Song of the Thin Man (1947) Poster

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7/10
Nick and Nora Charles stroll off arm-in-arm into the distance. We'll miss them
Terrell-42 February 2008
Song of the Thin Man is a sad-sweet experience, something like meeting a good friend you haven't seen in years and realizing how much affection you still have for him... but also how much you both have aged. It's been 13 years since The Thin Man appeared in 1934. We have to stop and remember that Nick Charles wasn't the thin man back then; that particular thin man was just one of the many murder victims Nick and Nora came across in their six movies. We remember the sophistication and insouciance of this affectionate and clever couple. They were never at a loss for a quick come-back or to shake a cold, gin martini. Even Nick's modus operandi to bring all the suspects together at the conclusion and pick apart the case until he has the murderer squirming never quite got stale. Alas, with Song of the Thin Man we have the MGM factory squeezing out one more film to try to wring a profit from it, this time attempting to make it "contemporary" by setting the story in the post-WWII social world of after-hours jazz clubs, bebop musicians and hep cat dialogue. Nick and Nora never looked uncomfortable anywhere their adventures took them in the past. They look at times now as out of place as salesmen from Peru, Indiana, at a Linda and Cole Porter party.

Gone is the sophisticated world of white sofas and polished black floors, of naughty Porter lyrics and earnestly sophisticated Gershwin tunes. Martinis seem oddly old fashioned now (and so do Old Fashioneds) as Nick drinks high balls and Nora sips sherry. And instead of clever repartee, Song of the Thin Man gives us the kind of dialogue only studio journeymen can write. Says one character, "I must have blown my top, kicking Buddy over for a road company Casanova like you!" The solution depends on the kind of half-baked, melodramatic psychology popular at the time. To make it even more tedious, there are no characters except Nick and Nora to care about. The movie is peopled with crooks, opportunists, gold- diggers, scat-talking musicians and the unattractive rich. The acting is so variable that it doesn't take long to realize we're watching the kind of movie that MGM did not waste much effort on.

Why spend time on it? Two names: William Powell and Myrna Loy. Even though 13 years have elapsed, even though, at 55, Powell is a little fuller around the face (Loy at 42 doesn't seem to have changed a bit) and even though WWII altered decisively the world of films, they remain one of the most refreshing, attractive and delightful movie pairs in screen history. They raise the movie, if at least not to their level, to a level of enduring affection for their style, their warmth, their intelligence and, that word again, their insouciance. So three stars is too much for the movie but five stars is too little for them.
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6/10
The last and the least
blanche-228 April 2012
It's 1947 and after five entries into the "Thin Man" series, starting in 1934, it's time for a sixth and last one. This may not be the best, but it has a lovely cast consisting of William Powell and Myrna Loy, of course, as well as Keenan Wynn, Leon Ames, Gloria Grahame, Don Taylor, Patricia Morison, Jayne Meadows, Dean Stockwell as little Nicky, and Asta Jr.

Nora is trying for a higher class of acquaintances in the hopes that Nicky will get to know people besides thieves. At a society dance, the band leader, Tommy Drake (Philip Reed), is killed. The police go after Phil Brant, whom they suspect. The next day, Janet Thayer (Meadows) and Brant (Bruce Cowling), with whom she has just eloped, come to ask for Nick and Nora's help. The police arrive just then, and because Nick believes that Brant's life is in danger, turns him over to the police for his own safety.

Ass Nick and Nora look into the case, they find out that there are many suspects in Drake's death as he wasn't very popular. Janet's father (Ralph Morgan) couldn't stand him, he owed money to a loan shark (William Bishop), and the clarinetist (Don Taylor) and Drake had an onstage fight. Drake suspected him of having an affair with his girlfriend (Grahame) who sings with the band.

In an attempt to be hep, Nick attempts to use musician language, and it's funny to hear it coming from him, and Nora tells the institutionalized clarinet player that she's a "canary." Though they were always wonderful together, Powell and Loy just don't have the zip of earlier films; they are, after all, older. Powell is 55, Loy is 42 and lovely, but their routine is tired. The mystery is okay; Dean Stockwell is funny as the incorrigible Nicky, and Asta Jr. has some funny bits.

