Ellery Queen, Master Detective (1940) Poster

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6/10
REBOOT by Columbia Pictures...
xerses137 February 2013
Ellery Queen had made two (2) previous appearances during the 1930s. THE Spanish CAPE MYSTERY (1935) Liberty Pictures, featuring Donald Cook and THE MANDARIN MYSTERY (1936) Republic Pictures, with the light-weight Eddie Quillan. Producer Larry Darmour cornered the rights to the Ellery Queen novels and through Columbia Pictures and Harry Cohn launched a new series of films. Starting with ELLERY QUEEN, Master Detective (1940).

Ralph Bellamy for the first four (4) pictures played 'QUEEN' with Margaret Lindsay as romantic interest and side-kick, 'NIKKI PORTER'. Bellamy after a strong start at RKO had slipped into character parts and second leads by the latter half of the 1930s. The same could be said about Ms. Lindsay over from Warner Brothers. This series kept them working and in the company of other professionals like Charlie Grapewine as Inspector Queen. Here also was Marsha Hunt, up and comer on loan-out from M.G.M. and Katherine DeMille who plugged in character parts too her other interests. Former Silent Director Fred Niblo (BEN-HUR, 1925) also picked up a check. For plot details, read the synopsis, it's all there.

Bellamy plays 'QUEEN' with a light touch, but with a earnest intelligence, making him a viable character. Ms. Lindsay also hits her mark with a attractive appearance and winning smile. Though She seems to wear the same suit the entire film. The rest of the cast and a quick running time makes this a worth while watch. After the first four (4) films William Gargan would pick up the 'QUEEN' mantle with Ms. Lindsay soldiering on. Gargan proved a acceptable replacement and would rate the entire series a even IMDB******Six(6) or a Standard Rating of Two(2)**Stars.
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6/10
This time it's Ralph Bellamy as Ellery Queen
blanche-24 September 2016
Ralph Bellamy stars as Ellery Queen in Ellery Queen, Master Detective, from 1940. Margaret Lindsay plays Nikki Porter, here a competitor and a potential love interest of Ellery's. Charles Grapwin plays Inspector Queen.

John Braun, who owns a fitness company and is a perfect specimen, finds out from his doctor that he's terminally ill. The next day, he changes his will, disinheriting his family and putting everything in the hands of the company.

His daughter (Marsha Hunt) is estranged from him, and Nikki goes to talk to him about the situation. He's signed the will and locked himself in his study.

Nikki waits a while and then finds out that she can't leave as the other door is locked. When she and Ellery finally get the door open, they find Braun dead from stabbing. The will and the murder weapon are gone. Ellery tells Nikki that as of now, she's the only one who could have done it.

I haven't seen all the actors who have played Ellery Queen by any means - I remember George Nader when I was a child and Jim Hutton later on. The Jim Hutton series was marvelous. The George Nader version may have been live TV -- for some reason I distinctly remember him saying murtel and then correcting himself and saying murder.

Bellamy is excellent, giving a spirited, light performance. He has good chemistry with Lindsay and with Charles Grapwin. His Ellery is super-smart and on the sarcastic side. "There's a door," Nikki says. "Oh, thank you," Ellery says. "I never would have found it."

Margaret Lindsay is marvelous as Nikki, who goes after a plot that Ellery wanted to use in his next book, that of this locked room mystery. He hides her in his house, and the next day introduces her as their new cook. She can't even boil water and incurs the ire of Inspector Queen.

I liked it - director Kurt Neumann keeps this 65-minute film moving. The plot is clever, and the film is enjoyable. Look for Charles Lane, who died in 2007 at the age of 102.
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7/10
Lively comedy with likeable characters
csteidler12 August 2019
Ralph Bellamy and Margaret Lindsay investigate a murder and have a good time doing it in this entertaining comedy.

Bellamy is a clever and playful Ellery Queen. "Did you buy this book?" he teases the police detective who asks him to autograph his latest book. "I've missed several from my study lately."

Lindsay is also fun as Nikki Porter, a would-be mystery writer herself. She has a shelf full of Ellery Queen's books but claims she can't stand him. Naturally the two soon meet, start bickering immediately, and only gradually become friends and allies.

