Bullet Scars (1942) Poster

(1942)

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6/10
a doctor and nurse are basically held hostage by robbers
blanche-213 September 2014
Regis Toomey and Howard da Silva star in "Bullet Scars," a 1942 B movie that's pretty good, thanks to the nice performance by Toomey.

The Dillon gang, led by Frank Dillon (Da Silva) pulls off a robbery, but one of them, Joe, is badly wounded. They can't risk going to a hospital, so they corral a doctor, Steven Bishop (Toomey) to help them, claiming the shooting was accidental and saying nothing about the fact that they're all crooks. Meanwhile, Joe's sister Nora (Adele Longmire), a nurse, is asked to come and take care of her brother. Dillon offers the doctor a fortune and his own laboratory if he will stay and take care of Joe, who is Dillon's best friend. Dillon is also in love with Nora, who wants nothing to do with him.

It doesn't take Bishop long to realize that he's pretty much a captive of these men, but while picking up supplies at the drugstore, with one of the men standing nearby, he does find out about the recent bank robbery and puts 2 + 2 together. He also knows he won't live if Joe dies while under his care. He and Nora have to figure out how to get out of there.

There's nothing special about this movie, but it is entertaining, and the end is clever. Regis Toomey was a solid actor with a kindly presence who was prolific in both television and film into his eighties. He was a regular on many TV series over the years. Howard da Silva, turned in as a Communist by Robert Taylor, was blacklisted for 8 years but acted in theater and returned to television in 1959. He starred as Ben Franklin on Broadway and screen in "1776." However, the most interesting person in this film was the elderly doctor in the beginning of the film, Hobart Bosworth. Bosworth was a direct descendant of John and Priscilla Alden on his father's side, and on his mother's side, a descendant of the first Dutch settlers to land in the U.S. He was an actor, director, writer, and producer going back to 1908.
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7/10
A very solid B-movie...well worth seeing.
planktonrules27 July 2018
The film begins with a gang robbing a bank and shooting a teller. In the process, however, one of the gang members was shot. They take him to a doctor...who realizes they are crooks and tries to tell the police...and he's killed. Soon, they approach Dr. Steven Bishop* (Regis Toomey) and convince him to help. However, over time the doctor starts to realize that these men are no goodnicks.

The acting was very solid in this one thanks to Toomey and Howard Da Silva (who always was excellent as a heavy) and fortunately the script and direction were nice as well. Despite a stereotype that B-movies are bad movies, this one is well made and enjoyable...and well worth your time. It also didn't hurt that the finale was so tough and exciting.

*Not to be confused with the pop singer who sang the themes to "Tootsie" and "Animal House"!
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6/10
Bullet Scars
CinemaSerf21 March 2024
When one of their number ("Joe") is shot during a robbery, the gangsters responsible try to seek the help of a doctor. The first they find claims that he needs hospital treatment and that's soon the end of him. They move on to another, "Bishop" (Regis Toomey), and lure him to their hideout where he discovers the sister of the wounded man "Nora" (Adele Longmire) who also happens to be a nurse. They are given a very thinly veiled ultimatum - save his life or lose their own. Both reckon they are doomed either way, so have to find a way of getting a message out to the pursuing police before they are toast. Just to add a little spice to the proceedings, "Nora" also happens to be the moll of boss "Dillon" (the not very menacing Howard Da Silva) so some conflict looms? Though it is quite watchable, it hasn't really an original bone in it's body and appears to be supplemented with some archive footage from similar crimes-noir. The denouement is just a little different but for the most part it's all join-the-dots stuff that you've seen before with a cast and writing that's probably just as adequate.
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3/10
Third go around
bkoganbing4 April 2020
The plot that served Dr. Socrates and King Of The Underworld got it's third go around with Bullet Scars. The twist here is that instead of the lead gangster himself needing medical attention, Howard DaSilva wants it for henchman Tod Andrews. Not that DaSilva is sentimental, but he is seeing Andrews's sister Adele Longmire who is a nurse.

Since he already killed one doctor who was ratting him out DaSylva goes deep in the piney woods and finds Regis Toomey.

DaSylva's character Frank Dillon is a Dillinger like public enemy with a Dillinger like reputation I found it real hard to believe he didn't know what kind of trouble he was in. It dawns on him though.

Lots of stock footage from previous Warner Brothers classics are in Bullet Scars. Movie fans will recognize it.

Third time was not the charm.
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unoriginal, but fun (very minor spoiler)
rhole224 September 2004
Warning: Spoilers
Though there's not much original in this flick, it's a fun light gangster show. There's nothing too heavy here (but there's a couple deaths - that was the spoiler).

