poster

Lucky Jordan (1942)

6 | Nov 16, 1942 (US) | Comedy, Crime, Drama | 01:24

Tough ... trigger mad ... and Terrific !

Lucky Jordan is a gangster living in New York City and when he's drafted into the army, he tries to escape duty by using an old con woman named Annie to convince the draft board he's needed at home. When that fails, Jordan is sent to boot camp, but he doesn't stay there long. He takes a beautiful USO worker hostage and flees back to New York. There, he learns that a rival gangster is plotting against America.

Featured Crew

Director
Director of Photography
Costume Design
Makeup Artist
Screenplay
Art Direction
Orchestrator
Original Music Composer
Art Direction
Sound Recordist

Cast

profile
Alan Ladd
Lucky Jordan
profile
Helen Walker
Jill Evans
profile
Sheldon Leonard
Slip Moran
profile
Mabel Paige
Annie ('Ma')
profile
Lloyd Corrigan
Ernest Higgins
profile
Dave Willock
Angelo Palacio
profile
John Wengraf
Herr Kesselman
profile
Miles Mander
Kilpatrick

Reviews

avatar
CinemaSerf
6 | May 27, 2024
I never really rated Alan Ladd but he's quite decent in this wartime thriller. He's the gangster "Lucky" who finds himself drafted! Despite the best efforts of his lawyer "Higgins" (Lloyd Corrigan) to get him off, he is duly posted - and promptly absconds. Not before, though, he encounters "Jill" (Helen Walker) who disapproves heartily of his unpatriotic attitude. She ends up his hostage and the briefcase she was carrying becomes the hottest property in town. We discover it contains some top secret army designs and that there's a group of Nazi fifth columnist's out to retrieve it. Now "Lucky" has to make some tough choices (and a fairly impassioned speech at the end) before their secrets fall into enemy hands. The drama itself is quite well put together and decently paced. There's a solid, if unremarkable, effort from Walker and a few scene stealing quips from Mabel Paige's rather astute "Annie" - the sharpest, shrewdest and wittiest of the bunch. It's all fairly standard fayre, but is an easy watch as it sows the seeds for US involvement in WWII.