SnoReptilePlenty
Memorable, crazy movie
Pacionsbo
Absolutely Fantastic
Fairaher
The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Logan
By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
MartinHafer
I almost always like Herbert Marshall films and "The Solitaire Man" was a huge disappointment. While it started off well enough, it really became a boring and highly clichéd movie when it came to the airplane sequence.The film begins with an elaborate flim-flam scheme in which some rich lady buys a necklace she THINKS is worth a fortune. You then learn that these two women are in league with Oliver (Marshall). However, Oliver and the young lady crook have decided to marry and she assumes this means an end to their lives of crime. However, Oliver wants a final big score and as he's sneaking in to steal a valuable necklace, a murder occurs! Another thief is there and shoots a detective who's waiting for him...and Oliver uses the confusion to get the necklace.When the film switches to the airplane on which Oliver and his two friends are traveling, the film grinds to a halt. Much of the next 20- 30 minutes consists of folks talking and talking and you learn that a detective or police informer is among the passengers. None of this is really interesting or worth seeing...and it's filled with so many silly clichés. I really HATED how Oliver kept making brilliant educated guesses based on no evidence whatsoever! It's a shame, as this final portion seems like it's from a cheap Monogram or Grand National film...not a picture from a quality studio like MGM!
drjgardner
"The Solitaire Man" is an undistinguished early talkie murder mystery from MGM about a jewel thief.Herbert Marshall (1890-1966) plays the head of a gang that specializes in stealing gems. Marshall made dozens of films in the 30s and 40s, best known for "The Letter" (1929 and 1940), "Trouble in Paradise" (1932), 'Foreign Correspondent" (1940) and "Duel in the Sun" (1956).The great Lionel Atwill plays a detective. Atwill is best remembered for his iconic role as the Inspector in "Son of Frankenstein" (1939). Between 1918 and 1946 he made 75 films, mostly horror (e.g., "The Man Who Reclaimed His Head", "Mystery of the Wax Museum", "Murders in the Zoo") and went on to play Sherlock Holmes' arch enemy, Moriarty, in "Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon" (1943) and for my money, he was the best Moriarty. This film certainly is one of his lesser works.May Robson (1858-1942) plays a member of the gang. She was everyone's favorite granny, a part she played in films like "Irene" (1940), "They Made Me a Criminal" (1939), and "A Star is Born" (1937). She was nominated for an Oscar for "Lady for a Day" (1934). Robson is subdued in this film and her fans will want to look elsewhere.Beautiful Elizabeth Allen (1910-90) plays Marshall's love interest and a gang member. She was popular in the 30s – "Tale of Two Cities" (1935), "David Copperfield" (1935) – playing British subjects.Jack Conway (1887-1952) directs. Conway was a prolific director (over 100 films) who started out as an actor but decided directing was for him when he was asked to wrestle a lion. He directed MGM's first talkie in 1928 ("Alias Jimmy Valentine") and worked on "Birth of a Nation" (1915) as a second director. Conway was particularly good working with long films (e.g., "Viva Villa", "A Tale of Two Cities", "Northwest Passage") and with films featuring women (e.g., "But the Flesh is Weak", "Lady of the Tropics"). His work here is rather ordinary, perhaps due to the sets which make the film more like a play.The NY Times said - "It is a feature which might justly be termed an amusing melodrama, for when persons are slain here the effect is invariably more humorous than tragic." 1933 was a good year for films. Box office hits were Mae West's "I'm no Angel" and "She Done Him Wrong", the star studded "Dinner at Eight", Ruby Keeler and Dick Powell in "42nd Street", "King Kong", and Garbo in "Queen Christina". The Oscar winners were "The Private Life of Henry VIII" (Actor), "Morning Glory" (Actress) and "Cavalcade" (Picture). Other notable films released that year included the Marx Brothers' "Duck Soup", Laurel and Hardy's classic "Sons of the Desert", and "The Invisible Man". Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers made their film duo debut in "Flying Down to Rio". FWIW – 1933 was the year that Walt Disney referred to the gold statue as an "Oscar" when he won it for "The Three Little Pigs".For films about Jewel thieves, among the best are Hitchcock's "To Catch a Thief" (1955), "The Pink Panther" (1963), "Thief" (1981), and "A Fish Called Wanda" (1988).
museumofdave
What was it about jewel thieves in the 1930's? All the major studios seemed to thrive on them, especially in their "B" movies, one of the most delightful forays a film aptly titled "Jewel Robbery," from Warners, and starring dapper William Powell and clothes-horse Kay Francis. The sophisticate in The Solitaire Man is erudite Herbert Marshall, he of the rich, clipped English tones, a suave thief ready to give up his craft for love and move take his sweetheart, supportive Elizabeth Allen, to a manor home in respectable Devonshire. Most films from MGM tended to be less snappy than the Warner's product, but this zippy little "B" begins on The Continent where rich folks hang out in fancy hotels, robbers sneak into lavish apartments, and there's evena killer at work when the lights go out. This initial set up soon transfers to the interior of a small airplane (looking not unlike a large cardboard box with windows), where snappy give-and-take dialogue moves the pace along as fog closes in around the plane, the cool tones of Marshall contrasted with character actress Mary Boland, a rich, loudmouthed American from Peoria, who tosses out quips like candy while the rest of the cast quibbles about comeuppance. This is not a film of great import, but if you are a fan of the period, it is great fun--with Boland and Marshall joined by such experts as Lionel Atwill and May Robson. On it's own merits, and not because it's a timeless classic, I'd give it an eight--It's a perfect Saturday matinée popcorn film--and there will be time for another feature, too!
klarkash
This is one of those little MGM quickies that is unfairly overlooked by both film fans and historians. Without giving anything away, the plot involves a jewel theft and murder, with the suspects aboard a plane flying from France to England. There are several plot twists before and after the plane lands. It may not be hard to guess who the villain really is, but the film maintains a good level of suspense and is well acted. It's not without a major goof, at one point in the film Lionel Atwill calls Herbert Marshall "Wallace", the name of Atwill's character. How MGM let that get by is a mystery. This film is a good example of what could be done on a limited budget.