The plot includes a murder but it's mainly an excuse to get Ellery and Nikki together. Nikki gets herself trapped in the outer office of a cranky millionaire who then dies mysteriously in the inner office. Ellery helps Nikki escape before the cops arrive. While the police look for Nikki, who has left her fingerprints all over, she hides out in Ellery's house--which of course is also the home of Ellery's father, Inspector Queen, who is investigating the murder.

That sounds like a dangerous ordeal but Nikki proves she is game: "You know something, Ellery?" she says after a narrow escape. "I'm beginning to like being a murder suspect. As long as they don't catch me."

Charley Grapewin is a colorful and fast-talking Inspector Queen. James Burke is fun as loyal assistant Sergeant Velle.

The murder suspects barely appear--this really is much more a comedy than a traditional whodunit. The stars eventually do some detecting but the focus is almost always on lively banter rather than murder clues. Overall, it's no showcase for amazing skills of deduction...but it is very easy to watch.
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6/10
It was suicide, but it was murder
bkoganbing16 June 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Fans of Ellery Queen had to feel quite a bit better with what Ralph Bellamy did with this and successive Ellery Queen movies. Ellery Queen, Master Detective has Ralph Bellamy both shielding a suspect and trying to find the evidence that will clear the woman he's shielding.

The one whom Bellamy is shielding is Margaret Lindsay who would turn up in a few subsequent Ellery Queen features as his girl Friday. She's a friend of the daughter of the deceased and Lindsay resemblance to Marsha Hunt causes her and Bellamy a lot of grief.

Silent film classic director Fred Niblo plays the deceased, a kind of Charles Atlas who is a physical fitness guru. His doctor and prospective son-in-law Michael Whalen has diagnosed him with an incurable disease and faced with the prospective of a long and lingering death, Niblo kills himself. But the weapon and a new will he made out are missing. And Lindsay was the last one to see him.

As it turns out the events surrounding the crime can all be explained as they eventually are by natural causes. Except for the fact that Niblo's body is stolen twice from the hands of coroner Charles Lane. Someone had a real good reason for not wanting an autopsy.

Bellamy was quite an improvement over Donald Cook and Eddie Quillan who played the mystery writer/sleuth before. Charley Grapewin settled nicely into the role of his patient, but somewhat harassed father Inspector Queen of NYPD homicide. I think you'll find this an interesting film for the performances and for the fact the solution is a somewhat unusual one.
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7/10
Ellery Queen, master detective
coltras3525 November 2023
John Braun, healthy and athletic model for his fitness enterprise, gets fatally ill and on the next day changes his will, leaving everything to his company. John locks himself up in his study, but Nikki goes to talk with him. She waits in the anteroom, but finds herself locked in and when they finally manage to open the door, they find Braun sitting at his desk, stabbed, and both the will and the murder weapon missing.

The first Ellery Queen to star Ralph Bellamy is a lively mix of humour and murder with the chemistry between Bellamy and Lindsay being the shining part of the film. The mystery itself is your usual locked room murder with a household of suspects.
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5/10
Ingenious, but not very exciting
gridoon20244 May 2011
Warning: Spoilers
This is the first entry in the "official" Ellery Queen film series (though actually the third film starring that character); Ellery is played by Ralph Bellamy, who is just a tad colorless in the part (Donald Cook of "The Spanish Cape Mystery" remains my favorite so far), but he does have a certain sweet chemistry with the beautiful Margaret Lindsay, especially when he wakes up in the middle of the night to cook her something to eat; Lindsay's presence and smile brighten the movie, and I'm glad they decided to make her a recurring character in the series. The plot is pretty ingenious - a seemingly unsolvable puzzle (the dead man is found in a locked room with his throat slashed; there is only one way in, but we know nobody went through there; he might have committed suicide, but then where is the weapon?) with a simple, oh-but-of-course! solution. But the film is not very exciting or suspenseful, although it does end with a brief car chase / crash which was somewhat of a surprise for a production of this caliber. ** out of 4.
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5/10
Okay big screen appearance of a not so master detective
dbborroughs15 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
(Possible spoiler ahead)

Ralph Bellamy stars as Ellery Queen,best selling author and son of Inspector Queen of the New York Police force. Ellery gets mixed up in the death of a fitness guru who has been diagnosed with a terminal disease. However after changing his will and letting the vultures around him know they have all been cut out the old man is found dead. The body begins to go missing and Ellery has to keep the prime suspect out of police hands.

