul in the thing is a comic stereotype, from the pug, the palooka, moll, Irish copper, German sanatorium doctor and so on. The big thing is that Fetchit's acting is what I call folded. He plays a moron, with a vocal rhythm that bests today's rappers. Sure he plays a moron. But the character is constantly talking to himself about what morons the other characters are. And the fold — he knows he is playing a fake being and opens a separate channel with the audience, winking at himself and you for going along.
The US has a strange racial history, and there is much to be ashamed of. But talent is talent and this guy is good.
Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
This is about a gangster who has come out of hiding to take a train trip to from Los Angeles to Chicago to collect on a sweepstakes ticket. On the train, several disguises become apparent among other passengers as well. It is not remotely interesting except for one actor, the Pullman Porter. He is Stepin Fetchit, a man who in later years became reviled for his scraping and bowing, his complete acceptance and deserving of the bottom class. I've seen him and his cohorts before. There was one in almost every movie of this era. They make me squirm, not so much for what they are but because it makes me wonder what I easily accept now that my grandchildren will revile.
But here, my god, he is a blast. He had me rolling on the floor and I have to actually send you to this for a masterful performance.
Yes, he plays a stereotype. But it has a few mitigating factors. First, every soul in the thing is a comic stereotype, from the pug, the palooka, moll, Irish copper, German sanatorium doctor and so on. The big thing is that Fetchit's acting is what I call folded. He plays a moron, with a vocal rhythm that bests today's rappers. Sure he plays a moron. But the character is constantly talking to himself about what morons the other characters are. And the fold — he knows he is playing a fake being and opens a separate channel with the audience, winking at himself and you for going along.
The US has a strange racial history, and there is much to be ashamed of. But talent is talent and this guy is good.
Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Across the Aisle
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 6 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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