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The Great Hospital Mystery (1937) Online

The Great Hospital Mystery (1937) Online
Original Title :
The Great Hospital Mystery
Genre :
Movie / Comedy / Crime / Drama / Mystery
Year :
1937
Directror :
James Tinling
Cast :
Jane Darwell,Sig Ruman,Sally Blane
Writer :
Mignon G. Eberhart,Bess Meredyth
Type :
Movie
Time :
58min
Rating :
6.8/10
The Great Hospital Mystery (1937) Online

The first of three films made featuring the Nurse Sarah Keate character created by Mignon Eberhardt. This 20th Century-Fox film was followed by two from Warner Bros. in 1938 ("Mystery House" and "The Patient in Room 18"), both starring Ann Sheridan in the role played here by Jane Darwell, who was, despite source that seems to think otherwise, first-billed in this film with her name on the posters twice the size of that of Sig Rumann(as billed in this film), Sally Blane, Thomas Beck and Joan Davis. The story has nurse Ann Smith, with the knowledge of her night supervisor Sarah Keate, smuggling her brother Allen Tracy into the hospital as a patient of Doctor Taggert, in order to hide him from gunmen sworn to get him. Gangster Mortimer Beatty is admitted to the room next to Tracy's. Ann's patient is found dead, but the dead man is not Tracy but a charity patient who had died days before, but now has some fresh bullet wounds in his body. Ann's sweetheart, hospital physician David McKerry,...
Cast overview:
Jane Darwell Jane Darwell - Miss Sarah Keats - Head Nurse
Sig Ruman Sig Ruman - Dr. Taggert (as Sig Rumann)
Sally Blane Sally Blane - Ann Smith
Thomas Beck Thomas Beck - Dr. David McKerry
Joan Davis Joan Davis - Flossie Duff
William Demarest William Demarest - Mr. Beatty
George Walcott George Walcott - Allen Tracy
Wade Boteler Wade Boteler - Det. Lt. Mattoon
Howard Phillips Howard Phillips - Tom Kirby


User reviews

Jazu

Jazu

Comedy and Mystery were often mixed in the 30's and this is a fine example.

The story is about a young man on parole. A bunch of bank robbers use him and his car to get away. Being on parole, he doesn't want to inform the police. He seeks shelter in the hospital were his sister is working as a nurse. But the gangsters are on to him...

The true sleuth in this movie is head nurse Sarah Keats, played by Jane Darwell. Her role, gestures and acting do remind one of Margareth Rutherford playing Miss Marple. Wade Botteler embodies the stereotype stupid policeman. Sally Blane as the nurse and Thomas Beck as doctor McKerry are a nice couple in love. Sig Ruman is convincing as the head of the hospital. Joan Davis is thrown in to cause laughter, even though she is overacting terribly.

I found this movie on the internet. I am quite certain there are no more rights on this movie, so you could try a search. However it is quite likely available on a cheap DVD carrying oldies as well. And usually these are of better quality.

A very enjoyable movie. The pace is high and there is plenty to laugh, with a few nice one liners by Jane Darwell. 7 out of 10: enjoy!
Manarius

Manarius

When a patient makes a phone call after he's been dead for six hours, with a bullet hole, detective Wade Boteller comes calling. He finds pompous chief of staff Sig Ruman, efficient Jane Darwell, pretty Sally Blane, frenetic Joan Davis, a couple of doctors and William Demarest suffering from appendicitis.

Although director James Tingling directs this Fox B movies for speed, it turns out pretty good with a nice assortment of clues. That's because it's from a Mignon Eberhart story. Surprisingly for a B, it was adapted by Bess Meredyth. She had entered the movies as a writer for D.W. Griffith, and basically produced a good chunk of BEN-HUR. When Zanuck started 20th Century, she wrote for him, and came over when that company merged with Fox. While Zanuck worked on getting the company's script department in shape -- long a weakness for Fox -- she did uncredited work on scripts and had her name on several B productions, including this one. She would return to the A-list in 1939, with a Shirley Temple movie, then THE MARK OF ZORRO and the funny THAT NIGHT IN RIO, then ease off, with one more credited movie.

The character actors don't really work well in the context of the move; each is busy doing his or her shtick. But what fun that is!
Pruster

Pruster

The Sarah Keate films can perhaps only with a fair amount of leniency be classified as parts of the same series (the main character has a variety of different names, ages, professional positions, etc., and is played by a variety of actresses), but "The Great Hospital Mystery" is one of the better ones. Here, Keate is named Keats and she is plump, middle-aged, sharp-minded, and sharp-tongued; she's a lot like Hildegarde Withers, and Jane Darwell is perfectly cast in the part (her best lines: "The doctor wants to operate on 707" - "Too bad for 707" - "But he's not sick" - "He will be!"). Sally Blane, looking a lot like her sister Loretta Young, is sweet, Joan Davis is a funny and talented comedienne, the male parts (the good guy doctor, the officious chief of staff, the loudmouthed police inspector) are also well cast, but the best performance of all is given by the prolific William Demarest as a hypochondriac patient. He is simply masterful. The mystery is clever, while the production is clearly "B", but serviceable. **1/2 out of 4.
the monster

the monster

In the 1930s and 40s, Hollywood must have made at least 16,302,380 B-murder mystery films. The formula was pretty much constant....with a stupid cop (or cops) and an amateur who actually helps them solve the mystery. However, while "The Great Hospital Mystery" generally follows this exact pattern, it's very different when it comes to who solves the crime. In this case, Jane Darwell plays the smarty pants...and it's rare to see a woman in this role, let alone a middle-aged female nurse!

There is a strange mystery at the hospital. A man was found dead in his bed in the hospital...and he was shot. But it gets much weirder. Later it turns out he already was dead...and he's not who he's supposed to be. In addition, the head of the hospital is an enigma--he's either completely incompetent or completely evil...or both. What is the dead man all about? Wait...the head nurse will eventually figure it out for us!

I liked Darwell. Her character was pretty neat...and it was nice seeing a competent and intelligent woman in an older film. Sadly, Joan Davis was NOT pretty neat...she was there for comic relief (part of the mystery movie formula) but her acting was simply annoying and over-the-top. She could be funny...here she was just bothersome. As for the rest, there were no problems and Sig Ruman was nice as the awful chief of staff. Not a brilliant film but worth seeing if you like the genre.
Foiuost

Foiuost

Uneven comedy mystery involving bank robbery and murder around a big hospital.

It starts with a parolee getting carjacked outside of a bank robbery. In order to hide out he goes to a friend in a hospital and they decide to fake his death. From there we end up of misdirection and murder.

A good mystery is under cut by a boneheaded nurse who has been inserted for comic relief. She's so loud that you tire of her nonsense instantly.

I liked it but I wish it was better and less silly.

6 out of 10