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The Garden Murder Case

The Garden Murder Case (1936)

February. 21,1936
|
6
|
NR
| Mystery

Detective Philo Vance is in charge of the investigation of several mysterious murders. Things take a turn when he gathers evidence against Major Fenwicke-Ralston.

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PiraBit
1936/02/21

if their story seems completely bonkers, almost like a feverish work of fiction, you ain't heard nothing yet.

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Humaira Grant
1936/02/22

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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Kien Navarro
1936/02/23

Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.

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Fatma Suarez
1936/02/24

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

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stancarter
1936/02/25

Any movie with Virginia Bruce in it is worth watching, and I enjoyed Jessie Ralph's tantrum, similar to the ones she threw in The Thin Man. But this movie doesn't make a lot of sense. For one thing, people can't be hypnotized to kill themselves, unless they're suicidal in the first place. You might be able to hypnotize someone to jump off a bus if you tell them it's on fire and they'll land on a soft mattress, but not if they know they're going to die, as the character in this movie does, and states very clearly ahead of time. Also, there's an annoying scene -- repeated in so many movies -- where someone tells the detective they know who the killer is. Naturally they don't give them the name at the time, but promise to reveal it later. Which of course they never do because they're killed before they can. Yes, Philo, by all means make sure the person doesn't give you the name over the phone, because... why exactly? And the "dueling pistol" looks like a modern gun to me, not an antique. And when the killer tries to hypnotize Vance, does he really think it's that easy, just flash your shiny cigarette case in his eyes and he'll go under?

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MartinHafer
1936/02/26

Etienne Girardot is just a character actor--the sort of person people almost never would know by name. However, he once again plays the coroner--one of the only actors in the Philo Vance films that played his role more than once. I've already seen him two other times and loved him every time because he was so funny and a breath of fresh air. This film also is great to watch because in addition to Girardot, there are many other wonderful character actors along for the ride--including Grant Mitchell, Gene Lockhart, Henry Walthal, Kent Smith, H.B. Warner and Nat Pendleton. This is quite an impressive cast, and they sure made the job easier for leading man and woman Edmund Lowe and Virginia Bruce.These great character actors are one of the big reasons I love these old B-movies. While the mystery itself is rarely that terrific, because of the breezy writing and acting, the films really satisfy. As for this film, Vance is played wonderfully by Lowe but, like I said, the mystery itself is only an after-thought--with a silly plot involving hypnosis and suicides. Unfortunately, you cannot hypnotize anyone to do anything of the sort--I have training in clinical hypnosis and if I COULD do anything like the evil guy could do in the film, I would have done it! Used car salesmen and a few of my old bosses would have been obvious targets!! Overall, while not the best Philo Vance film, it was very good and it's a darn shame Lowe only played this role once. In fact, aside from William Powell (who played Vance five times), the series was hindered by a long, long succession of actors such as Basil Rathbone, Wilfred Hyde-White and Warren William (and many others) playing Vance. This is a similar problem that also plagued the Bulldog Drummond series--just too many different actors playing the leading man.Well worth seeing and exciting--though also quite impossible.

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bkoganbing
1936/02/27

S.S. Van Dine must have been a shrewd businessman in dealing with Hollywood. Most of the film series' from the studio days were usually confined to one or two studios. But apparently Van Dine must have sold his rights to each book about Philo Vance one at a time. Note that Paramount, MGM, Warner Brothers, and more all released Philo Vance films. Only Tarzan seemed to get around Hollywood more.MGM produced the Garden Murder Case and starred Edmund Lowe as the fashionable detective. Of course MGM had the screen's original Philo under contract at the time, but Bill Powell was busy doing The Thin Man at the time and I guess Louis B. Mayer decided to concentrate him there.Edmund Lowe is a pretty acceptable Philo Vance. Lowe had started out pretty big at the tail end of the silent era with What Price Glory and then with a string of films with Victor McLaglen with their Flagg and Quirt characters. But after McLaglen got his Oscar for The Informer, Lowe seemed to fade into the B picture market. The Garden Murder Case involves three separate victims, Douglas Walton, Gene Lockhart, and Frieda Inescourt. The sinister atmosphere around the perpetrator kind of gives it away, the mystery is really how all the killings are connected and how they are accomplished.I will say this though. Vance takes a very big chance in exposing the villain and the last 15 minutes are worthy of Hitchcock.

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Arthur Hausner
1936/02/28

Of the ten actors who portrayed Philo Vance in the series, Edmund Lowe seemed the most personable, but in this script the audience is way ahead of the famed detective. After all, when the jockey, Douglas Walton, stares blankly in space, obviously hypnotized, and says something like "I must ride and be killed," I felt it was dumb that no one picked up on it after he does get killed. The police thought it was a suicide because he said he would do it! After hated horse owner Gene Lockhart gets shot and killed, Frieda Inescort does the same thing, saying she's going out to be killed, and then fatally jumps off a bus. I laughed when Lowe finally yells "I got it," as though it were a revelation. The guilty party, however, was cleverly concealed and there was considerable suspense generated when that party starts to hypnotize Lowe to get him to jump off a roof.

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