Private Scandal (1934) Poster

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8/10
There are lots of private scandals going on here...
AlsExGal19 June 2016
...but only one ultimately requires the attention of the police.

Benjamin Somers (Lew Cody) is building a housing development entitled "Eden Gardens". He is asking for more money from the investors, but they are confronting him asking him what he has done with the money they already gave him. Plus the investors have hired a very unpleasant person to investigate where the money is. Somers stalls them off for a day, so he can ask an old friend of his to front him some more money. The truth is, and what he admits to one of his employees and the fiancé of his daughter (Phillips Holmes as Cliff), is that he gambled that money on the stock market and lost it all. Somers is not only worried about his good name, he actually is worried that all of the investors will be without anything if he doesn't get the money back. He mentions to Cliff that his life insurance policies are enough to pay everybody back, but doesn't mention the suicide plot he is hatching.

That night, Cliff and Somers' daughter Fran (Mary Brian) are out on the town. Cliff decides to call Somers at the office, only to have Somers tell him he is about to kill himself because his old friend and last hope refuses to help him with more cash, and that Cliff needs to come over and hide the gun after he is dead so that the life insurance policies will pay off and the investors will have their money back. Horrified at this information, Cliff drives to the scene hoping to stop the suicide, but it is too late. Somers is slumped at his office, dead from a gunshot wound to the head. In fact, Cliff hears the shot from his car. So Cliff does only what he can do at this point. He hides the gun in his own office, so it will look like a murder took place, and the life insurance will pay off. Plus he wants to hide the fact that Somers was an embezzler and a suicide from Somers' daughter, Fran. You have to wonder, what WOULD have Somers done if Cliff hadn't have called him? Was he planning to call somebody else to hide the gun? But I digress.

It's a good thing Cliff is honest, because he is the worst criminal accomplice in the history of the world. As he leaves he is seen by the night watchman, and tells him that Somers has left. The next morning, Somers' secretary sees the "IN CONFERENCE" light on in Somers' office (his dead finger is on the button) and wants to go in and ask Somers something. Cliff stops her, and tells her Somers came in early and is talking to somebody important. He tells several other people in the office that he saw Somers either leaving or entering his office. And then there is that pesky weapon in his office. In short, he is getting caught in a web of lies that are easily contradicted by his dead boss' body.

The police do show up, after the office personnel discover the body, and Ned Sparks is the detective in charge. The thing is, he is acting like Ned Sparks did in every other film he's ever been in - rude, with a personality dipped in vinegar, pushing everybody around, and acting like everybody is going to jail. And you can't help but notice that the whole office is acting very guilty about SOMETHING. It turns out they all have something to hide, just not necessarily having anything to do with the dead body of their old boss.

How will this all work out? Watch and find out. It is a very good mystery with a great ensemble cast and there is actually even more to Somers' death than I am telling you here, but I want you to do some head scratching of your own. Highly recommended.
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Eden Gardens, a paradise for the wage earner
ecaulfield6 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
So reads the advertisement for the tract of land that real estate developer Lew Cody plans to revitalize. Cody promises home ownership to anyone who can make a modest down payment. But after four months of waiting, his investors ask, where are the houses? Building is overdue!

The film moves at such a fast pace that you might not catch Cody's explanation about the delay. Let's just say that the funds for building are gone.

This film is an ensemble piece, especially as the story progresses and the characters are quarantined at the office. Fittingly, Cody has assembled a memorable staff of employees. In pre-code thirties style, there is the less than polite receptionist June Brewster, who is really too wise for her job but lacks the conscientiousness to perform it. The head of the sales force is married man Jed Prouty, who has an eye for Brewster. Anytime is a good time for a drink with him: "Hey, hey," Brewster responds when he repeatedly calls her away from the switchboard. Third wheel Harold Waldridge, who has a gambling habit he cannot afford, is wise to them, calling them Frankie and Johnny. Zasu Pitts seems to have an affinity for the restroom. Elderly Charles Sellon is on hand, either to be abused or to speak insensitively to Waldridge. And let's not forget the sweet young lovers Phillips Holmes and Mary Brian.

Besides the characters, you'll find the typical thirties work environment and banter. When someone faints, no one has water, but they have gin! Several of the employees have aversions to decorum. Brewster uses Waldridge so she can leave the switchboard to get a drink and "get her system back to normal." But he spies on her when she meets Prouty before work in the mornings for orange juice.

So what about those houses? Well, it seems that financial trouble has led to murder (or at least a death). That's why the employees are trapped at the office by the police.

The police detectives are another interesting twosome. Ned Sparks is apparently the Sherlock Holmes of the Eden Gardens area, but his entrance, "I'm Reardon" means nothing to anyone within hearing distance. "Are you cops?" asks Brewster in her well-spoken way. In thirties style, officer Sparks adopts a dismissive conversation style: "Stay here Grandpa, or I'll spank you." Sparks's sidekick George Guhl mistakenly follows Pitts into her beloved restroom. Besides these government officials, coroner Olin Howland has obviously adjusted to the fact that none of us is immortal. Let's just say he whistles while he works.

After several dramatic twists in the last fifteen minutes, the film wraps up rather happily. Perhaps Cody was right to have an altruistic mission, even if he didn't manage the funds for it transparently. But where will all these office workers get new jobs?

Amusing, thirties style entertainment.
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