The B-Hive
RKO's Almost Breakout Star
RKO's Almost Breakout Star
By
Ed Garea
Don’t
Turn ‘em Loose (RKO, 1936) -
Director: Ben Stoloff. Writers: Thomas Walsh (story), Harry Segall &
Ferdinand Reyher (s/p). Cast: Lewis Stone, James Gleason, Bruce
Cabot, Louise Latimer, Betty Grable, Grace Bradley, Nella Walker,
Gordon Jones, & Addison Randall. B&W, 65 minutes.
By
1936, most of the themes for gangster films had been worked and
reworked seemingly to death. Looking for new ground to tread,
RKO’s Don’t Turn ‘em Loose takes a look
at the parole system and the corruption and incompetence within.
The
film boasts a good, solid cast, with Lewis Stone receiving top
billing, backed by the capable James Gleason and Bruce Cabot. Stone
plays a school superintendent, but his appointment to the parole
board will remind viewers of his popular role as Judge Hardy. Nella
Walker, as his wife, has a strong resemblance to Fay Holder, who
plays Mrs. Hardy in the MGM series, and I would think her casting was
intentional if this film were released in 1939. Stone’s character
also shows the same penchant for making speeches and moral bon
mots that he would later hone to a fine point in the Hardy
Family series.
Gleason
is his usual dependable self, again playing a cop. But it is Cabot
who drives this film. 1936 was his best year since playing John
Driscoll in 1933’s King Kong. He was just coming off an
excellent performance as Magua in The Last of the Mohicans,
and if a little more care had been exercised with this film, it would
have been a breakout performance. Cabot’s the heel of the film, a
totally unrepentant type called Bat Williams. When the film opens we
see him before the New York State parole board with his wife and baby
in attendance to bolster his case and show his repentance. He is
granted parole over the objections of Detective Daniels (Gleason) and
vows to stay on the straight and narrow. Minutes later, as he enters
his lawyer’s car for the ride back to town, we learn that the
“wife” was an actor and the “baby” borrowed for the day. Bat
reunites with his gang and his moll, Grace Forbes (Bradley). He
immediately begins planning the next heist, a payroll job at the
Escow Creamery. The robbery goes off, but in the process Bat kills
the payroll clerk.
Upon
their return to the hideout, Bat takes his leave, refusing to tell
the gang where he’s going. It turns out he’s headed for Barlow,
New York, where he is known under his real name of Robert Webster.
His family has no idea of what he really does; they are under the
belief that he is a globetrotting engineer whose most recent port of
call is in Brazil. Even his childhood sweetheart, Letty Graves
(Latimer), has no idea of his real life. His father John Webster
(Stone) is a respected school superintendent, and his mother Helen
(Walker), is the typical Hollywood homemaker. Robert has come home
for the wedding of sister Mildred (Grable). While the family is
celebrating Robert’s return, John receives a phone call from the
governor, who asks him if he would be willing to serve on the parole
board. Afterward, John tells the family about it, with Robert
advising against it.
Later,
Bat breaks into a local jewelry store to steal a present for Grace.
In the process, he kills a guard in cold blood. Before he returns to
the city, however, Daniels tracks down Grace and secures her
cooperation by threatening to tell Bat all about her affair with gang
member Al (Randall) while Bat was in stir. This leads to a nice
little scene where Bat comes back to the apartment to fetch her. She
wants to go out and see a movie. He tells her to dress nicely, and
she replies by telling him that she’ll wear her special red dress.
(Shades of Dillinger!)
Daniels
springs the trap as they leave the theater, with Bat giving Grace a
knowing look as he’s led off. A few scenes later, Bat has hatched a
plan for escape by hiding in the back of a truck delivering lumber to
the prison in a scene that has to be seen for its sheer
preposterousness. As Grace returns to her apartment that night, she
discovers she’s not alone. Bat is waiting with his friends, Smith
and Wesson. One shot later and Grace’s role in the film is over.