You'll enjoy this as long as you don't compare it to the first few. "The Thin Man" started a host of imitators as well as a TV show and Broadway musical. Powell and Loy brought humor and class to the detective genre. This isn't really a fitting end to such an important series.
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7/10
Interesting Characters; a Mystery set in the World of Musicians in the 40s
silverscreen88830 June 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This is not quite a great movie,perhaps; but of all the "Thin Man" series'entries that starred capable William Powell and mature and lovely Myrna Loy, arguably this is the best mystery of all. It is also unfortunately true that having saddled the fun-loving Charleses, Nick and Nora, with Little Nicky, the same error committed in the Tarzan series, this series' executives discovered the young fellow, admirably played by Dean Stockwell, was crimping the thirties' breezy and boozy style of their very stylish duo. So this was the final entry of a long-lasting and frequently delightful set of entries. The storyline for this one is particularly strong, as are the dialogue and characters, in my judgment. Steve Fisher and Nat Perrin wrote the strong screenplay with additional dialogue by James O'Hanlon and Harry Crane. The story was by Stanley Roberts. The main narrative concerns musicians and socialites, and how badly they mix in this 'case'. The corpse is an obnoxious bandleader, who is killed while leading his aggregation aboard a gambling ship that operates outside the 'three-mile limit". Nick Charles, retired New York detective refuses to become involved here; then he is shot at, involved in the case up to his ears, menaced, lied to, frustrated by police, instructed in bee bop music, and finally left alone and also aided by his wife long enough to solve the murder and clear the innocent. In this excellent cast along with Powell and Loy are Keenan Wynn as a likable musician nicknamed "Clinker", Don Taylor as a lovesick musician with mental problems, Leon Ames and Patricia Morison as dynamic and mismatched couple, Jayne Meadows and William Bishop, Gloria Grahame, Ralph Morgan, Warner Anderson, Connie Gilchrist, Marie Windsor. Bess Flowers who is somewhat inadequate both as a singer and an actress is also featured. The best scenes in this directorial effort by Edward Buzzell are Nick's evading of police surveillance to row out and search the gambling ship with his dog Asta after the murder, the early shipboard scenes, the visits Nick and later Nora and Nick make to various locales to question people and the final showdown scene. In this one, Patricia Morison wears a stunning black evening gown, and is given something important to do in the events at last--as she shoots the man who was the murderer of the heel bandleader that she really loved, and not just another plausible suspect... This is a very attractive MGM film to boot. The sets by Edwin Willis, art direction by Cedric Gibbons and Randall Duell, Sydney Guilaroff's hairstyles and Irene's gowns are major assets to a creation of the the "look" of a good 1940s mystery entry. Exceptional for its characters, and for its band, its wealthy folk, and its shady gambling circles' setting.
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The worst still better than most!
estabansmythe11 January 2004
Did Nick and Nora's swan song, "Song Of The Thin Man," try just a tad too hard to be hip and cool? Yep.

You know what that means? It means, so what? It means that what many consider the least popular of the Thin Man movie is still better than most.

For Nick and Nora's final bit of sleuthing and their first in a couple years (since the wonderful Thin Man Goes Home), they enter the ultra-hip, ultra-cool, slanged-out world of jazz, courtesy of their tour guide, reed-man Keenan Wynn, who couldn't put together a sentence of straight Queen's English to save his shoe bottom (soul).

Who killed the band leader? All I can say is, it wasn't Nick or Nora or Asta.

By 1947, William Powell's waistline has expanded slightly and Myrna Loy long ago gave up the sheer, slinky gowns that had us all drooling, but they can still cut it, rug and all.

Were six Thin Man movies enough? Not for me.
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7/10
Swan song of the Thin Man
AlsExGal25 January 2016
I apologize for having the same obvious review title as several others, but I just couldn't help myself. This is only the least of the Thin Man movies if you have seen all of the others, especially the energetic precode that started it all. If this was the only Thin Man film you ever saw, you'd think it a superior mystery of its era with great leads.

It is 1947, Nick is obviously in middle age, Nora is on the edge of it, and our dynamic detective duo of the 30's and the war years (they made one film during WWII) are in a brave new postwar world that they do not quite fit into, nor do they understand. Their son is about ten and is getting old enough to defy them, and two young friends, socialite Janet Thayar and her newly wed musician husband Phil Brant come to them for help. They need help because the night before, aboard a shipboard nightclub, band leader Tommy Drake has been murdered, and because Brant and Drake were seen arguing, of course the police jump to conclusions and assume Phil did it.

