Four Men and a Prayer

Four Brothers Sworn to a Mighty Oath Death..Romance..Mystery..Intrigue

6.3
19381h 25m

The sons of a disgraced British officer try to clear his name.

Production

Logo for 20th Century Fox

Cast

Photo of Loretta Young

Loretta Young

Lynn Cherrington

Photo of Richard Greene

Richard Greene

Geoffrey Leigh

Photo of George Sanders

George Sanders

Wyatt Leigh

Photo of David Niven

David Niven

Christopher Leigh

Photo of C. Aubrey Smith

C. Aubrey Smith

Loring Leigh

Photo of William Henry

William Henry

Rodney Leigh

Photo of Berton Churchill

Berton Churchill

Martin Cherrington

Photo of Alan Hale

Alan Hale

Furnoy

Photo of J. Edward Bromberg

J. Edward Bromberg

General Torres

Photo of Reginald Denny

Reginald Denny

Douglas Loveland

Photo of John Carradine

John Carradine

General Sebastian

Photo of Harry Hayden

Harry Hayden

Cherrington's Secretary

Photo of Claude King

Claude King

General Bryce

Photo of Frank Baker

Frank Baker

Defense Attorney

Photo of William Stack

William Stack

Prosecuting Attorney

Photo of Ruth Clifford

Ruth Clifford

Telephone Operator (uncredited)

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

"Col Leigh" (Sir C. Aubrey Smith) summons his four sons to their family home to inform them that he has been dishonourably discharged from the British Army. In disbelief, the family convenes and the old gent insists on his innocence and says he has the proof. They all go to change for dinner but before they can meet again, a gunshot shatters the peace of their stately home and the colonel is dead. The older brother, barrister "Wyatt" (George Sanders) quickly concludes this was murder and together with his brothers "Geoff" (Richard Greene), "Chris" (David Niven) and the enthusiastic young "Rodney" (William Henry) sets out on an adventure that takes them from Britain to India, Argentina and Egypt on the trail of some illicit gun-runners and would-be revolutionaries. "Geoff", meantime is keen on the feisty and determined "Lynn" (Loretta Young) who, having been stood up by him twice, decides to rather usefully embroil herself in the family mystery too. At times, this is quite a tautly directed story of machiavellian proportions, but for the most part it's a rather disappointingly meandering drama that can't quite decide what it's trying to be. John Ford has assembled a strong supporting cast - Reginald Denny and Alan Hale feature amongst them - but there is just far too much verbiage and not enough action before an ending that is remarkably rushed and really rather weak. It's my kind of film and I did quite enjoy it - I just don't know that I'll ever remember it.

You've reached the end.