- Messages
- 17,215
- Location
- New York City
Bureau of Missing Persons from 1933 with Pat O'Brien, Bette Davis and Lewis Stone
- Not quite sure what they were trying for with this, at times, documentary style picture and, at times, traditional movie about a big city's Missing Persons Bureau, presented here as a critical Police department with a large budget and devoted officers passionately looking for missing persons
- The movie does reveal that the bulk of the missing persons are husbands or wives who've run away to lovers or they are teenage children running from abuse or neglect
- One story has a very modern feel: a child prodigy violinist runs away because he wants a "normal" childhood, which his mother seems to understand, but the father will have none of that and just wants to milk the son - it's a '30s version of some of today's sport-driven-parent stories
- If there is a central plot, it's that Pat O'Brien, a young rising star detective, feels "above" his new assignment with the Missing Persons Bureau, but then he gets wrapped up in an apparent missing-wife story (Bette Davis), which twists into an embezzlement and murder story that has him both seeing the value of the Bureau and the value of a young and blonde Miss Davis
- At just over an hour, and with O'Brien and Davis firing out dialogue at warp speed, the movie (1) flies by (once she gets into it), (2) is a quirky but fun early talky and (3) has really neat time travel to the '30s - cars, clothes, architecture and cool police technology (pictures sent over phone lines, radio broadcasts to patrol cars, etc.)