Bat then returns to prison in the same manner he’s
escaped, and despite the time he’s been away, no one at the jail
seems to have noticed he was gone. Some prison this is.
Time
passes and soon Bat is once again up for parole. Guess who’s
sitting on the board? John Webster, who is willing to grant parole to
everyone except Bat Williams, who he characterizes as an unrepentant
career criminal to whom it would be a mistake to grant parole.
Daniels, who is sitting in on the meeting, gives a “three cheers”
type of response, while the parole board head, a slimy sort of
character, responds that if John were only to meet and talk with
Williams, he’d change his mind. And so Bat is brought in. This
leads to one of the great double takes in film, as John sees his son
standing before him. (If it was Curly Howard instead of Stone, he’s
take one look at Bat and yell “Nyha-aa-aa-aa-aah!”) Obviously
taken aback, John asks to speak alone with the prisoner.
What
follows is another preposterous scene, as John begins to put two and
two together to realize that his son has always been a no-goodnik,
even from childhood when he broke into his sister’s piggy bank.
Yes, John had overlooked it all, but now he realizes he can no longer
overlook this. (Andy Hardy never did this to him.)
Bat
counters with the argument that the soon-to-be-married Mildred would
be absolutely devastated if the truth ever came out. It’s good
enough of an argument for John, who agrees to Bat’s parole on the
condition that he gets lost and never darkens the Webster family’s
towels again. It’s a deal, and John calls for the board, telling
them that after consulting with the prisoner, he has agreed to grant
him parole. Daniels is devastated; he thought John would be different
from the other namby-pambies and take a harder line instead of simply
rubber-stamping these mugs for release.
Time
passes, and the family gets ready for Mildred’s wedding. John is
writing a letter of resignation to the parole board when he and the
family receive a visit. Guess Who? Yes, it seems that Bat cannot
resist dropping by to see his sister off. While he’s there, old
girlfriend Letty lets slip the fact that her father, who owns a big,
successful construction company, is preparing his huge payroll. This
is a score too rich to resist, so Bat heads out to pay a visit to the
old boy. Unbeknownst to him, his father has followed him, and the two
have a confrontation. Suddenly, Detective Daniels, who has heard
everything, breaks in to arrest Bat. They scuffle, and during the
melee, Bat disarms Daniels. He tells Daniels to say goodbye before he
pulls the trigger, but John, who has picked up Daniel’s revolver,
shoots Bat before he can shoot Daniels. Daniels takes the gun from
John and tells him to get the heck out of there. Having heard
everything, he will see that the family is not embarrassed. In the
next scene, Daniels is driving a mortally wounded Bat out of town. A
telegram is received at the Webster’s home, informing John that
everything has been taken care of and he no longer need worry.
What
a film. One thing is for certain, it moves fast, not pausing long to
linger upon its characters. And it all makes a kind of sense until
the final scenes. The supporting cast is fine. Grable, in her limited
role, is bubbly and cute. Latimer adds a nice touch as Bat’s old
flame, and Bradley is solid as Bat’s moll, especially in her death
scene. As mentioned before, Gleason is fine as Daniels, and Stone is
more than capable playing John Webster. But the real star of the film
is Cabot. He growls, sneers and stalks his way through the film,
making the most of his part without resorting to overemoting.
If
the studio had invested a little more money and preparation time to
this picture, Cabot might have come out of it as RKO’s breakout
star. But RKO was more interested in ”now” rather than taking a
chance on “later.” Even its theme of corruption in a failing
parole system is used only as background. RKO wasn’t about to
launch a social campaign a la Warner Brothers, who
by this time had also dropped its stance on social activism.
Entertainment was in and advocacy was out.
Trivia: It
was after the release of this film that RKO dropped young starlet
Betty Grable from its roster, commenting that while she was cute, it
wasn’t enough. She made a couple of films for Paramount before
signing a contract with 20th Century
Fox. She became a huge star in her first Fox film, Down
Argentine Way (1940).
She went on to become one of the studio’s most popular stars and
her pinup during World War Two was posted in barracks all around the
world.
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