STRANGERS OF THE EVENING (1932) Zasu Pitts & Eugene Pallette | Comedy, Crime, Mystery | B&W

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Strangers of the Evening is a 1932 American pre-Code film produced by Samuel Bischoff for Tiffany Pictures, directed by H. Bruce Humberstone and starring ZaSu Pitts, Lucien Littlefield, and Eugene Pallette.[1] The film is also known as The Hidden Corpse (American reissue title).[2] It was based on the novel The Illustrious Corpse written by Tiffany Thayer,[3] the screenplay was adapted by Stuart Anthony and Warren Duff.

SYNOPSIS
Bodies start mysteriously disappearing from the city morgue. An investigator tries to determine what is going on.

The body of what appears to be lawyer and aspiring politician Clark C. McNaughton is brought to the Chandler Undertaking Parlor which is on 52nd Street, his face mangled from a car accident, but it is really the body of a man called Jack Lee who died in a car accident. It will be novice nineteen year old undertaker Tommy Freeman's (Harold Waldridge) first solo job. and he's very apprehensive. Dr. Joseph Chandler (Warner Richmond), is the owner of the establishment, but he and his accomplices are trying to avoid an investigation, since McNaughton actually died of a gunshot wound having been shot by Lee in an argument. Tommy has a bad feeling about the case, so he tells Dr. Raymond Everette (Theodore von Eltz) that he's going out for "coffee" so he can delay the embalming. Shortly after, Everette's fiancée Ruth (Miriam Seegar) stops in for a visit. Feeling like she is being followed by her father, Frank Daniels (Lucien Littlefield), she says she can't stay long. Daniels, who has indeed been following her, confronts Everette and warns him to stay away from his daughter. Ruth, who has been hiding in another room, leaves the back way and hails a taxi cab just as Tommy returns to discover that Dr. Everette is leaving as well. He and Ruth are planning on eloping.

Two passersby discover what appears to be a dead man laying in the alley nearby and decide to deliver him to the undertaker. Tommy warns them they should've called the cops instead of bringing him there, but the two men leave and after some discussion decide to tell a cop anyway. The cop knocks on the door, startling already skittish Tommy, then the cop tries to go after the two men who brought the body there but is unable to find them. Meanwhile the second body starts to move, and a frightened Tommy runs from the building. Later two cops arrive to collect the body of the dead man found in the alley but no one is at the undertakers, so they take the only body they see which is the one being passed off as McNaughton.

The next day the newspaper headlines announce that Frank Daniels has been found dead, his face mangled beyond recognition, which prompts a murder investigation and a search for the two men, as well as a search for Tommy, Ruth and Dr. Everette. Chandler phones his accomplice and advises him that he had to bury McNaughton in his own casket since Lee's body is now missing. Days later Dr. Everette and Ruth read in the news that they are wanted for the murder of Daniels and that they have been traced to a Chicago hotel, but the pair leave quickly after seeing two cops knocking on their hotel door.

A man with amnesia, who is really Frank Daniels, stops by the police station and tells Detective Brubacher (Eugene Pallette) that he knows about a murder on 52nd Street, but can't seem to remember anything about it. After questioning Daniels he finds out that the man is living on 84th Street with a nice lady named Sybil. The other detective gives him the name of Richard Roe, and has Sybil brought in for questioning.

The cops exhume what they believe to be Daniels' body, but Chandler sees the body and claims that it is McNaughton's body, however Daniels' uncle (Tully Marshall) claims it isn't his nephew, in spite of the mangled face.

CAST & CREW
ZaSu Pitts as Sybil Smith
Eugene Pallette as Detective Brubacher
Lucien Littlefield as Frank "Snookie" Daniels aka Richard Roe
Tully Marshall as Robert Daniels
Miriam Seegar as Ruth Daniels
Theodore von Eltz as Dr. Raymond Everette
Warner Richmond as Dr. Joseph Chandler
Harold Waldridge as Tommy Freeman
Mahlon Hamilton as Charles E. Frisbee, Deputy District Attorney
Alan Roscoe as Sutherland
William Scott as Passerby
Francis Sayles as Roberts

Directed by H. Bruce Humberstone
Written by Stuart Anthony, Warren Duff.
Based on the book The Illustrious Corpse by Tiffany Thayer
Produced by Samuel Bischoff
Cinematography Arthur Edeson
Edited by David Berg, Martin G. Cohn
Music by Val Burton
Distributed by Tiffany Pictures
Release date May 15, 1932
Running time 70 minutes, 66 minutes (American DVD)
Country United States
Language English

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