Lucybespro
It is a performances centric movie
Fatma Suarez
The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Mathilde the Guild
Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.
Hattie
I didn’t really have many expectations going into the movie (good or bad), but I actually really enjoyed it. I really liked the characters and the banter between them.
Charles Herold (cherold)
This procedural is notable for a focus on forensics before that was a thing and for a solid script. But mainly it's notable for its women. The always-fascinating Elsa Lanchester is absolutely wonderful as a scheming landlady. Jan Sterling does well as a brassy bleached blonde while Sally Forrest, as sweet, unfortunate wife, has a terrific scene in which she blows up, in a defeated desperate way, at a cop.The men are a bit less interesting. While I like Marshal Thompson as Sally's hubby, the other main men strike me as a bit too generic in that way that was common in the 1960s. Still, Montalban's scene being talked down to by a privileged blue blood is pretty terrific.The story is generally solid, although the action in the last third feels a bit forced.A must-see for Lanchester fans, and worth watching for anyone who likes detective movies.
Ed-Shullivan
The blackmail scam has been done ad nauseam but not quite like actress Jan Sterling who plays Vivian Heldon the sexpot who seemed to have too many dates until her last scheme went sideways on her. She ends up as the murder victim. The poor sap who was last seen with Vivian (the victim) alive was Henry Shanway (played by Marshall Thompson) who just happened to be at the wrong place, and at the wrong time. Henry happened to be seen in the company of the murder victim Vivian Heldon leaving a bar. Vivian was reported missing six months earlier by another boarder who resided in the same rooming house where Vivian was known to use the landlord's downstair hallway phone regularly to call her male companions.As this film was released in 1950 I was more than impressed with the manner in which the lead detective Peter Moralas (played by a young looking Ricardo Montalban) teamed up with Harvard University doctor/scientist named Dr. McAdoo (played by Bruce Bennett. We are witness to one of the first times that the use of forensic science is used in the murder investigation process within a film.In 1950, this new forensic procedure(s) must have been quite impressive to the general movie audience witnessing it for the very first time. The new police investigative procedures used must have also been even more scarier for any yet to be discovered and unknown murderers. Murderers who had yet to be captured in 1950 were most likely perspiring quite heavily after watching how the detective and scientist had teamed up and meticulously gathered scientific evidence. Their evidence was used to determine who the murdered person was, whose bones were discovered buried in the sand by the evening tide after washing ashore, how she had died exactly, and by what type of weapon.I also liked that unlike many of the crime TV series of the era and that have been released over the past five (5) decades, in this film, the lead detective Peter Moralas who was eager to make an arrest based on the existing evidence leads to an innocent man being arrested and tried for the murder. The film has excellent depth and the audience can see how Detective Moralas may have prematurely come to his conclusion on the murderer but both his conscience and his most qualified medical/scientist Dr. McAdoo convince him to keep digging just in case someone else is guilty and is covering up who the actual murderer may be. The film is a very good crime/drama/mystery with good acting and an intriguing plot filled with sex, greed, suspicion, blackmail, assault, and of course the earliest signs of how forensic science has assisted in determining the W5, who, what, why, when and where of a murder victim.This is a movie well worth seeing.
Scott LeBrun
Accurately described by many as "C.S.I. style noir", the mystery-procedural "Mystery Street" is cracking entertainment for devotees of the noir genre. It's also ahead of its time for its approach to solving a case of murder. It bears some of the trademarks of the genre, such as the extremely moody and effective black & white lighting by John Alton.Ever charming Ricardo Montalban stars as Boston detective Pete Morales, working an interesting case. A skeleton is found buried under beach sand, and Morales must first find out who the person is. So he calls upon Harvard forensic specialist Dr. McAdoo (Bruce Bennett), who determines that the person was a woman named Vivian Heldon (Jan Sterling), who as we saw from the prologue, met a bad end while desperately trying to get in touch with a particular man."Mystery Street" is quotable and enjoyable, and snappily paced. It gets points for its casting of Montalban in the lead role, and he's highly watchable as our hero. It also gives fine showcases to its supporting cast: Bennett, a fun Elsa Lanchester in an amusing turn as an eccentric landlady, Marshall Thompson as an unfortunate sap who falls under suspicion due to his circumstances, Sally Forrest as the saps' agitated wife, Edmon Ryan as an upper class type, and Betsy Blair as an associate of the murder victim. Lanchester ends up walking away with the film.John Sturges directed, and he's in fine form, working from a script by Sydney Boehm and Richard Brooks. This is the kind of story where savvy viewers pretty much figure it all out early on, and thus wait for our hero to play catch-up. At least, he's a reasonably smart guy, if somewhat stubbornly fixated on his red herring, so one doesn't much mind.Well made and engrossing for an hour and a half.Eight out of 10.
JLRMovieReviews
Ricardo Montalban, Jan Sterling, and Elsa Lanchester all reside on "Mystery Street." Jan Sterling has a small but pivotal role in this exciting crime drama. The best films in film noir make the movie's style the star over all actors, and this is one such example. Ricardo is very memorable and sexy, and Elsa has a scene-stealing role as a landlady, but this centers on the investigation of a murder and is compelling all the way. In fact, it plays like a forensic show on TV today, with Bruce Bennett studying the skeletal remains of the victim. Sounds a little creepy and unsettling, doesn't it? Well, it's very matter of fact about the every-day life of Ricardo and what he does as a cop. Each person he meets is an individual, but to him it's just another day and another case on "Mystery Street."