Now as usual there are many suspects, some that are obvious and some that are not so obvious. However, to solve the crime, Nick has to investigate a world completely foreign to him - that of postwar jazz and the jive talking of the inhabitants of that world that sound like a foreign language to him. Nick hasn't lost a step in his investigation abilities, he's just having some trouble with the changing times.

I don't know if this was meant to be the last of the Thin Man films, or it just happened to be, but it was a perfect ending. Nick and Nora are moving into middle age, it is time for a new generation to take over, symbolized by the newlywed Brants, and the Charles' are ready to wander off into the sunset and deal with their son's upcoming teen years. A perfect ending to a perfect series.

My favorite scene has nothing to do with the crime. It is when the Charles' son has tried to duck out on piano practice and go play ball against their direct orders. Nora says a spanking is in order and hands this task over to Nick who hesitates as he thinks back on his son's birth, the good times, and then one memory of his son being a brat hits him and he is able to complete the task. In this one way Nick and Nora were very postwar - they winced at corporal punishment. This was probably the reason the baby boomers were entitled hippies in their teens and 20s, the most prudish bunch of old people since the pilgrims in middle age, and want the government to keep their hands off of their Medicare now that they are old. But I digress.

At any rate, adieu Nick and Nora, no sleuthing team before or after you were ever your equal in charm, teamwork, insight or just plain fun.
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7/10
"If this rampage of respectability persists, we'll have to get you a bulletproof girdle."
classicsoncall16 February 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Most of the reviewers here for this film appear to fall right in line with the common perception that this was one of, if not the weakest of the Thin Man films. But you know what? I liked it. I think a lot of it had to do with the hep-cat dialog coming from clarinetist Clinker Krause (Keenan Wynn), and if there was a better supporting cast in the series elsewhere, I think you'd be hard pressed to find it. Besides Wynn, you had Leon Ames, Gloria Grahame and Jayne Meadows, and the kicker would be Dean Stockwell, still a kid as young Nick Charles Jr.

As usual, and despite my best efforts to follow the characters and situations, it's virtually impossible to solve the mystery presented, but getting there is much of the fun. I knew that necklace would wind up being instrumental in solving a murder as soon as Nick (William Powell) picked it up the first time, but gee, what's with Mrs. Talbin (Patricia Morrison)? She would have gotten her revenge when her husband confessed to killing Drake (Phillip Reed). I think you'd have to call her shooting of Mitchell Talbin (Ames) an unforced error. Oh well, too bad.

So for a swan song, I think Nick and Nora Charles went out respectably. Powell by this time was showing his age a bit but Myrna Loy still looked great, though both conceding that perhaps their party hearty days may have been well behind them. Even Asta still had a few good scenes left in him, working the bedroom gimmick for maximum effect. Spanning a period of slightly over a dozen years, I think the Thin Man series came to a successful conclusion with this entertaining swan song.
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6/10
The least of the series
bensonmum231 December 2005
Warning: Spoilers
What started with a bang in The Thin Man sadly ends in something of a whimper in Song of the Thin Man. By 1947, William Powell and Myrna Loy had become a little too long in the tooth to portray the dashing, urbane mystery solving couple. Both still do a good job, but I always picture Nick and Nora a little younger. The writing is not up to the standard set by the first three Thin Man films. It often seems more like what you would find in a cheap Monogram Charlie Chan film. I'll always argue that the writing in this series as a whole really suffered with the departure of Dashiell Hammett. And, with a child at home, the jokes centered on Nick's drinking seem out of place and not as funny.

