Reporter Mike Lawrence lands in Panama, gets embraced by a stranger, and is pursued by agents convinced he has a secret formula for the Panama Canal's safety.Reporter Mike Lawrence lands in Panama, gets embraced by a stranger, and is pursued by agents convinced he has a secret formula for the Panama Canal's safety.Reporter Mike Lawrence lands in Panama, gets embraced by a stranger, and is pursued by agents convinced he has a secret formula for the Panama Canal's safety.
Sam McDaniel
- Rodriguez Lincoln Jones
- (as Sam "Deacon"McDaniel)
Elias Gamboa
- Police Officer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
Roger Pryor is a reporter who's just flown into Panama. Saloon singer Virginia Vale meets him at the airport, kisses him and says to come along with her. She's there to meet her brother, Hugh Beaumont, who's just invented a paint to make planes invisible, but she's spotted a tail and figured that spies are out to snatch him for the secret. She's right, too. Later she puts on a wig and a Spanish accent and she's unrecognizable.
Actually, the script is a lot better than that; once you've accepted that the script works -- and there's a demonstration -- it make sense. It's the first movie credits for writers Ben Roberts and Sidney Sheldon. They would break up as a team, and Sheldon would win an Oscar in 1947 and devise I DREAM OF JEANNIE; Roberts would go on to create CHARLIE'S ANGELS. There's some excitement, some good humor under the direction of Jean Yarborough, some hokey stuff -- Sam McDaniel plays a stereotypical Black waiter -- and a car chase through the rugged mountains roads of the Canal Zone. If you can ignore those and Pryor's indifferent line readings, there's some fun here.
Actually, the script is a lot better than that; once you've accepted that the script works -- and there's a demonstration -- it make sense. It's the first movie credits for writers Ben Roberts and Sidney Sheldon. They would break up as a team, and Sheldon would win an Oscar in 1947 and devise I DREAM OF JEANNIE; Roberts would go on to create CHARLIE'S ANGELS. There's some excitement, some good humor under the direction of Jean Yarborough, some hokey stuff -- Sam McDaniel plays a stereotypical Black waiter -- and a car chase through the rugged mountains roads of the Canal Zone. If you can ignore those and Pryor's indifferent line readings, there's some fun here.
Photos
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe earliest documented telecast of this film occurred Monday 9 October 1944 on New York City's pioneer television station WNBT (Channel 1); in Washington DC and Baltimore it first aired Thursday 11 November 1948 on WAAM (Channel 13) and on WMAL (Channel 7), in Cincinnati Sunday 12 December 1948 on WLW-T (Channel 4), in Detroit Wednesday 9 March 1949 on WXYZ (Channel 7), in Dayton Tuesday 19 April 1949 on WHIO (Channel 13), and in Los Angeles Thursday 22 December 1949 on KTLA (Channel 5).
- Crazy creditsSee after the opening credits: The Producers of this Motion Picture grateful acknowledge the co-operation of the Royal Air Force for allowing them the use of the actual working models of the Hudson Bomber; and for their invaluable assistance. To the men of the R.A.F. -- Democracy's first line of defense -- this picture is respectfully dedicated.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 8 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content