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poster of The Greene Murder Case
Rating: 5.7/10 by 9 users

The Greene Murder Case (1929)

Philo Vance investigates when a murderer preys upon members of a wealthy family on New York's Upper East Side.

Directing:
  • Frank Tuttle
Writing:
  • S.S. Van Dine
  • Louise Long
  • Bartlett Cormack
Stars:
Release Date: Sun, Aug 11, 1929

Rating: 5.7/10 by 9 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 09 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: pre-code, philo vance

Florence Eldridge
Sibella Greene
Jean Arthur
Ada Greene
Eugene Pallette
Sergeant Ernest Heath
E.H. Calvert
District Attorney John F. X. Markham
Ullrich Haupt
Dr. Arthur Von Blon
Gertrude Norman
Mrs. Tobias Greene
Lowell Drew
Chester Greene
Augusta Burmeister
Mrs. Gertrude Mannheim
Veda Buckland
Nurse (Uncredited)
Shep Camp
Medical Examiner (Uncredited)
Charles E. Evans
Lawyer Canon (Uncredited)
Helena Phillips Evans
Miss O'Brien (Uncredited)
Mildred Golden
Barton (Uncredited)
Harry Strang
Cop in House (Uncredited)

CinemaSerf

This all starts with a sort of roll-call where a lawyer checks the presence of the "Greene" family at the bedside of their mother. A condition of their late father's will is if they don't all live together for fifteen years after his demise, then they don't get a sou. Not surprisingly, they don't exactly see eye to eye so when one of them is shot, it's hardly a shock. The police - the instantly recognisable Eugene Palette as "Sgt. Heath" - duly arrive and enlist the help of detective "Philo Vance" (William Powell) who quickly discovers that any one of them could have done it. Thing is, the killer isn't content with just the one - and when the family start to drop like flies, the investigators must get a move on in case it is just them who are actually left at the end! It's very stage-bound, this, but the pace is break-neck and there are a few characters - not least the bed-ridden and grumpy mother (Gertrude Norman), to keep the investigation moving along until it's slightly unexpected conclusion. It's a bit of an hybrid of other "Dark House" style stories, but Powell and Pallette deliver simply and quite well here.


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