The Falcon investigates the murder of an actor on a Hollywood backlot.The Falcon investigates the murder of an actor on a Hollywood backlot.The Falcon investigates the murder of an actor on a Hollywood backlot.
Photos
Paula Corday
- Lili D'Allio
- (as Rita Corday)
George DeNormand
- Truck Driver
- (scenes deleted)
John Barton
- Film Crew Member
- (uncredited)
Virginia Belmont
- Girl
- (uncredited)
Arthur Berkeley
- Film Crew Member
- (uncredited)
Sammy Blum
- Sammy - Actors Agent
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe motion picture studio seen in the film is in fact the old RKO studio lot, now part of Paramount Pictures studio lot. Despite the film having been made more than seventy years ago, a lot of the buildings on the lot are virtually unchanged.
- GoofsDuring the chase towards Sunset Studio Billie is driving her cab with Lawrence sitting in the back. When they get out at the studio gates Lawrence gets out from behind the wheel and Billie from the back. Presumably there was a scene where they switched places that ended up on the cutting room floor.
- Quotes
Louie Buchanan: [with menace] You see too much - you think too much - and you breathe too much...
Tom Lawrence: [helpfully] Yeah, and bet too much on the wrong horses.
- ConnectionsFollowed by The Falcon in San Francisco (1945)
Featured review
A welcome return to form for the Falcon series -- having run out of ideas for the standard city-based plots, the studio evidently tried putting the Falcon into unaccustomed environments to try to milk a few more scripts out of the formula, and oddly enough it actually tends to work quite well. In these later films ("The Falcon and the Co-Eds", "The Falcon Out West", "The Falcon in Hollywood") the focus seems to swing back onto the actual crime rather than the amiable surrounding tom-foolery, and the comic relief -- being more sparingly employed -- is more successfully funny.
"Hollywood" is in my experience the best of the films mentioned above, with a really quite ingenious plot and some interesting characters. Of course we've all seen "The Producers" now... but the cast of Hollywood 'types' -- from the Germanic martinet director to the playboy leading man, the distrait Shakespearean Englishman, the costume diva, the exotic star with a villa and swimming-pool and the gangster's moll trying to make her big break in the movies -- still has its own charms to offer, not least in watching the film subvert the stereotypes! (There's also a nod to a famous Sherlock Holmes case in there, for the alert.)
"Hollywood" is in my experience the best of the films mentioned above, with a really quite ingenious plot and some interesting characters. Of course we've all seen "The Producers" now... but the cast of Hollywood 'types' -- from the Germanic martinet director to the playboy leading man, the distrait Shakespearean Englishman, the costume diva, the exotic star with a villa and swimming-pool and the gangster's moll trying to make her big break in the movies -- still has its own charms to offer, not least in watching the film subvert the stereotypes! (There's also a nod to a famous Sherlock Holmes case in there, for the alert.)
- Igenlode Wordsmith
- Jan 1, 2007
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Falken i Hollywood
- Filming locations
- Hollywood Boulevard & Vine Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(The Falcon's cab follows Peggy Callahan's car around this corner-Melody Lane Cafe clearly visible)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 7 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was The Falcon in Hollywood (1944) officially released in India in English?
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