The White Cockatoo
The White Cockatoo
| 29 January 1935 (USA)
The White Cockatoo Trailers

In a spooky hotel on the coast of France, two bands of crooks are working independently of the other in an attempt to steal the inherited fortune of an American girl, Sue Tally. Along the way the heiress is kidnapped, three murders are committed, a girl appears in two places at once, mysterious persons roam about the old hotel at night and mysteriously disappear, and there is a hidden room without any doors.

Reviews
Ameriatch One of the best films i have seen
SnoReptilePlenty Memorable, crazy movie
Majorthebys Charming and brutal
Allissa .Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.
JohnHowardReid Associate producer: Henry Blanke. Copyright 29 January 1935 by Warner Bros Pictures, Inc. New York opening at the Astor: 15 January 1935. Australian release: 8 May 1935. 7 reels. 73 minutes.SYNOPSIS: An American heiress is marked for murder at a lonely French hotel.COMMENT: Although the film starts far more promisingly than it finishes, "The White Cockatoo" is a fascinatingly atmospheric mystery, superbly enacted by a fine cast of players, including the lovely Jean Muir as the vulnerable heroine, dashing Ricardo Cortez as the helpful hero, shady Gordon Westcott as a mysterious "doctor", eccentric Ruth Donnelly as a matronly guest, and Minna Gombell as a conspiratorial inn-keeper. Most of the action takes place at night, enabling director Alan Crosland and photographer Tony Gaudio many dramatically atmospheric effects, all artistically framed, such as the shot of Jean Muir against the sea.OTHER VIEWS: A nicely complicated mystery, its atmosphere somewhat undermined by the casting of Walter Kingsford as a French inn- keeper, of all things. He mugs and over-acts atrociously. Fortunately, the rest of the players, including blonde charmer, Jean Muir, equally attractive Pauline Garon, suave John Eldredge and brusque Gordon Westcott make valiant efforts to save the picture from Kingsford's clutches. Thanks to Crosland's skillful direction and Gaudio's tingling photography, they succeed. - JHR writing as George Addison.
calvinnme There's a comforting familiarity about small mystery thrillers from the 1930s, such as this one. It has a lot of the usual plot elements: mysterious tavern setting in an isolated part of the country (in this case France), a girl (Muir) waiting there to inherit a fortune, shots in the dark, a body found, the usual red herring suspects (almost everyone in the cast) and the police inspecting the case who are every bit as hopeless at solving a crime in France as they are in American set thrillers of the same nature.This Warner Brothers affair is directed with efficiency by old pro Alan Crosland, the film further benefiting from some wonderful tavern sets (probably left over from some bigger budgeted productions but every bit as effective here), all beautifully photographed.And the cast is an engaging one. Ricardo Cortez, second billed, is really the lead in this film, as an American tourist who becomes involved in the mysterious tavern happenings, and largely takes over as amateur detective in trying to crack the case (since it's apparent the police here will never be able to do so). And Cortez is solid in his part, as well as showing some smooth charm, which was his trademark.I happened to find the book of that title by Mignon Eberhart - a great mystery writer of the 30's and 40's - in a used bookstore. The film pretty much adheres to the story.
MartinHafer In the 1930s and 40s, Hollywood made approximately 400,038,823 films similar to "The White Cockatoo". Murder mystery/whodunnits were a dime a dozen back then and because of this, I wasn't too interested in watching this film though I did because I usually enjoy Richardo Cortez films. Fortunately, it's better than I expected.The film is set in a bizarro version of a French hotel. In other words, practically no one (other than the police who show up later) speaks with the least hint of a French accent! This isn't really a major problem...and it's common during this era of film making. Sue (Jean Muir) has come here from the States to meet her step-brother to settle their father's estate and they've never met each other. Jim (Cortez) is another American who just happens to be there and gets pulled into the murders...yes, murders. When the first body appears, the French police tell everyone that they must remain in the hotel until the case is solved. However, when more bodies start appearing you wonder who is going to buy the farm next and who is behind it all.Overall, despite being talky (very common to all these sort of films), this one is well acted, well made and has a genuinely interesting story. Well worth seeing and among the better whodunnits I have seen.
dougdoepke Routine whodunit, more complex than most. Seems Sue (Muir) travels to a French village to meet her long lost brother, so that once their identities are confirmed, they'll share a big inheritance. Trouble is people start turning up dead at their hotel, while Sue seemingly overcomes physics by appearing in more than one place at the same time. So what's going on.Unlike the Hollywood custom of the day, there's no amateur sleuth operating here. Instead guest Sundean (Cortez) stumbles around along with the French cops. Reviewer GManfred is right: the narrative lacks suspense. I think it's mainly because there are too many angles at play at the same time. In short, too many subplots detract from needed whodunnit focus. Instead, there's dark Gothic atmosphere, along with a single wind recording that blows throughout. Anyway, Muir looks pretty, Donnelly acts ditzy, while the Cockatoo qualifies for SAG membership. But anything memorable, it's not.
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