Big Town
Big Town
| 19 December 1932 (USA)
Big Town Trailers

A newspaper owner discovers that his girlfriend's father is the head of the biggest racket in New York City.

Reviews
Matrixiole Simple and well acted, it has tension enough to knot the stomach.
Maidexpl Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast
Fairaher The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Bessie Smyth Great story, amazing characters, superb action, enthralling cinematography. Yes, this is something I am glad I spent money on.
kidboots Never heard that expression used as frequently as it is in this movie. Lester Vail and Frances Dade are not exactly names that spring to mind when you are thinking of stars that have had an even okay career and it looks like "Big Town" was the movie that put paid to both their careers. Dade was just another starlet whose biggest hit was "Dracula" and Vail was just another stolid leading man whose career never really got into second gear. As with a lot of these obscure films, a lot of the cast seemed to be fly-by- nighters, around only for one or two movies and then disappearing into the night - like Geoffrey Bryant who played eager reporter Riley and Edith Broder as his long suffering wife who turned up every so often with the question "Have you seen Riley"???"Big Town" - gee, I wonder what this movie is about? Could it be vice and corruption in the big city? Racketeer Romero is due to meet the police to co-operate with the low down about the big boss of big town!! Newshound Riley wants the scoop but they are both hoodwinked by Romero's moll Etheline (Diane Bori, another fly-by-nighter) who squeals to the big boss who sees to it that Romero is taken for a ride.Vail is Jimmy who has inherited the paper from his father and wants to carry on the tradition of truth and gangland exposure. Also finding time to romance Pat Holmes (Dade) whose square shooting father is - you guessed it, Mr. Big of Big Town. Not a huge amount of action going on, the plot has more to do with Pat's coming to terms with her father's duplicity. Jimmy helps her escape from her father's house by registering her at a hotel under a different name, father sees the name and thinks Jimmy is hiding a floozie so gets the place raided by the police. When he realises he has smeared his own daughter's name over the front pages - there is only one way out!!On a positive note, never heard Lester Vail so jovial and cracking jokes - I can only remember him as Joan Crawford's blue blood boy friend in "Dance Fools, Dance"(1931).