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''Sky Murder'' is a 1940 detective film starring Walter Pidgeon as detective Nick Carter in his third and final outing for MGM as Nick Carter. The film was part of a trilogy based on original screen stories starring the popular literary series character. In the heightened tensions prior to
World War II World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
, Hollywood produced many films in the spy film genre such as ''Sky Murder''. ''Sky Murder'' followed '' Phantom Raiders'' (1940) and the first film in the series, ''Nick Carter, Master Detective'' (1939) and led to ''Sky Murder'', the last of the Nick Carter series.


Plot

Old friend Cortland Grand summons private detective Nick Carter and his friend "Beeswax" Bartholomew to Washington for as meeting with Senator Monrose, who heads a committee investigating subversive groups in the U.S. Nick turns down the Senator's request to assist his committee, and flies back to New York on Cortland's personal aircraft. Joining Nick on the flight are six beautiful models accompanied by their chaperone, detective Christine Cross, and Andrew Hendon, a polo star suspected of being a spy. Upon landing, Hendon is discovered murdered, with a nail file belonging to model Pat Evens in his throat. More ominously, three spies waiting on the landing strip are intent on silencing Pat and, getting into the cockpit, they strangle the pilot. Nick take over, bringing the passengers to Cortland's country house, where he interrogates Pat when machine gun fire hits the house. Bartholomew is dressed in Pat's robes to fool the killers, allowing Nick and Pat to make a getaway. After leaving in the sheriff's car, Nick and Pat are arrested. When they are locked up, the spies plant a bomb with Pat and Nick again narrowly missing being killed. They take refuge in Cortland's New York apartment where Pat tells Nick that the spies had been threatening to kill her father, held captive in Europe. As Pat confesses, Bartholomew and Christine trace the spies to their hideout behind a printer's shop, but they are taken prisoner. Sending Pat to stay in a small hotel, Nick contacts Senator Monrose and realizes that Cortland is likely the leader of the fifth column spies. Nick locates Bartholomew by following his bees but when he goes to rescue his assistant, Kathe, one of Cortland's spies, kidnaps Pat. After rescuing Bartholomew and Christine, Nick alerts the police, who arrest the spies and free Pat. Setting a trap for Cortland, Nick and the Senator board his aircraft, and after Nick tricks him into a confession, Cortland dies in a shootout.


Cast


Production

Production on ''Sky Murder'' began on July 24, 1940. A Douglas DC-2 in scale model form is seen in the film.


Reception


Box office

According to MGM record, ''Sky Murder'' earned $270,000 in the US and Canada and $167,000 elsewhere, making a profit of $64,000.


Reviews

Film reviewer Bosley Crowther, in his ''
The New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'' review of ''Sky Murder'', wrote: "Let a Hollywood producer launch a film series and very shortly the stories, as they appear, become as formalized as Chinese checkers. The Nick Carter mysteries are no exception ... Through it all Nick is magnificently careless. Though sudden death lurks outside the window pane, he never pulls a shade. When seconds count, he saves one to pinch a cutie's cheek. When lesser men quail, he lights a cigarette. As usual, he wins his game in a welter of comic-strip heroics. But, as we were suggesting, it's a little like playing checkers with an opponent whose tricks became familiar long ago". Film historian and reviewer Leonard Maltin called ''Sky Murder'' an "above-average private-eye yarn". Film historian John Douglas Eames in ''The MGM Story: The Complete History Of Fifty Roaring Years'' (1975) described Pigeon's recurring role as sleuth Nick Carter in ''Sky Murder'', "a 'melo'".Eames 1975, p. 165.


References


Notes


Citations


Bibliography

* Eames, John Douglas. ''The MGM Story: The Complete History Of Fifty Roaring Years''. London: Octopus Books, 1975. . * Pendo, Stephen. ''Aviation in the Cinema''. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1985. . * Quinlan, David. ''Quinlan's Film Stars''. Washington, D.C.: Brassey's, 2000. .


External links

* * * {{George B. Seitz 1940 films Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films 1940 drama films American aviation films American drama films Nick Carter (character) American black-and-white films Films directed by George B. Seitz 1940s English-language films 1940s American films Films scored by David L. Snell