So how can I rate a movie a 6/10 if I see so many problems with it? The faults I point out are found when comparing Song of the Thin Man with the other movies in the series. On it's own, it's an enjoyable enough movie, just not the best I've ever seen. But when compared with the previous five films, it fails. Still, we're talking Powell and Loy, my all-time favorite movie couple, so a 6/10 seems about right.
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9/10
Excellent Mystery & Great Jazz Background
fflambeau27 October 2012
I completely disagree with some prior posters who thought this the worst in the series. First of all, it's one of the best mysteries with any number of possible candidates. Secondly, it has a really strong supporting cast led by K. Wynn who is terrific in the role of jazz inside man. Jayne Meadows and Ralph Morgan are also strong supporting actors. Third, it really showcases jazz, perhaps inadvertently and in a negative way however (as out of touch, out of the mainstream with a different language etc.), and has some great numbers (including the theme song, "You're Not so Easy to Forget" which I think the director was using as a nod to this being the last in the series of Thin Man movies and to William Powell. The director obviously makes his disapproving commentary on jazz in a subtle way: by focusing the camera on the bust of Beethoven just after a jazz scene! But he does integrate the music well into the plot since much of the plot takes place on a gambling boat.

The denouement of the mystery is also probably influential on other mystery/criminal series to follow (like Perry Mason) in that the entire cast of suspects is collected together, as in an Agatha Christie or a Rex Stout story. Fourth, the script is very, very witty and you have to pay close attention to the words (like the reference to Somerset Maugham with the "it couldn't be his razor", a reference to Maugham's, The Razor's Edge. Or how about the time William Powell is "eying" a ladies earrings but his sight is a bit focused elsewhere and Nora reminds him something like, "earrings are higher than that"! But I did think we saw too much of Dean Stockwell and the film would have better off with him in a reduced role (sorry to his fan club, but I'm no fan). I thought I saw the Wizard of Oz in this movie and it turns out that it is his (almost lookalike) brother! Lastly, Asta has a big and important role in this movie, fittingly so, since it is the last in the series. In short, great acting, great script, and great harmony between Powell (who really could act, especially in comedy) and M. Loy. Superb.
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6/10
several notches below the original
planktonrules3 May 2006
While I enjoyed this final THIN MAN movie, I've gotta admit that it was far less enjoyable than the first few entries in this series. Maybe the actors were getting tired or the writers had writer's block--but the movie just lacked the most important factor for a THIN MAN movie--FUN! Yes, some of the wonderful banter between Nick and Nora was present (particularly when Nora talks "jive"), but only here and there--not nearly as often or as hilarious as in previous films. And, unfortunately, the plot also is pretty convoluted (though I must admit that plot is NOT the primary reason people watched the films--it was the characters). Also, their son, played by Dean Stockwell, was never developed as a character and, Frankly, Nick and Nora seemed like TERRIBLE parents. Oh well, despite all these complaints, it still is a pretty good film--slightly better than average but that's really about all.
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9/10
Good mystery comedy
kenandraf29 July 2002
Good mystery comedy movie that was certainly carried by the lead stars.The production was average and the script was not as good as the previous THIN MAN films.Still delivers the basics of the genre though so if you are a fan of the THIN MAN films or a big fan of comedy mysteries or a big fan of the lead stars here,you will like this movie......
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6/10
Great Jazz, thin plot
stwhite22 August 2003
Warning: Spoilers
William Powell and Myrna Loy conclude an entertaining series with a so-so film that just happens to be packed with some great 1940's jazz. Much of the quick wit we've come to expect from Nick and Nora just isn't here with the exception of Nora's "Mr. Charles is a bit of a schmoe" remark. In many of the earlier Thin Mans, Nick and Nora both seemed to thrive when they encountered a murder mystery and when they drank quite a bit, which became less and less as the series continued. Unfortunately, the humor which had centered around their (especially Nick's) vices, drinking, gambling, flirting, etc., was replaced with parental humor. The scene where Nora becomes a disciplinarian and insists that a reluctant Nick give a spanking to Nick, Jr. just wasn't the humor we'd become accustomed to and was difficult to observe. It was obvious that Nick and Nora had entered a more mature phase of life, but in the movies that doesn't usually make for better comedy. POSSIBLE SPOILER: It is also hard to believe that someone who had been committed because he had been made to believe that he was the killer, and rehabilitated by being made to believe that the murder never happened was brought back to give a concert and then announce who the killer was after the concert.

