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poster of Seven Sinners
Rating: 5.5/10 by 10 users

Seven Sinners (1936)

Ed Harwood, a wisecracking private investigator from New York, discovers a crime at a hotel in Nice during a carnival. The unraveling of the mystery which lies behind will lead him and Caryl Fenton, a female insurance agent, who will become his companion, first to Paris, then to London, later through the English countryside and finally to Southampton, in search of a criminal train wrecker.

Directing:
  • Albert de Courville
  • Douglas Peirce
Writing:
  • Sidney Gilliat
  • Frank Launder
  • Arnold Ridley
  • Bernard Merivale
  • L. du Garde Peach
  • Austin Melford
Stars:
Release Date: Mon, Jun 01, 1936

Rating: 5.5/10 by 10 users

Alternative Title:
Doomed Cargo - US
The Wrecker - GB
Siete pecadores - ES

Country:
United Kingdom
Language:
English
Français
Runtime: 01 hour 07 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: london, england, countryside, private investigator, sabotage, insurance agent, train wreck, disappeared corpse, nice france

Felix Aylmer
Sir Charles Webber
Anthony Holles
Reception Clerk
David Horne
Hotel Manager
Edwin Laurence
Guildhall Guide
Margaret Davidge
Housekeeper (Uncredited)
Patrick Ludlow
Pilgrims of Peace Poet (Uncredited)
Phyllis Morris
Irate Bridge Player (Uncredited)
Joyce Kennedy
Elizabeth Wentworth

CinemaSerf

This is quite a clever little mystery, well held together by Edmund Lowe and Constance Cummings. The former is a cocky PI ("Harwood") who meets ("Miss Fenton") who works for an insurance company. They must get to the bottom of some rather ingenious murders. Each time, an heavily insured body is found in a train wreck. One might be plausible, but after a few of these the coincidence theory starts to wear thin, and a clever strategy emerges which they must thwart. Initially, of course, the pair are pretty hostile towards each other and as we progress their acerbic rapport becomes witty and entertaining. The pace is good, the supporting cast which includes Felix Aylmer and Thomy Bourdelle delivers well too, and by the end there is still plenty of jeopardy as to whom is pulling the strings (or the emergency cord!). The action scenes are quite authentic looking too and there is definite sense of entertaining peril for us to enjoy.


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