Films
in Focus
By
Ed Garea
The
Silk Express (WB, 1933) – Director: Ray
Enright. Writers: Houston Branch (story and s/p) & Ben Markson
(s/p). Stars: Neil Hamilton, Sheila Terry, Arthur Byron, Guy Kibbee,
Dudley Digges, Arthur Hohl, Allen Jenkins, Harold Huber, G. Pat
Collins, Robert Barrat, Vernon Steele, Ivan F. Simpson, & Guy
Usher. B&W, 61 minutes.
The
Silk Express is a fast paced programmer that seems to move
faster than its 61 minutes allow. It’s a good diversion; a murder
mystery set aboard a moving train with no end to the list of suspects
and a limited amount of time in which to solve the crime. Like many
low-budget mysteries of the day, the plot is somewhat implausible,
but as Mordaunt Hall wrote in his review for The New
York Times (June 28, 1933): “It is a good
robust thriller, with two murders, well-sustained suspense, a vein of
amusement and a dash of romance.” And isn’t that what any mystery
needs to hold its audience?
The
film begins with a clever montage of phone calls and conversations.
It seems that silk is the next big thing in the fashion industry.
Speculator Wallace Myton (Hohl), having gotten wind of the news, has
gotten his cronies together and bought up the supplies of raw silk on
the market. His aim is to make the silk manufacturers pay through the
nose if they want to survive. But Donald Kilgore (Hamilton), the head
of the association of mill owners, isn’t going to fold, not just
yet. He and his board invite Myton to a sit-down to discuss price.
When Myton refuses to budge off his original quote, Kilgore informs
him that he and his fellow manufacturers have no choice but to buy
raw silk directly from Japan, $3 million of it, in fact. But there’s
a hitch in the plan: Kilgore must assure delivery by a set time or
the manufacturers will have to accede to Myton’s terms.
Kilgore’s
plan is that, once the silk arrives in Seattle, it will be loaded on
a specially chartered express train for New York City. However,
knowing Myton will try to stop or delay the train, Kilgore and his
attorney, Calhoun (Barrat) have hired two train guards, Craft (Huber)
and Burns (Collins) to accompany the shipment. However, what he
doesn’t know is that Craft and Burns are operatives in the employ
of Myton.
The
first sign of trouble occurs when the silk is unloaded in Seattle. A
customs agent (Usher), having been tipped off that something is
wrong, examines the silk and finds evidence of “Mongolian Rust.”
He wants to seize it, but Kilgore notices that the “rust” has
only affected a small portion of the shipment and has the rest loaded
aboard the train.
To
complicate things further, Kilgore is approached by Dr. Harold Rolph
(Steele), who is armed with a letter of introduction from the mayor
of Seattle. Two people are accompanying Rolph: his patient, Professor
Axel Nyberg (Digges), and Nyberg’s daughter and nurse, Paula
(Terry). It seems a fly carrying a variation of sleeping sickness has
bitten the professor while on expedition in Asia. The only hope for a
cure is at the Rockefeller Institute in New York, and if they don’t
get him there in 72 hours, the paralysis will reach his heart and the
professor will be history.
Kilgore,
being the good guy he is, tells the train’s conductor, Clark
(Byron) that the trio is accompanying him to New York and has room
made for them aboard the train. Shortly after another suspect is
added as we see a tramp (Allen Jenkins) slipping aboard right before
departure.
As
the train departs, we come to a stretch in the film where the
characters are getting to know each other and explaining their
various missions. Meanwhile, Hohl is receiving telegrams at his
headquarters in New York from yet another operative on the train, a
special operative he placed there in case Craft and Burns fail.
The
train is moving along at a goodly pace when Kilgore and Paula, who
have stopped out onto the rear platform to get some fresh air, notice
that one of the cars is on fire. The train is stopped and Kilgore and
Calhoun, along with Clark, enter the car to extinguish the fire. They
find none of the silk is damaged, but discover a body in the car.
It’s the body of Johnson (Simpson), Kilgore’s secretary, who was
last seen on the train platform in Seattle. Yes, there’s a murder,
and yes, it’s a tragedy, but the train needs to be in New York, so
they push on. But not for long; someone drops a note outside one of
the main stations the train passes through and it’s brought to the
attention of railway detective McDuff, who races down the line and
stops the train to investigate. He tells Kilgore and the others the
train is going nowhere until a full investigation is performed.