Despite all of this, I did enjoy the film. I think it was mainly because of the jazz (in the words of Klinker "Love it! Love it!)and the nightclub and jam scenes. I wish I had been around when that music was popular. I also liked the fact that there weren't any stereotypical pathetically helpless female characters in the supporting cast, unlike the first four Thin Mans. While this is one of the weaker Thin Mans(this and Another Thin Man, while After the Thin Man and the original Thin Man are the best), I cannot imagine that this series would have been like without William Powell, Myrna Loy, and Asta (I think there was a new Asta for this last film). No one today could even come close. In honor of Nick and Nora, 6 martinis out 10 for Song of the Thin Man.
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10/10
A fine and mature Farewell to the series.
NativeTexan6 May 2001
Nick and Nora have grown up in this Farewell to the series. It is still just as funny, but there is an underlying theme of duty and moral obligation that is missing from the previous entries as Nick and Nora try to find the killer. Keenan Wynn is hilarious as Klinker, a jazz clarinetist, and there's plenty of jazz music -- real jazz, when it was truly cool and the performers were super cool.
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7/10
Not one of the best entries, but I liked it anyway!
JohnHowardReid28 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Finally, the movie everyone (except me) hates: Song of the Thin Man (1947). For this one, Nat Perrin was assigned as both producer and screenwriter (in collaboration with Steve Fisher), whilst the directorial reins were handed to veteran Eddie Buzzell. The writers have taken care to restore Nick's liking (though not compulsion) for alcohol, but they made little change to the bland domesticity of Nora. Admittedly, she isn't quite the dumb housewife here, more the not-so-bright socialite. Her antics aren't funny though. In one particular boneheaded play, she almost gets herself killed! Loy's performance is adequate, but by no means sparkling. Maybe she was miffed that she was handed no witty lines to speak of. Maybe she was just tired. She'd already co-starred with Powell in thirteen films. Aside from Myrna Loy's inoffensively decorative Nora, the main item that irritates most fans is the jazz soundtrack. I thought it terrific. In fact it's my number one reason for welcoming this entry. Sultry Gloria Grahame sings up a storm with "You're Not So Easy To Forget", whilst Keenan Wynn (as an enthusiastic muso) and Don Taylor (as a psychotic reed man) give the most convincingly charismatic performances of their lives. As for Powell, the script not only serves him astringently well, but he still seems right at home tossing off one-liners in the same polished, throwaway, suavely witty form. No doubt he could have continued persuasively playing Nick Charles for the rest of his career. - Which he did with only minor variations.
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5/10
Tiresome story depends heavily on Loy/Powell chemistry...
Doylenf6 November 2006
It was inevitable that "The Thin Man" series would run out of steam eventually and this last entry is probably why both Powell and Loy never made another one. The background for this mystery is a gambling boat with jazz musicians giving the film a very dated look because of all the jive talk, circa 1940s.

And as usual, there are more suspects than there are murders, with Asta and Mrs. Charles trying to help Nick solve the crime. MGM spared no expense in giving the film a glossy, polished look and a sparkling supporting cast--PATRICIA MORISON, LEON AMES, GLORIA GRAHAME, KEENAN WYNN, DEAN STOCKWELL (then 11) and PHILIP REED.

The problem is the usual flaw in these Nick and Nora mysteries--the viewer never gets enough clues to solve the crime along with the two sleuths. You're just along for the ride as the two deal with a host of unpleasant characters, among whom is a murderer who invariably slips up in time for Nick to solve the crime.

Summing up: Good chemistry between Loy and Powell is still there, but they get little help from a tiresome script.
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An Often Amusing If Unremarkable Finale
Snow Leopard12 September 2005
While it probably doesn't offer as much as most of the earlier movies in the series, "Song Of the Thin Man" is nevertheless a pleasant finale to the classic series. It has the usual blend of wit, oddly assorted characters, and mystery, with a solid supporting cast led by Keenan Wynn.

The story uses the now-familiar setup of Nick getting drawn into a mystery against his will. This time, it uses the jazz scene as the backdrop, and while the setting is not always used to its potential, it does allow Wynn some good moments that he makes use of. Wynn usually plays off of Powell and Loy rather well. Most of the rest of the cast does well when they get the chance, and Don Taylor works as a more serious, troubled character who is important to the story.