First in a short lived series, its an okay comedic mystery but a far from a great one. To be certain Bellamy is better than Eddie Quillan who played him in the truly awful Mandarin Mystery a few years earlier, but he's too lethargic and a bit too dense for such a great detective. Granted he's ahead of everyone else, but he doesn't seem to actually do much. The rest of the cast is fine consisting of a good group of supporting player stalwarts who play it as real as B-mysteries get. The real problem with the film is the script, plot holes abound, however the movie moves along at a good clip and its easy to forgive most of them. Not so easy to forgive is that three minutes in its plainly clear not only who the murderer is going to be, but also whats going on and why. I've never seen a killer so clear outside of a Columbo mystery where the whole point of the movie is to watch the detective and killer crash heads. It ruined the film since all suspense was drained from the proceedings, even with some final revelations (which raised more plot questions). Okay at best, its not one I'll probably watch again (I'll take out my tapes of the old Jim Hutton TV show).
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8/10
An 'impossible' crime!
binapiraeus7 February 2014
Now THERE's a mystery if ever there was one: John Braun, who's always been the perfectly healthy and athletic model for his fitness enterprise, learns that he's incurably ill - and changes his will the next day, disinheriting his family and leaving everything to his company. His daughter's friend Nikki goes to his home to talk to him right after he's signed the will and locked himself up in his study. She waits in the anteroom - and soon finds out that she can't get out, because the other door is locked as well; and when they finally manage to open the door, they find Braun sitting at his desk, stabbed, and both the will and the murder weapon missing - which leaves Nikki as the ONLY person who could have committed the murder...

In this third 'Ellery Queen' mystery, Ralph Bellamy for the first time plays the police detective's son, writer, and hobby sleuth; and he does quite well, although he isn't quite as charming and funny as Donald Cook in the first one - he's more the serious, clever, and slightly ironic type. But the center of attraction (in every way) is Margaret Lindsay as Nikki, who is TRAPPED in every sense of the word...

This is one of the movies to which should be added 'Don't tell the ending to anyone!' - because it REALLY takes a crime film or novel expert to solve the case. Classic murder mystery at its best here!
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5/10
Locked Room Mystery
boblipton11 May 2020
When health-farm magnate Fred Niblo is found murdered in his study, suspicion falls on aspiring detective-story writer Nikki Porter, as played by Margaret Lindsay, who was the last person to see him. Fortunately Ellery Queen, in the person of Ralph Bellamy, decides she's innocent and to crack the case himself.

It's the first of four movies that Bellamy starred in as Queen for Columbia, with Charley Grapewin as his father. It's a locked room mystery, but not a particularly good one; after the first couple of reelsw to establish the characters and look over the crime scene with the Queens, there's half an hour of comedy, as Bellamy hides Miss Lindsay away in the apartment he shares with Grapewin, as a cook. Even so, director Kurt Neumann and a capable cast make this half-hour story watchable over more than twice that time.
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5/10
Missing the bang and the bite that really gets detective series rolling.
mark.waltz1 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
For the first entry of the Ellery Queen movie series at Columbia, Ralph Bellamy is a suave and smooth Ellery and Margaret Lindsay is sassy and delightful as his secretary to be, Nikki. However, the film itself leaves a lot to be desired, quite talkie and often rather dull.

The film involves the murder of a domineering wealthy man (Fred Niblo), having drove daughter Marsha Hunt out of their house when she married a man that he did not approve of. It appears that the wealthy man was manipulated by a crack doctor (Michael Whelan) and now believes that he is dying. When the millionaire shows up dead with his throat slit, the suspects are numerous but the culprit is obvious. Clues of suicide are left and even Lindsay's character is a suspect. James Burke goes from being typecast harassed police officer to Ellery's often idiotic assistantt, and Charley Grapewin of "The Wizard of Oz" is a lot of fun as Ellery's father. There's also busy character actor Charles Lane as the doctor who does the murdered man's autopsy and comes up with several different theories and Ann Shoemaker as Niblo's long-suffering wife. While the cast is in general very good, the film needed a little more spark to remain truly memorable.
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