Neither Kilgore nor Nyberg can wait that long, so a plan is devised
to conk McDuff over the head, tie him up and deposit him in one the
sleeping berths until the train gets to New York.
As
the train continues another crisis rears its head. Calhoun discovers
the letter of introduction Dr. Rolph handed Kilgore has the mayor’s
signature forged. Calhoun deduces the mayor was in Montana when the
letter was typed. Rolph admits the signature is a forgery, but
maintains it had to be done in order to get Nyberg to New York. Paula
pleads for her father, who Kilgore determines is not faking, and lets
the trio stay on, as Paula, in his estimation, “wouldn’t know how
to lie.” How’s that for deduction?
Yet
more problems mount. A snowstorm threatens to delay the train. Nyberg
begins fading fast. Dr. Rolph advises Kilgore to open the windows and
let the cold air in to keep his patient awake. Clark, the conductor,
disappears, and when he’s found, it’s too late. As there has been
another murder committed aboard the train, Kilgore has no choice but
to free McDuff and allow him to investigate. What he can’t figure
out, however, is the manner in which Clark was killed. Enter the
tramp, who identifies himself as Lloyds of London insurance
investigator Raymond Griffith. He explains that Clark was another of
Myton’s men. Clark killed Johnson and in turn was killed by driving
a sharp icicle through his eye and into his brain. The only question
now is, “Who done it?”
Kilgore
has noticed that Nyberg has been in an extremely agitated state since
Clark’s death was announced. Nyberg has reached the state where the
paralysis has set in so deep that he has lost the power of speech and
can only move his eyes. They know someone in the present company is
the murderer. Kilgore believes Nyberg knows who did it and gets him
to communicate by making a list of everyone on the train and asking
the professor to blink once for “no” and “twice” for yes”
each time a name is read out. It turns out Craft is the guilty man;
Nyberg saw him remove one of the icicles hanging from the window.
Now
that they have their man, all is well as the train pulls into New
York. Nyberg is transferred onto an ambulance, but not before Paula
and Kilgore promise to hook up. McDuff gets credit for solving the
murders. The police want to close the train down until the
investigation is finished, but Kilgore talks them into unloading the
silk in time to defeat Myton, save the silk manufacturers, and
prevent the consumer from paying high prices for silk garments.
Plot
inconsistencies aside, The Silk Express has some
things going for it. Ray Enright’s excellent direction keeps things
balanced and moving, with no dead spots. In fact, the movie is so
intent on covering its intrigues that there is no time for the usual
sappy romance; the love story between Paula and Kilgore is more
insinuated than expressed. Another point I noticed is that the film
moves so quickly that we fail to realize there are several detectives
working at odds with each other to solve the killing of Johnson in
the storage car.
A
nice touch is the realization by Craft and Burns that, although they
are supposed to be working with the mystery man, they are in reality
mere pawns whose real purpose is to have the murder pinned on their
shoulders, especially since they believe they committed it. Another
point about the film is that, in case the audience missed anything in
the whirligig of a plot, the director cuts to Hohl explaining what is
happening to his cohorts in New York. It’s as if Enright realized
the film was, like its train, speeding out of control.
On
the whole, the acting is decent; it’s a nice ensemble performance.
The only person that sticks out is Guy Kibbee, who turns in a
marvelous performance. I liked how Kibbee’s character was
introduced, as a man with little to do but watch the stationmaster
play a game of checkers with a counterpart via the station’s
telegraph. As it turns out, Kibbee became involved in a little
checkers game of his own.
Allen
Jenkins was also fine, as his usual bombastic antics were toned way
down. Arthur Hohl is fine as the heel and Sheila Terry makes the most
of her role as Paula. And the casting of Barrat was Calhoun was a
nice touch, as Barrat was familiar to most moviegoers as the bad guy
in many films. It gave the audiences another red herring to consider,
which adds to the fun.
The
most interesting performer in the film is top-billed Neil Hamilton,
who was rapidly reaching the end of his leading man status. Unlike
other stars who began at the bottom and moved upward, Hamilton began
at the top and moved his way downward: from star to supporting player
to minor player to guest star on television series. He’s most
famous to us today as Commissioner Gordon, from the camp-classic
television series Batman (1966). Perhaps Hamilton’s
strangest film appearance came in David O. Selznick’s war
romance, Since You Went Away (1944). Cast as star
Claudette Colbert’s husband, his scenes ended up on the cutting
room floor, and his only appearance in the film is in a photograph on
the table.
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