You can tell that they were running out of truly new ideas for the series, yet in another sense the series got an impressive amount of mileage from the format. This last movie may offer little that is new, but it is enjoyable as light entertainment.
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7/10
Not bad, but not great ending to the Thin Man movies
CCsito10 August 2009
This is the sixth and last in the series of Thin Man movies with William Powell and Myrna Loy. The plot deals with a night club manager who is murdered after he assaults a trumpet player in a band and two times a girlfriend and well as owe several thousand dollars to another man. Nick and Nora take on the murder case at the request of the girlfriend (Jayne Meadows) of the prime murder suspect. The jilted murder victim's girlfriend (Gloria Grahame) also gets bumped off as well. The movie has some scenes with the son of the Thin Man (played by Dean Stockwell). Keenan Wynn costars as one of the band members (though he is never considered to be a prime suspect). There is still a good chemistry between William Powell and Myrna Loy in this movie. There are less good one liners that you often heard from the earlier movies in the series though. Asta also has a few good scenes in this movie. William Powell and Myrna Loy appear a bit more tired in this last movie of the series. But I guess that is to be expected as one gets older anyway.
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7/10
Swan Song of the Thin Man
madden-28 January 2008
Yeah, it's not as good as the other five Thin Man films. So what? It's worth a 7 just to see Powell & Loy banter one more time. Remember, even Marilyn Monroe couldn't save "Love Happy", the Marx Brothers' last effort.

BTW: The jazz was dated even for the time. The cutting edge in 1947 was bebop, and even bebop was fairly mature by then. The after-hours jam sessions would be mixed race efforts with an edge toward the black musicians, not a bunch of white guys playing small-group variations of 1940's big band crap. The white musicians went to the sessions to learn bebop from their black compatriots and to get away from the junk they had to play on the bandstand. Even the instrumentation was dated. The clarinet had already died as a principal instrument for younger musicians. All in all, it's about as authentic as the Rock and Roll in an Annette Funicello movie.
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7/10
This is great for an afternoon, or rainy day movie.
FiendishDramaturgy27 January 2009
This was another excuse to showcase the wonderful chemistry between Loy and Powell. Thankfully, I cannot say that there is no attention to detail, story, plot, or execution, because there is. It does somehow seem to be secondary, however, to the marvelous on screen relationship the principles enjoy.

I like this in spite of the comparatively weak production style, plot, etc. and more for the quirky, sweet element and less for the tremendously compelling story or plot. It has a close feeling to Another Thin Man in that it was enjoyable, not as good as Shadow, or the first two installments, but enjoyable, nonetheless.

All in all? This is great for an afternoon, or rainy day movie.

It rates a 7.3/10 from...

the Fiend :.
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8/10
The swan song of the Thin Man
binapiraeus15 February 2014
Aboard a gambling ship where Nick and Nora are invited by rich David Thayar, the atmosphere is obviously pretty much poisonous - and by the end of the night, it becomes murderous, too: band leader Tommy Drake, hated by just about everyone on board, is shot. And suspect number one is - Phil Brant, who just married secretly Thayar's daughter Janet. So the newly-weds seek help from Janet's friends Nick and Nora; but instead, Nick turns Phil over to the police - but why? Because he wants him in a safe place, since he's afraid somebody might kill him - and a prison cell IS (temporarily, at least) a safe place...

And then Nick and Nora start their investigations - and very soon we've got a whole bunch of suspects: clarinetist Buddy Hollis, who's become an alcoholic since Drake stole his girlfriend, the beautiful singer Fran (a great performance by Gloria Grahame!), gambling boss Al Amboy, whom he owed a lot of money, and of course Thayar, who disapproved of his daughter's marriage and might want to get Brant out of the way...

And then there are the members of the band, of course, who haven't actually got a motive, but certainly hated their 'boss' enough to actually celebrate his death - but here the fun begins: Nick gets the second clarinetist, 'Clinker', to help him search for the vanished Buddy Hollis (he found a razor blade at the scene of the crime, and every clarinetist uses one for cleaning his instrument...); and so we (and Nick and Nora, who don't seem to be very up-to-date anymore on the latest music hits and musicians' slang) get a chance to see some really crazy jam sessions!

But then things become serious again: they find Buddy in an asylum, completely deranged by now, then Fran is mysteriously stabbed in her apartment - and when Nick and Nora come back home, where they had left Nickie Jr. in Janet's care, they find them both missing... Could she possible be wanting to take revenge for the way Nick treated her husband??

