A Holy Terror (1931)
6/10
George O'Brien Against Bogart
16 February 2019
The copy of this movie that I looked at was in poor condition. A five-minute chunk was missing, the image was dark and every once in a while the title "Fade In" would appear. Nonetheless, it was interesting for reasons having nothing to do with the production.

James Kirkwood comes to visit Robert Warwick. They talk about Warwick's dead wife and his son, George O'Brien. When O'Brien comes home from his polo match, he finds his father shot dead. The only clue is in his vault: a name change and a detective's report stating they are ending a quarter of a century's surveillance on "William Drew." O'Brien heads out, crashing his plane into Sally Eiler's bath room while she's taking a shower. Drew's cow hands, Humphrey Bogart and Stanley Price, take a dislike to O'Brien. Miss Eilers and Rita Laroy are sort of interested.

It's derived from a Max Brand novel that had been filmed with Tom Mix a decade earlier as TRAILIN'. O'Brien is interesting to old movie fans. In this one, it's clear that Fox had him leading a programmer. Stanley Fields gives a fine, psychopathic performance, but Bogart, while he shows plenty of menace, seems miscast. Even so, it's Bogart who holds the most interest for the modern viewer, and he gives a clear and recognizable performance.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed