Never Too Late (1935) Poster

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6/10
Good Late Richard Talmadge Vehicle
boblipton7 September 2019
Mildred Harris has lost her pearls to blackmailer Paul Ellis. Her sister, Thelma White, is trying to recover them. She runs into undercover detective Richard Talmadge, who's trying to convict Ellis, so he adds getting the pearls to his to-do list, and hopes to get it all done before Miss Harris' husband, Police Commissioner Robert Frazer finds out about the matter.

Talmadge started out as a circus acrobat, became a stunt double for Douglas Fairbanks, and then a minor star in his own series of light-hearted adventures. He's near the end of them here, but he's still pretty good on the falls, flips, and tumbles. The plot is a pretty good one, reminiscent of the recovery of the Queen's pearls in THE THREE MUSKETEERS. In fact, it's a pretty good movie overall, except when director Bernard B. Ray isn't stretching things out to bring it up to speed, with overlong car chases to replace the horse chases he used in his oaters, and his dialogue direction is sluggish. Still, cinematographer Pliny Goodfriend -- love the name! -- shoots all the gags beautifully.
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6/10
One of Mr. Ray's better efforts!
JohnHowardReid18 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Richard Talmadge (Dick Manning), Thelma White (Helen Lloyd), Mildred Harris (Marie Lloyd Hartley), Paul Ellis (Lavelle), George Chesebro, Robert Walker (henchmen), Lloyd Ingraham (successful bidder), Robert Frazer (Hartley), Vera Lewis (Mrs Hartley), Bull Montana (Monte, the escapee).

Director: BERNARD B. RAY. Screenplay: Jack Natteford (dialogue), Richard Talmadge (continuity). Story: Bennett Cohen. Photography: Pliny Goodfriend. Film editor: Frank Atkinson. Assistant director: Ira Webb. Sound recording: J.S. Westmoreland. Producer: Bernard B. Ray.

Not copyrighted by Reliable Pictures Corporation. No recorded New York opening. U.S. release: 27 November 1935. 53 minutes.

Alternative title: IT'S NEVER TOO LATE TO MEND.

SYNOPSIS: Daredevil detective, Dick Manning, nabs a gang of warehouse bandits led by a blackmailing jewel thief.

COMMENT: Borrowing a plot strand from "The Three Musketeers", this story serves mainly as an excuse for a series of acrobatic escapades by Richard Talmadge.

One must admit that the daredevil, Talmadge, is not only in great form, but comes across as a moderately appealing personality.

And it's also good to record that despite some histrionic shortcomings, Miss White makes an agreeable heroine.

The rest of the players are serviceable enough. And it's certainly interesting to see that perennial solid western heavy, George Chesebro, in a suit (and doing a couple of double takes at that).

Mr. Ray's direction rates a cut above his usual humdrum standard, thanks to some great location work with police cars speeding all out along actual streets and alley-ways.
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7/10
A high rating just for its gaul alone.
mark.waltz20 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Take a look at the opening scene featuring Richard Talmadge in an ambulance, desperate to get out, and pulling himself up flipping himself onto the roof and riding like a circus performer down a city main street just to get to police headquarters. He wants to get to a police auction to see what happens to a particular trunk, and when the option is over, he breaks into that apartment and finds himself at gunpoint, which Mildred Harris searching futile through it for something. It's all to help her sister Thelma White, both the victims of blackmail.

"That girl has something on her mind, and it isn't a prayer book." So says Vera Lewis, Harris's mother-in-law, about White who lives with them. Apparently, Harris has gone to a man's apartment and is now being fleeced, desperate to get back her property of some valuable pearls so her husband, commissioner Robert Frazer, doesn't find out and accuse her of cheating on him.

It's a bit of a convoluted plot line and situation regarding the sisters, but the way it is presented is very entertaining and fast moving. The auction sequence alone is very funny with an obvious spinster bidding on a criminal's suitcase of love letters, apparently very racy, and she steals the scene simply by fanning herself in expectation of the reading that she will have later on. Several car chases and some sly witty dialog aid in making this poverty row crime comedy drama more entertaining with a low budget then most major studios did with all the gloss allowed to them.
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