Although at times a bit too melodramatic and complicated, even this last one of the 'Thin Man' films provides many different elements: a shade of Noir, a glimpse into the jazz world, some humor, some suspense, a quite intriguing plot, and good solid performances.

The sad thing about this movie, though, is that the carefree, nonconformist, cheeky Nick and Nora that we knew at last are turning 'typically American', almost bourgeois: they've become rather strict parents (Nick spanks Jr. when he tries to sneak out to play baseball instead of practicing piano), and compared to the 'hep cats' of the band, with first and best Keenan Wynn as 'Clinker', they look - almost intentionally - pretty old-fashioned and stuffy. All this is a mirror of the general atmosphere in the US society toward the end of the 40s, of course; but it also shows that the good old days of crime comedy were coming to an end - and this film is kind of a 'swan song' for that great genre that had blossomed in the 30s and early 40s...
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7/10
See it for Keenan Wynn, at the very least
zetes11 September 2003
Enjoyable final Thin Man film with Mr. and Mrs. Charles investigating the death of a jazz musician. Of the three Thin Man movies I've seen, I don't think I ever really was able to follow the convoluted mystery plots, not because they were beyond me, but because I didn't care much. I find them rather uninteresting. But William Powell and Myrna Loy are both so wonderful, and their chemistry so perfect that the films are never less than fun to watch. I enjoyed this one quite a bit, especially the jazz music that accompanies the plot. The supporting cast is excellent, especially Keenan Wynn, who gives a hilarious performance as a jive-talking clarinetist. It's very amusing watching Nick and Nora trying to understand his hip slang. Wynn is definitely the highlight of the picture. There are a lot of beautiful female co-stars as well, including Gloria Grahame, Patricia Morison, and Bess Flowers. 7/10.
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8/10
Still enjoyable installment.
wkozak22112 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I love all of the Thin Man movies except for After the Thin Man. This one is almost right. The mystery and cast are pretty good. I don't know why it has to revolve around music. Slightly annoying. Why does one of the musicians have to be a burn out.? Also, why did it take so long to make this film?
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7/10
Jive talking
Spondonman25 June 2006
Totally ordinary now, the Thin Man bowed out as slightly off-key as one of the clarinet solos played by the mysterious key character Buddy. Can madness be turned on and off like a tap? However still some fine moments here even for 1947, but especially for 2006.

Murder is committed on a heaving nightclub-boat the Charles are disporting themselves on, and Nick launches himself into the case with gusto for the once and only. The dissembling suspects are assembled for the viewers, but with this lot for the first time I didn't care whether they were all guilty or innocent. None of them were given enough time to become interesting, whether as baddies or semi-baddies. If Nick had pointed out Junior as the murderer I would have been surprised but accepted his deductions as infallible as usual. Keenan Wynn and other all-white musicians laid on the hep talk with a trowel, to Nick and Nora's continual generation gap bewilderment.

Overall a tremendous Golden Age Hollywood comedy drama series, starting with a bang and ending with a slight fizzle. So 6/6 it was but I give this one a good 7/10.
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6/10
Don't Judge the Series by this Weak Entry
aimless-4614 June 2006
The standard comment and review for 1947's "Song of the Thin Man" is that it is the weakest of the series but still way above your average film. It is the none-too-remarkable conclusion to a great six-film (produced over 13 year period) series and suffers from Hollywood's usual inability to sense when enough is enough. They just tried to wring one too many out of what had once been a good idea.

The basic problem lay in trying to incorporate all the elements that sold tickets to the earlier films. The quantity of these elements grew with each successive film rendering the producers clueless about which ones were actually drawing to viewers; so they just threw them all into the mix.

The interplay between Nick and Nora Charles (William Powell and Myrna Loy) as they move about in the Dashiell Hammett world of odd characters had once been enough to turn a good murder mystery into great entertainment. To this add a little Asta comic relief and you have a complete package.

Then successive pictures introduced little Nicky, overused the Asta gags, infested the cast with characters who rather than being subtly oddball-were overbearing and stupid, and moved ever more toward screwball style comedy. "Song of the Thin Man" is the culmination of this process.

