A Dangerous Game (1941) Poster

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4/10
A Comedy At The Looney Bin
boblipton18 June 2019
When a doctor is killed at a mental hospital, detective Richard Arlen shows up to investigate the murder. At the same time, two sets of crooks descend on the facility to try to rob and swindle patient Andrew Toombes out of the quarter of a million dollars of cash he has.

It's one of those forced, frantic comedies that showed up fairly often, with several well-known comics of the era: Andy Devine, Edward Brophy, Tom Dugan, and Vince Barnett. Yet of all of them, the funniest performance is given by Marc Lawrence: not, alas, that the competition is so very difficult. Still, he distinguishes himself when he tries to torture Devine with a banana.

This not particularly funny comedy was one the movies included in Universal's 1957 Shock Theater package. I suppose they had to add in some odd ones to come up to 52 entries for those midnight TV movies.
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6/10
Great cast sells an otherwise okay comedy mystery mess
dbborroughs17 January 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Mobsters show up at a sanitarium in order to get the secret of hidden money from one of the patients.Into the mix come more crooks, people claiming to be related to the rich man and a detective. The robbery which begins to go wrong almost instantly suddenly becomes murder as someone begins to kill off the people gathered. Good, unremarkable and unlikely to stick in your brain comedy mystery is an amusing way to spend an hour. Overly silly at times, to the point any suspense is lost, this is film produces its share of chuckles thanks to a stalwart cast of character actors headed by Andy Divine as a male nurse. Everyone in the film is in fine form which helps to make the thin story worth seeing. A light hearted diversion worth sticking with if you stumble across it.
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4/10
The eye can only focus on so much wackiness.
mark.waltz20 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This mystery farce set in a mental hospital is filled with crazy patients and even loonier visitors, as well as a group of criminals with a man in drag who seems to be trying to look like Hope Emerson. Then there are the detectives (Richard Arlen and Andy Devine) who show up to try and figure out the whole mess, and they should have turned to the audience to tell them in spots exactly what was going on. The highlight in the film is a fight to get ahold of a satchel filled with money which resembles a classic Keystone Cops routine, famously recreated a few years after this in "High Button Shoes".

Not a fan of the Arlen and Devine pairings, this is probably the best of their early 1940's pairings, and that is not saying much. A cast of recognizable funny character actors (most notably Vince Barnett and Edward Brophy) rounds out the cast along with Jean Brooks as the heroine and Mira McKinney as an officious hospital staff member, but there is far too much going on with the characters yelling over each other and often speaking far too fast. The presence of Richard Carle is a sight to behold. While there are many hilarious moments, they do not add up to a memorable film, and certain sequences are painfully long in their attempts to be funny.
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2/10
A non horror title in Universal's SHOCK! television package
kevinolzak5 May 2011
1941's "A Dangerous Game" actually belies its title, as the atmospheric beginning (a shadowy figure frightening a young nurse) quickly degenerates into a nonstop parade of foolish behavior from the entire 14 player cast. Various inept crooks drop in at an isolated sanitarium to steal the hidden fortune of Silas Biggsby (Andrew Tombes), before Dick Williams (Richard Arlen) reveals himself to be a private investigator, holding everyone at bay in the same living room until the tedious 61 minute running time has exhausted the audience's patience as well. Once the opening credits unspool to the familiar cues from 1939's "Son of Frankenstein," what had the makings of a promising mystery whodunit is sabotaged by a witless script that ranks with Hollywood's poverty row worst. Director John Rawlins certainly had a miserable track record (1938's "The Missing Guest"), but there were 1942's "Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror," and 1947's "Dick Tracy Meets Gruesome" as two definite highlights. The excellent, hard working cast is not at fault for their moronic material (Richard Arlen and Andy Devine a popular team at the time), but when even dependable veteran baddie Marc Lawrence is required to engage in such lowjinks, it's truly a hopeless case. Among the handful of non genre titles included in Universal's SHOCK! package of classic horror films issued to television in the late 50's, "A Dangerous Game" may perhaps be the very worst of them all, quite deserving of its total obscurity.
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3/10
What game? What danger?
JohnHowardReid24 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A top cast is forced to fight - not for their lives, but for their reputations in this mundane excuse for a "B" movie. According to the press sheet, it's supposed to be a "slapstick murder mystery". I'm always open to the idea of adding slapstick comedy to a murder mystery, but this little film is neither gripping nor amusing!

True, the players try hard. Perhaps too hard. I think the script would have worked better - in fact, I know it would have worked better - if director John Rawlins and the players had totally forgotten about the mystery and played the whole film for laughs!

As it is, Andy Devine's and Tom Dugan's comedy routines are undermined by poker-faced Richard Arlen and the beautiful but somewhat misplaced Jeanne Kelly

Inept direction by John Rawlins doesn't help, but it's a real shame that Stanley Cortez's creative photography is wasted on a well below standard vehicle like this one!
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