The Mysterious Mr. Valentine

THE PAY-OFF WAS MURDER!

4.1
194656m

Janet Spencer is driving down a country road when one of her tires blows out. This seemingly innocuous, everyday occurrence leads Linda into a labyrinth of murder, blackmail and intrigue.

Production

Logo for Republic Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Mysterious Mr. Valentine clip

The Mysterious Mr. Valentine clip

Cast

Photo of William Henry

William Henry

Steve Morgan

Photo of Linda Stirling

Linda Stirling

Janet Spencer

Photo of Thomas E. Jackson

Thomas E. Jackson

Police Lt. Milo Jones

Photo of Barbara Woodell

Barbara Woodell

Rita Armstrong

Photo of Kenne Duncan

Kenne Duncan

Sam Priestly

Photo of Virginia Brissac

Virginia Brissac

Martha, the Housekeeper

Photo of Lyle Latell

Lyle Latell

Peter Musso, Henchman

Photo of Ernie Adams

Ernie Adams

Frank Gary, Henchman

Photo of Tristram Coffin

Tristram Coffin

John Armstrong

Photo of Arthur Space

Arthur Space

County Coroner

Photo of Roy Barcroft

Roy Barcroft

Blackmailer (voice) (uncredited)

Photo of Symona Boniface

Symona Boniface

Landlady (uncredited)

Photo of Ed Cassidy

Ed Cassidy

Police Sergeant (uncredited)

Photo of Charles Sullivan

Charles Sullivan

George - the Mechanic (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

"Janet" (Linda Stirling) gets a puncture and seeks the assistance of "Armstrong" (Tristram Coffin) incurring the chagrin of that man's rather jealous wife "Rita" (Barbara Wooddell). To make matters worse, she now drives off in the wife's car only to collide with another car and then find herself embroiled in a previous, and fatal, hit-and-run with the partner of the husband of the wife of the car she is driving. Still with me? Now she engages the help of PI "Morgan" (William Henry) to try to get to the bottom of an internecine mystery that involves fraud, insurance and mysterious women. It packs quite a lot of plot into an hour, but the acting and the dialogue is banal at best with very basic production values that smack more of television than cinema. It probably looked OK at a drive-in when the audience maybe had better things to do, and it really is pretty instantly forgettable fayre.

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