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The Missing Guest

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox film

| name = The Missing Guest

| image = The Missing Guest.jpg

| alt =

| caption = Film poster

| native_name =

| director = John Rawlins

| producer =

| screenplay =

| story =

| based_on =

| starring =

| music =

| cinematography = Milton Krasner

| editing = Frank Gross

| studio = Universal Pictures Co.

| distributor = Universal Pictures Co.

| released =

| runtime = 68 minutes

| country = United States

| language =

| budget =

| gross =

}}

'The Missing Guest' is a 1938 American mystery-comedy film directed by John Rawlins. It is a remake of the 1933 film 'Secret of the Blue Room'.

Synopsis



A newspaper reporter is sent by his editor to spend a night in a country house where a notorious murder had been committed exactly twenty years before.

Cast



Production



'The Missing Guest' was the first of two remakes of the 1933 film 'Secret of the Blue Room'. The film was budgeted at $80,400 and was completed under budget, at $72,000.

Music in 'The Missing Guest' is recycled from previous films including 'Werewolf of London' and 'Dracula's Daughter'.

Release



'The Missing Guest' was distributed by Universal Pictures on August 12, 1938.

Reception



From contemporary reviews, "Hobe." of 'Variety' referred to the film as a "feeble whodunnit for bottom billing" and that "Every outdated [haunted house] situation and piece of business is included - not only included, but embarrassingly highlighted." 'The New York World-American' stated that "[I]f you know your mystery stories at all, you must know by now how unfunny a couple of presumably comic detectives can be when they get mixed up with spooks, sliding panels, and clutching hands" and found that the film "is a feeble and fumbling attempt at being eerie and funny" Kate Cameron of 'The New York Daily News' said that the comedy in the film was "such feeble fooling that it entirely destroys its purpose and merely serves to shatter whatever illusion the murder and the mystery might otherwise hold for the audience." Frank S. Nugent of 'The New York Times' declared "The cast does as little with it as it deserves, and that is little enough."

In their book on Universal Horror films, the authors stated that "mile-a-minute wisecracks and inane humor stand in for atmosphere and chills" declaring the film to be a "dismal mystery-comedy that serves up none of either." and declaring it to be "one of the worst Universal mysteries of the '30s."

References



Footnotes



Sources



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