The good character-actor cast are all better known for other work, but they do an admirable job here, and seem to be having a good time with it. They are not taking themselves or the film too seriously, but they are playing it strictly straight.

Howard Da Silva plays the heavy, and while he can be very menacing in some of his roles, he uses a very light touch here (he's almost affable).

I can heartily recommend it as an entertaining hour's worth.
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4/10
Let's see. Where have I seen this plot before?
mark.waltz26 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
While the writing credits don't acknowledge it, this plot is very similar to two other Warner Brothers films, "Dr. Socrates" (1935) and "King of the Underworld" (1939) where members of the medical profession are held against their will to treat criminals who have been shot. There's enough difference between the story of this and the other two films to claim independence, but certain plot details can't be denied as to how similar they are.

In the opening scene, gangster Howard da Silva shoots the doctor who won't treat the injured gangster without notifying the police, then goes to see the sister of shooting victim Tod Andrews (nurse Adele Longmire) who works for doctor Regis Toomey. Sis knows that her brother was up to no good, and now her relationship to Andrews puts the doctor's life in jeopardy as well.

This was the only lead role for Longmire, obviously a failed screen test at Warner Brothers that didn't lead to a contract even though she's a decent actress. Da Silva plays his typically smug bully, a far cry from his later lovable characterizations of Ben Franklin and Louis B. Mayer. His gregarious nature doesn't hide his nasty soul, and da Silva gleefully sneers every line he has. He would follow this up with going to Broadway to play Jud Fry in the original cast of "Oklahoma!".

Toomey, who had been around for over a decade, went from a leading man in pre-code dramas, co-starring with Barbara Stanwyck in "Shopworn", then appearing with her in a bit part in "Meet John Doe". He's better in parts that don't require him to be in a romantic role, and does okay as the small town doctor using his intelligence to outwit the gangsters. There's a bit of light comedy to tone down the gangster theme with brainless hood Ben Welden barely able to button his shirt let alone handle a gun. It's an okay bottom of the bill programmer, but strictly formula.
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8/10
B-Movie Master Lederman and Another Violent Finale
LeonLouisRicci27 September 2014
Ultra-Short but Long on Entertainment, this is Another Quickie from Director Lederman that Delivers a Sombre, Violent Story with a Shootout at the End that is just Bullet Crazy and Anticipated a Style that would Not Become Prevalent Until the Late Sixties and Continue to this Day.

Howard Da Silva is a Gangster that is a Psycho, but Loves His Bullet Scarred Pal that is On Life Support, Kept Alive by County Doctor Regis Toomey. Except for a Bit of Comedy Relief from a Pill Popping Goon, this is a Downbeat and Edgy B-Movie that is Exceptional.

The Climax is a Frenzied Free for All that Ends in a Blaze of Glory. Chalk Another One Up for the Prolific Director that Made Close to 300 Movies from the Early Days of Hollywood Silents and Ended with a Stint in TV. An Unknown Talent that Seemed to have an Unlimited Supply of Energy. The Same could be Said about Most of His Movies.
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5/10
Plenty of bullets, dead aplenty, but... any scars on show?!
adrianovasconcelos3 February 2024
Director Ross Lederman began his Hollywood career as an extra in the Keystone Cops comedy flicks... and what a pity he ever rose to loftier heights, because on the strength of BULLET SCARS direction was not his forté.

Despite the ever threatening presence of Howard da Silva, not much Lederman could do with this substandard script by Robert E. Kent that depicts backwater town doctor Regis Toomey as such a gullible medic that he even accepts a salary raise from villain da Silva and his sidekicks in exchange for ignoring bullet wounds. He also helluva slow in the uptake, misses the chance to escape, and it is his Latin that ultimately saves the day.

Nurse Adele Longmire is certainly pretty but, like da Silva, she cannot save this poorly shot and predictably handled C pic.
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Fast paced Warner Bros crime flick
searchanddestroy-112 September 2023
That's the kind of little crime flick that a moviegoer should not miss. It is so efficient, taut, gritty, with a Howard Da Silva excellent, juicy, terrific in this villain character. It is of course fast paced, as were the Paramount crime movies of this period, starring Anthony Quinn, Lloyd Nolan, J Carroll Naish. Short but riveting. The only weak point is that here, you have the unavoidable good guy who survives in the end with his sweetheart. Such a shame. Warner Bros was really a specialist of this kind of films, gangster plots with over the top casts. D Ross Ledermann remained without any ambition as a director and that's also a shame.
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