Here Comes Trouble (1948 film) explained

Here Comes Trouble
Director:Fred Guiol
Producer:Fred Guiol
Screenplay:George Carleton Brown
Edward E. Seabrook
Starring:William Tracy
Joe Sawyer
Emory Parnell
Betty Compson
Joan Woodbury
Music:Heinz Roemheld
Editing:Art Seid
Studio:Hal Roach Studios
Distributor:United Artists
Runtime:55 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Here Comes Trouble is a 1948 American comedy film in the Hal Roach's Streamliners series. It was produced and directed by Fred Guiol and written by George Carleton Brown and Edward E. Seabrook. The film stars William Tracy, Joe Sawyer, Emory Parnell, Betty Compson (in her final film) and Joan Woodbury. It was released on March 15, 1948 by United Artists.[1] [2]

Plot

Returning home from his army service in the Pacific, Dodo Doubleday resumes his former job as a copy boy at a newspaper. Dodo's girlfriend Penny Blake is determined to have her father, the editor of the newspaper, promote Dodo to a job with a salary that will allow them to afford to marry. However, her father "Windy" Blake detests Dodo and wants Penny to marry someone of her own social standing. After a quarter of the paper's police reporters are beaten up by gangsters and leave town, Windy sees the answer to his problems by promoting Dodo to police reporter.

Reporting to the police station on his first day on the job, Dodo meets his old Sergeant Ames who is now a uniformed police officer on his own first day on the force. The pair team up to break up the organized crime ring that leads to double crossing, blackmail, murder and a frantic chase in a house of burlesque.

Cast

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Here Comes Trouble (1948) - Overview - TCM.com. Turner Classic Movies. 16 October 2014.
  2. Web site: Here Comes Trouble. TV Guide. 16 October 2014.