The Preview Murder Mystery
SCREEN STAR MURDERED! All Hollywood Thrown in an Uproar!
Someone is murdering the cast and crew of a new Hollywood movie, and the leading lady may be next. As a police detective locks down the lot and refuses to let anyone leave, the studio’s publicity head and his secretary attempt to solve the murders themselves.
Cast

Frances Drake
Peggy Madison

Reginald Denny
Johnny Morgan

Gail Patrick
Claire Woodward

George Barbier
Jerome Hewitt

Ian Keith
E. Gordon Smith

Rod La Rocque
Neil Du Beck

Conway Tearle
Edwin Strange

Thomas E. Jackson
Detective McKane

Colin Tapley
Studio Manager

Jack Mulhall
Jack Rawlins

Bryant Washburn
Karl Jennings

Franklyn Farnum
James Deley

Lee Shumway
Chief of Police

Spencer Charters
Jones - Watchman

Chester Conklin
Comedian

Hank Mann
Comedian

William Bailey
Studio Commissary Chief (Uncredited)

Bobby Barber
Prop Man (Uncredited)

Sidney Bracey
Du Beck's Valet (Uncredited)

Henry Brandon
The Bat Man (Uncredited)
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Rod Laroque ("DuBeck") has been getting threatening letters as he tries to conclude a film shoot at Paramount. Nobody is much surprised as he is a bit of a pain in the neck, but when the unthinkable does happen it falls to Reginald Denny ("Johnny Morgan") to get to the bottom of things. He'd better get a move on, because it is soon pretty clear that the killer has a vendetta against the entire cast! The investigation itself is fairly formulaic, but it has the added interest of showing us much of the behind-the-scenes aspects of life in Hollywood and of those on the sound stages. Director Robert Florey has used his budget quite creatively here - the action is pretty much constant, either relating to the search for the killer, or to the making of the feature. The, admittedly wordy, dialogue is not without some plausibly fun digs at the film-making process and at the real-life legends involved in front of and behind the camera. The story itself is really neither here nor there, but it is an entertaining mix of fact and fiction that though fairly predicable, still pitches a decent, workmanlike, cast and I quite enjoyed watching it.
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