Secret Service (1931 film) explained

Secret Service
Director:J. Walter Ruben
James Anderson (assistant)
Producer:William LeBaron
Screenplay:Bernard Schubert
Starring:Richard Dix
William Post Jr.
Shirley Grey
Nance O'Neil
Music:Max Steiner
Cinematography:Edward Cronjager
Editing:Jack Kitchin
Studio:RKO Pictures
Distributor:RKO Pictures
Runtime:68 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Secret Service is a 1931 American Pre-Code drama film directed by J. Walter Ruben and written by Bernard Schubert. The film based on a play by William Gillette, stars Richard Dix, William Post Jr., Shirley Grey, and Nance O'Neil.[1] [2] The film was released on November 14, 1931, by RKO Pictures.

Plot

Two Union officers, Captain Lewis Dumont and his younger brother, Lieutenant Henry Dumont, receive orders from General Ulysses S. Grant Grant to go behind enemy lines and become undercover agents to feed false information to the Confederate States Army. Lewis is tasked with becoming part of a Confederate telegraph office in Richmond, Virginia, under the guise of a deceased Confederate officer, Thorne. Meanwhile, Henry is ordered to allow himself to be captured by the enemy, during which he is supposed to pass incorrect information about Union positions.

Thorne comes upon the tail-end of a skirmish between Union and Confederate soldiers, during which he is wounded. After the battle, he carries one of the wounded southerners, Howard Varney, back to his family's plantation. This endears Thorne to the family of the wounded rebel, particularly Varney's father, who is a Confederate general. While recuperating from his own wounds, Thorne develops a romantic relationship with Howard's sister, Edith. However, this creates enmity with one of the locals who was interested in Edith prior to Thorne's arrival, Arlesford.

When Thorne enlists one of the Varney's slaves to take a message to his brother in the prisoner of war camp, Arlesford, already suspicious of Thorne, sets a trap. When the trap is sprung, the slave is executed by hanging. As the two Dumont brothers develop their plan for giving false information, and allowing Union troops to break through the Confederate lines, the younger brother is brought from the prison camp to the Varney plantation. Rather than allow their plan to be uncovered, Henry shoots himself.

The elder Dumont, torn between duty and his love for Edith, is eventually uncovered as a spy. However, it is also discovered that he never sent the false information. As he is led away to prison, Edith vows to wait for him.

Cast

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Secret Service (1931) - Overview. Turner Classic Movies. September 9, 2014.
  2. Web site: Secret Service Trailer, Reviews and Schedule for Secret Service - TVGuide.com. TV Guide. September 9, 2014.