Saw 'Tell No Tales' seeing as it has the kind of story that has always appealed to me straightaway. It was interesting to see how actor Leslie Fenton (have much more of his work to see though) would fare in his feature debut as director. And also to see Melvyn Douglas in a different and less suave role to usual (he was one of the best at that kind of role at the time in my view) and talented actors such as Gene Lockhart and Theresa Harris in also atypical supporting roles.
'Tell No Tales' turned out to be very entertaining and always engaging, very solidly done in most areas. Those playing against type surprisingly excel at it, Fenton does a remarkably good job as first time director and it always intrigues. It is not quite great, despite it having potential to be, and is not perfect, but despite any misgivings there is so much done right and the best of the good things are pretty brilliantly done. So well worth seeing.
Admittedly, 'Tell No Tales' gets far-fetched and contrived in places. The very end is too tacked on and doesn't ring true, due to not gelling with what goes on before.
It could have gotten going a little earlier perhaps too.
However, 'Tell No Tales' is well filmed with a slick, stylish yet never glossy look, with some atmospheric lighting, and Fenton keeps things moving at a crisp pace. Without rushing events through. William Axt's score has the appropriate typical moodiness. The script is taut, eventful and has very little extraneous fat, meaning that it always intrigues and it never goes limp. Some nice sharp wit too to not allow the film to get too dark.
Furthermore, the story has a good deal going on and doesn't feel dull, with some nice tension (towards the end to the maximum) and an exciting climax. It doesn't try to do too much and has enough surprises without being over-complicated, even if it does get silly and contrived as said in spots. The Wake sequence is a powerful one. All the actors do well, with Douglas having his usual suave persona mixed with a gritty edge. Louise Platt is charming without being pallid, Lockhart is fun in his part and Harris stretches her acting chops in a more substantial role than as a maid type of part.
On the whole, good fun though with flawed moments. 7/10