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The Girl in the Case (1944)

6 | Apr 20, 1944 (US) | Mystery, Comedy | 01:05

SH-H-H-H!

William Warner is a lawyer who is famous for his skill at opening any kind of lock, making him a valuable commodity. William is unknowingly enlisted by German spies who want him to open a chest containing a secret formula. This leads to a madcap adventure involving spies, the police and lots of picked locks!

Featured Crew

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Screenplay

Cast

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Edmund Lowe
William Warner
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Janis Carter
Myra Warner
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Robert B. Williams
Malloy (as Bob Williams)
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Richard Hale
John Heyser
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Tom Kennedy
Watchman (uncredited)
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Kaye Dowd
Secretary (uncredited)
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Dusty Anderson
Beautiful Girl (uncredited)
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Harry 'Snub' Pollard
Witness (uncredited)

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
6 | Nov 28, 2023
I rather enjoyed this quirky and quickly paced wartime thriller. "Warner" (Edmund Lowe) is a renowned lawyer who also dabbles, successfully, in a bit of locksmithery. Indeed, he is regularly called upon by companies and authorities alike to help them out when locks needs "unlocking". His skills are also on the radar of some devious Nazi spies who want to try and trick him into opening a safe in which some secret documents are securely stashed. Can he, and his increasingly involved wife "Myra" (Janis Carter) stay one step of the fifth columnists and, probably for him, not fall down the fire escape, or off the window ledge, or end up in a big chest or in jail with $25,000 of dodgy loot? The production is a bit basic and there's a bit too much dialogue, but when Lowe and Carter are sharing the screen together, there's enough comedy chemistry to raise a smile or two before the predicable denouement. This is typical WWII feel-good fayre, but some effort has gone into the story and the characters and it's certainly at the better end of the genre.