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poster of Sucker Money
Rating: 4.7/10 by 6 users

Sucker Money (1933)

A phony spiritualist hypnotizes the daughter of a wealthy banker in a scheme to swindle the banker out of his money. A reporter investigating the swami discovers the plot, determines to expose it.

Directing:
  • Dorothy Davenport
  • Melville Shyer
  • Harry L. Fraser
Writing:
  • Willis Kent
Stars:
Release Date: Tue, Feb 28, 1933

Rating: 4.7/10 by 6 users

Alternative Title:
Victims of the Beyond - GB

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 00 hour 59 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: medium, newspaper reporter, séance, scam artist, woman director
Subtitle   Wallpaper   Watch Trailer    

Mischa Auer
Swami Yomurda
Earl McCarthy
Jimmy Reeves
Ralph Lewis
John Walton
Mona Lisa
Princess Karami
Al Bridge
George Hunter
J. Frank Glendon
Meehan - Newspaper Editor
Julia Griffith
Seance Attendee
Dorothy Vernon
Seance Attendee

John Chard

Hokum Bokum. Victims of the Beyond (AKA: Sucker Money) is directed by Melville Shyer and Dorothy Davenport (as Dorothy Reid) and written by Willis Kent. It stars Mischa Auer, Phyllis Barrington, Earl McCarthy, Ralph Lewis and Mae Busch. For the era it was made this deserves credit for being a fore runner to a splinter of films dealing with spiritualism - notably as a fake exercise. Unfortunately for dramatic worth it has nothing of note to offer. Plot essentially has fake medium Swami Yomurda (Auer) using his nefarious means to swindle persons of wealth out of money. Enter an undercover reporter who is intrepid in trying to unmask the scammers and save the day. The End! It's all a bit creaky, the direction, the acting and the production as a whole really doesn't have much going for it. The premise at the core is interesting enough to hold attention for the short one hour run time - even if the first fifteen minutes drag and hardly entice one to stay through the rest of the play. Plenty of séance scenes are decently played, and thus rewards those into such shenanigans, but it becomes tiresome and the writing simply isn't good enough to drive home some thriller possibilities. 4/10


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