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poster of Rynox
Rating: 5.5/10 by 2 users

Rynox (1931)

Things are not all well at Rynox House, where the company is on the verge of collapse. At the same time, its senior partner, FX Benedik, keeps receiving threats from the disgruntled Boswell Marsh, who is seen in town buying theatre tickets and revolvers. As the Rynox staff, including the young Tony Benedik, work to keep the business afloat, FX invites Marsh to settle his grievances at his house one fateful night....

Directing:
  • Michael Powell
Writing:
  • Philip MacDonald
  • Joseph Jefferson Farjeon
  • Michael Powell
  • Jerome Jackson
  • Philip MacDonald
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, Nov 04, 1931

Rating: 5.5/10 by 2 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United Kingdom
Language:
English
Runtime: 00 hour 47 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: murder, business tycoon

Stewart Rome
Francis Xavier Benedik / Boswell Marsh
John Longden
Anthony Xavier 'Tony' Benedik
Dorothy Boyd
Petronella 'Peter' Rickforth
Charles Paton
Samuel Faraday Rickforth
Leslie Mitchell
Basil Woolrich
Sybil Grove
Elsa Victoria Fairburn, Benedik's housekeeper
Cecil Clayton
Mr Musgrove, theatre ticket agent
Fletcher Lightfoot
William Prout, Benedik's butler
Edmund Willard
Captain Inigo 'Glassy' James
Eileen Lamb
Christabel Pagan, Benedik's private secretary
Fred Schwarz
MacDonald, creditor

CinemaSerf

With his eponymous company facing bankruptcy, owner "F.X. Benedik" is found slain and it falls to his son "Tony" (John Longden) to try to track down the curmudgeonly "Marsh" (Stewart Rome) who has an axe to grind with the business and might be implicated. This is probably only notable as being Michael Powell's directorial debut - and for a talkie only just out of nappies, there is quite a lot of movement and outdoor photography to help distinguish it from many of it's more drab, stage-bound, contemporaries. Otherwise, though, it's an unremarkable little whodunit with little jeopardy and way too much script. Rome does a decent enough job as the irritating "Marsh" and Dorothy Boyd ("Peter") brings a touch of glamour, though little of substance, as the mystery gradually unfolds - but don't expect much of a challenge for your own little grey cells, that's all a bit of a no-brainer.


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