But the real problem is not these less-than-zero additions but the subtractions that they cause. Gone was any pacing and suspense, gone was a clever mystery, gone was a nicely written script; these things were considered unnecessary by the producers and there was no room for them anyway.

So although "Song of the Thin Man" is a murder mystery, it lacks the clues that could provide early answers to perceptive viewers. Any movie mystery can have a surprise ending by revealing too little, but a great mystery film is one where you look back at the end (in retrospective) and see that the necessary clues were provided, had you been insightful enough correctly puzzle things out. This requires great writing, directing, and editing. But when it came time to make "Song of the Thin Man" the producers were just trying to repackage the elements that they thought most fans of the series would turn out to see.

The film opens inside a casino, revealed to be a swank gambling boat named the S.S. Fortune. Nick and Nora are there for a charity benefit and there are cutaways to side stories concerning a member of a jazz band performing on the casino stage. The band-leader (who is revealed to have mega gambling losses to the boat's owner) goes below to break into the casino office's safe and is shot in the back by an unseen assailant. For its oddball characters, "Song of the Thin Man" has Nick and Nora paling around with jazz musicians, in a jazz world mysteriously lacking in African-Americans but making up for it with slang that seems to come from another planet.

All this said here are some interesting things to look for in "Song of the Thin Man". Patricia Morison plays Phyllis Talbin and Leon Ames plays her husband Mitch. Morison's failure to become a big star is perhaps the biggest mystery of Hollywood-she is not just breathtakingly beautiful but is blessed with acting talent as good or better than any of her contemporaries. If Ames looks familiar it is because he played supporting roles in most of the baby boomer Disney films.

Keeman Wynn (of Dr. Strangelove fame) is clarinet player Clarence 'Clinker' Krause. You recognize the voice more than the face. His once intentionally funny lines have become so out-dated that they are unintentionally funny.

Gloria Grahame is unexpectedly sultry as singer Fran Ledue Page, just a few years away from her show stealing performance as Ado Annie in "Oklahoma".

"The Honeymooners" Jayne Meadows appears Janet Thayar Brant and is quite good in what is the film's only really difficult part.

And what's up with "reed-man" Buddy Hollis.

Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.
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5/10
Farewell To The Thin Man
bkoganbing13 November 2006
William Powell was 55 and Myrna Loy 42 when Song of the Thin Man came out to box office that was not as good as the previous five entries. MGM thought they were getting too old for the roles and they and the stars called a halt to this most acclaimed of film series. I think they carried their parts off well myself.

I think the problem was that this last one was too violent. Myrna Loy is almost killed by one of the suspects and the final unmasking of the villain was very violent, not at all in keeping with the usual lightheartedness that characterized the Thin Man series. I think the audience rejected it for that reason.

A bandleader, Phillip Reed, is murdered on board a gambling ship and later on the band's vocalist Gloria Grahame is also killed. The usual array of suspects is on hand for Bill Powell to sift through and expose.

Song of the Thin Man has Dean Stockwell as their young son, Nick Charles, Jr. and Powell and Loy get a sidekick in the form of sideman saxophonist Keenan Wynn. If the series had kept going, Wynn might have become a regular.

Though it's not as good as the five previous entries, Song of the Thin Man is good one for this series to go out on.
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Watch an old mediocre Hollywood movie, not a new lousy one
edwartell28 June 2000
It may be mediocre, small-time fare, but it's also an excellent example of studio filmmaking from the 40s. In the last of the Thin Man movies, Nick (William Powell) and Nora (Myrna Loy) solve a murder (again), this time concerning a jazz bandleader (I think; the plot was kind of confusing). The dialogue isn't as sharp as in the other movies, and Dean Stockwell as Nick Jr. is cloying (although he was far worse in Anchors Aweigh). Keenan Wynn is fun as a jazz "insider" who "jams"; the outdated language in this movie is unbelievable. This is also wholesale propaganda: all the jazz players in the movie are either drunk or unpleasant, or both, thereby reinforcing the wholesome American family. As Janet, Jayne Meadows looks EXACTLY like Donna on Twin Peaks. Intentional or not? Compelling enough reason to watch this movie (the other reason is a bizarre sequence in which William Powell remembers his son growing up while his memories are projected onto the boy's butt).
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