Donald Free
William Powell
Donald Free

“It's a pleasure to have your home wrecked by a man like him.”
A former government agent in France, who has failed at an assignment and been disavowed, is deported back to the USA, where he can only find work at a low-rent detective agency. He soon gets involved with a woman with ties to a crooked gambling club owner, who is a client of his agency.
Private Detective 62
Donald Free
William Powell
Donald Free
Janet Reynolds
Margaret Lindsay
Janet Reynolds
Dan Hogan
Arthur Hohl
Dan Hogan
Amy Moran
Ruth Donnelly
Amy Moran
Tony Bandor
Gordon Westcott
Tony Bandor
Helen Burns
Natalie Moorhead
Helen Burns
Whitey
James Bell
Whitey
Harcourt S. Burns
Hobart Cavanaugh
Harcourt S. Burns
Cab Driver
Irving Bacon
Cab Driver
Tracey (Uncredited)
Arthur Byron
Tracey (Uncredited)
Bartender (Uncredited)
Heinie Conklin
Bartender (Uncredited)
Club Doorman (Uncredited)
Eddie Dunn
Club Doorman (Uncredited)
They used to say that in the end, Samuel Goldwyn couldn't get arrested in Hollywood. Well the same is true here for "Donald Free" (William Powell). His government career went down in flames and now he can't get a job for love nor money. Until, that is, he alights on the dodgy "Peerless" detective agency where he is charged with a frame-up of "Janet" (Margaret Lindsay) who has fallen foul of a gambler who is the man behind the cheques at his new employer. What nobody (except the audience, that is) predicts though, is that the two will begin to fall for each other and his task becomes not only more difficult, but downright perilous. It's quite a fun, and quirkily plotted, thriller this with a degree of chemistry on screen and just enough wriggle-room with the story to keep it interesting for an hour. By now the studio was quite adept at eking out the budget and the aesthetic of the film works quite well too, before a lively ending that offers no surprises but entertains well enough for a standard, afternoon B-feature.
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