MYSTERY! 1933 “Tomorrow at Seven” CLASSIC MOVIE film full length free black and white old



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This movie is so entertaining! It stars Chester Morris (love him!), funny men Frank McHugh and Allen Jenkins, and many other 30s actors and actresses I think you’ll recognize and have a good time watching.
“A murderer, known as “The Black Ace”, menaces a number of people staying in an old dark mansion. This 1933 picture features matinee idol Chester Morris as an author intent on writing a book about the notorious criminal. He visits criminal expert Thornton Drake to get more information about the case. When someone receives the killer’s calling card (the “ace of spades”) the mystery begins. This is a wonderfully entertaining old fashioned mystery movie with all the hallmarks – an old house, servants, guests, a dashing hero, some bumbling detectives and a murderer among them”. (Written by someone I wish I could give credit to if I just knew their name! I couldn’t have said it any better– thank you from all of us! 😉
Here are the Cast members (I imagine you know at least a couple!):
Chester Morris as Neil Broderick
Vivienne Osborne as Martha Winters
Frank McHugh as Clancy
Allen Jenkins as Dugan
Henry Stephenson as Thornton Drake
Grant Mitchell as Austin Winters
Charles B. Middleton as Jerry Simons
Oscar Apfel as Asa Marsden
Virginia Howell as Mrs. Quincy
Cornelius Keefe as Henderson
Edward LeSaint as Coroner
Gus Robinson as Pompey

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7 Replies to “MYSTERY! 1933 “Tomorrow at Seven” CLASSIC MOVIE film full length free black and white old”

  1. Typical "Shoestring Budget" B-Film of the early thirties, from a "skid row" studio. That script had more holes in it than Swiss cheese………Hahahahahahaha!!! But, how can you beat that A-list cast of character actors? You can't; and that's why, after 83 years, we still watch and enjoy this below-average movie. Just watching Morris, McHugh, and Jenkins dance around a crappy screenplay, is enjoyment enough; and it's those actors that salvage an otherwise worthless piece of celluloid……. Great people will save your bacon, more often than not…….

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