Michael Lanyard / The Lone Wolf
Warren William
Michael Lanyard / The Lone Wolf

“THE LONE WOLF SEES EVERYTHING...including five women who won't talk!”
Reformed jewel thief the Lone Wolf investigates the murder of a playboy who was blackmailing three socialites.
Michael Lanyard / The Lone Wolf
Warren William
Michael Lanyard / The Lone Wolf
Eve Andrews
Marguerite Chapman
Eve Andrews
Jamison
Eric Blore
Jamison
Jane Merrick
Mona Barrie
Jane Merrick
Sonia Budenny
Tala Birell
Sonia Budenny
Patricia Blake (Shaw)
Margaret Hayes
Patricia Blake (Shaw)
Vivian
Ann Savage
Vivian
Inspector Crane
Thurston Hall
Inspector Crane
Sidney Shannon
Warren Ashe
Sidney Shannon
Detective Dickens
Fred Kelsey
Detective Dickens
Harry Cooper
Gerald Mohr
Harry Cooper
Arthur
Louis Jean Heydt
Arthur
I imagine this is the kind of movie you might have gone to see in a drive-in. Made amidst WWII, it tells a rather quirky tale of "Eve" (Marguerite Chapman) whose car is totalled and she is luckily rescued by the "Lone Wolf" himself (Warren William) and his loyal sidekick "Jamison" (Eric Blore). They escort her to her home only to find that when they get there, there is a body. It's a renowned playboy and it's very, very quiet! Police inspector "Crane" (Thurston Hall) is unimpressed by the array of alibis on offer and so arrests them all - but our shrewd sleuths escape, and begin to piece things together uncovering a story of blackmail and jewel thievery with the enigmatic "Patricia" (Margaret Hayes) playing an increasingly significant and puzzling role in their investigations. Can they solve this before the police apprehend them again, and again - or, ideally, before anyone else gets bumped off? Nope, there's not the slightest hint of jeopardy here and the production is really very basic. That said, there's a bit of an entertaining dynamic between Warren and Blore and the whole thing has enough of it's tongue in it's cheek to keep it entertaining if not exactly taxing on the little grey cells. It's twenty minutes too long, and at times it regurgitates itself a bit much - but as wartime whodunits go, it's by no means the worst.
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