Blonde for a Day (1946) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
4/10
Expose leaves reporter exposed
bkoganbing30 December 2018
Poverty Row PRC studios took over the Michael Shayne franchise from 20th Century Fox and instead of Lloyd Nolan as Shayne, PRC cast Hugh Beaumont. The future dad of Beaver Cleaver had the same wise guy attitude as Nolan did, but without half the ability to put the character over.

The lack of production values shows in this one really shows as against Nolan's 20th Century Fox Shayne's which were from their B picture unit. Beaumont goes to San Francisco to investigate the shooting and beating of his friend, investigative reporter Paul Bryar by some gangsters who have a nice illegal gambling racket going on in the city by the bay.

But there's another possibility too. Bryar's editor Frank Ferguson is worried that his wife might be stepping out on him with Bryar and he might be the responsible party. It's up to Beaumont to sort out the culpability.

The players do their best, but it's PRC shoddy at its best.
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Routine, at Best
dougdoepke17 February 2018
Unremarkable Mike Shayne programmer, the sort of assembly line product that kept post-war audiences entertained (1946). Mike (Beaumont) is trying to find who shot his reporter buddy Rourke (Bryar), leading him through a thicket of blondes, a brunette, and an ornery editor (Ferguson). Unfortunately, the handsome Shayne lacks an edge to go along with his impish charm that too often bleeds into a wise-guy manner. As an actor, Beaumont's much better as Beaver Cleaver's dad. Not much suspense builds as the story progresses, nor does the visual style add mood. Rather, the focus is more on personalities than plot. And in that regard, the hefty Kendall's chief inspector appears too dense to be either amusing or convincing. Nonetheless, the two statuesque brunettes, Adams and Hoshelle, are real eye-catchers, at the same time Adams swings a really mean right-cross that's perhaps the movie's high point. Anyway, if you don't require much from amateur detective flicks, it's an easy though forgettable 68-minutes.
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Strange How Manhattan Looks Like Suburban LA
boblipton21 May 2020
Hugh Beaumont is Mike Shayne. His real-life wife, Kathryn Adams, is his secretary. When his old friend, Paul Bryar, is beaten to a pulp, the PI and his girl Friday fly to a Manhattan that looks surprisingly like Glendale in this blah entry in the Monogram series.

THe story is appropriately convoluted, but it's abbreviated by a series of women who say "I shouldn't tell you, but....", including nurses, legal secretaries and so forth. It's the only way that screenwriter Fred Myton seems to be able to figure out how to advance the plot. He had a long and thoroughly undistinguished career in Hollywood in B westerns and cheap melodramas, from 1916 until 1952, ratcheting out scenarios and screenplays for almost 170 shorts and features. He died in 1955, a few months shy of his 70th birthday.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Lots of blondes, and a brunette or two.
ralphv17 January 2019
Tightly plotted detective flick with Hugh Beaumont as Mike Shayne, one of five after taking over from Lloyd Nolan. Those only familiar with Beaumont as a television dad will be surprised by his hard edge and sense of humor. Good portrayal of the iconic character.
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed