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Blood Money
Blood Money

Blood Money (1933)

70% User Rating
1h 5min
Crime

"The Law Got Them In! But He Got Them Out!"

The title refers to the business of affable, ambitious bail bondsman (and politically-connected grifter) Bill Bailey, who, in the course of his work, crosses paths with every kind of offender there is, from first-time defendants to career criminals.

Rowland BrownDirector

Cast

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George Bancroft

George Bancroft

Bill Bailey

Judith Anderson

Judith Anderson

Ruby Darling

Frances Dee

Frances Dee

Elaine Talbart

Chick Chandler

Chick Chandler

Drury Darling

Blossom Seeley

Blossom Seeley

Singer

Etienne Girardot

Etienne Girardot

Bail Bond Clerk

George Regas

George Regas

Charley

Lucille Ball

Lucille Ball

Davy's Girlfriend (uncredited)

Herman Bing

Herman Bing

Butcher Weighing Sausages (uncredited)

John Bleifer

John Bleifer

Bombmaker (uncredited)

Ann Brody

Ann Brody

Jewish Client (uncredited)

Bess Flowers

Bess Flowers

Party Guest (uncredited)

Noel Francis

Noel Francis

Red's Girlfriend (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Henry Lewis Jr.

Jewish Client's Son (uncredited)

Nina Mae McKinney

Nina Mae McKinney

Rebecca, Ruby's maid (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Bert Moorhouse

Charley's Henchman (uncredited)

Theresa Harris

Theresa Harris

Jessica (uncredited)

Henry Kolker

Henry Kolker

Newspaper Managing Editor (uncredited)

Dennis O'Keefe

Dennis O'Keefe

Racetrack Spectator (uncredited)

Bradley Page

Bradley Page

District Attorney (uncredited)

Sandra Shaw

Sandra Shaw

Job Seeker (uncredited)

Kathlyn Williams

Kathlyn Williams

Nightclub Woman Wearing Monocle (uncredited)

Reviews (1)

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W
waltzma
Rating 80%

December 14, 2017

This is a saucy pre-code melodrama that deserves cult status. Bail bondsman George Bancroft is known all throughout New York City and encounters people from every scrape of society in this pre-code crime drama. But he's going to need every ounce of street-smarts when he strikes up an acquaintance with kleptomaniac Frances Dee, a woman with a rather animistic sexual appetite. Judith Anderson gets to display a rare glamorous side here as the nightclub hostess obviously in love with Bancroft, with her famous mole darkened into a beauty spot. Dee gives Bancroft several looks that It's nice to see her playing a softer character. This is a fast-moving programmer, made on a dime, but not showing it. Quick edits, snappy photography and dialog, nice musical interludes by Blossom Seeley (singing such standards as "Melancholy Baby"), and a side of seedy New York sung about in the same year's "42nd Street" diluted in most movies. There's hints about lesbianism in addition to Dee's whacked-out libido. Tons of familiar character actors pop in and out, most notably Etienne Girardot, Chick Chandler (as Anderson's gangster brother), Clarence Wilson and Edward Van Sloan. There's even a very young Lucille Ball in a quick appearance! An exciting dog racing sequence is one of the film's visual highlights, and the finale is downright suspenseful, like something Hitchcock might do.

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