Newspaper headlines proclaim
the notorious ‘Gorilla’ has murdered several people. The setting for this spooky comic murder
mystery is the house of Warren Stevens. Stevens’
estate is no ordinary edifice. The mansion
is a maze of secret passages. Virtually,
every room boasts a concealed panel. Kitty (Patsy Kelly) the maid is reading the Shakespeare play "Romeo and Juliet" in bed when she sees the arm of a gorilla pin a note to her
robe. Kitty raves hysterically and runs around the mansion. Peters (Bela Lugosi of "Dracula") the butler calms Kitty and then examines
that document. Stevens (Lionel Atwill) peruses the note, too. The note is a death threat for him. A thunder storm with recurring lightning
enhances the atmosphere laden with paranoia about when the ‘Gorilla’ will next
strike. The same night that this
happens, Stevens sends an urgent radiogram to his niece Norma
Denby. It seems that Stevens and Norma
are joint heirs under the terms of her late father’s will. Until Norma marries, Uncle Walter is the
executor of her estate. Walter wants
Norma and Jack to know what the contents of the estate are. The next
day Norma and her boyfriend arrive to find Walter feeling a little apprehensive
about the death threat. Of course,
Walter has no idea why anybody would want to kill him. Earlier, we see him on the phone begging for
clemency about a payment of a debt amounting to $250-thousand. Later, a genuine gorilla enters the mansion. Somebody has knocked out the gorilla’s trainer and unlocked the beast’s cage. Later,
we learn that Poe the gorilla hates women.
Stevens hires three
detectives from the ACME Detective Agency. The nitwit Ritz Brothers play the numbskull private
eyes that Stevens hires to protect him from the homicidal ape on the loose. They make their entrance about ten minutes
into the action. They arrive in the pouring rain in a convertible with an
umbrella serving as their roof. They
have cut holes for their eyes so they can see where they are driving. “I’ll bet there’s a dead body in every room,”
Garrity (Jimmy Ritz) observes before they climb out of her automobile. At best, the Ritz Brothers are low-brow
comics that rely on verbal wit and hammy acting to yield laughs. They freak out at the very mention of the
Gorilla’s name and Harrigan puts on a dumbshow when he encounters the ape. Everybody is in the study when the lights go
out and Stevens vanishes. The Ritz
Brothers try to reenact Stevens’ disappearance by using a stand-in for
him. “Look,” Mulligan says, “I’ve got an
idea. If we can figure out how Garrity
disappeared, we can figure out how Stevens disappeared.” Mulligan (Al Ritz) sits where Stevens sat
behind the desk. Harrigan (Harry Ritz) switches
off the lights and Mulligan disappears.
The next stand-in for Stevens that Harrigan uses is Kitty. This time the lights go out and Harrigan
rather than the stand-in for Stevens disappears. Suddenly, Kitty finds herself face-to-face
with Peters.
At the halfway point in the
film, a couple of other people arrive. Not
only does a mysterious but natty stranger (Joseph Calleia) appear without
invitation, but our bumbling heroes discover a sailor in a closet. The stranger prowls the premise after
Harrigan has vanished as a part of his reenactment ploy. The stranger finds Harrigan. Initially, Harrigan suspects the stranger is
the ‘Gorilla.’ The stranger explains he
stepped into the house to use the telephone because his car broke down. When Harrigan brandishes his revolver, the
stranger assures him he is making a big mistake. The stranger surprises Harrigan, knocks him
unconscious, and claps handcuffs on him. About forty minutes into the plot, A.P. Conway
(Paul Harvey) storms into the mansion. He
is adamant about collecting a quarter of a million dollars. “I have proof that Stevens have been stealing
from his client’s accounts for over a year.”
He refuses to leave until he has his money. More than ever the Ritz Brothers are
determined to solve the mystery. Eventually,
they venture into the cellar and encounter the real gorilla. During their search, Harrigan gets himself
snagged to a dressing dummy and freaks out.
The fake gorilla attacks Norma.
Jack suspects Peters is the culprit because the butler is never around
when anything occurs. Later, Harrigan
confronts the real gorilla in a clever scene when he thinks that his partners
are accompanying him. The sailor
recovers and warns them about Poe. Poe
hates women. The sailor says a man hired
him and Poe. Somebody clobbered the
sailor and released Poe.
Finally, the stranger reveals
that he is a detective on the trail of the Gorilla. The stranger finds a wire, and they trace it
to a hidden room where he uncover a microphone and Stevens tied up and
gagged. They emerge with Stevens in
handcuffs. Norma explains if anything
happens to her that Uncle Walter will inherit her part of the estate. The detective explains that Stevens brought
Norma to his house to kill her for her money.
The detective explains that Stevens hired the Ritz Brothers because he
didn’t think that his life was in jeopardy.
When Harrigan is shaking the cop’s hand before he leaves, he discovers
that the detective is the Gorilla.
Unveiled as the Gorilla, the detective confesses to his crimes. “As for Mr. Stevens, he is just as crooked as
I told you he was. The trouble with him
is he talks too much and too loud. I got
tipped off on what was going to happen here tonight. How he was going to
pretend to be me. I was going to get the
$250-thousand and at the same time let him get the blame for all the Gorilla
murders.” The real surprise is the guy
who gets the drop on the Gorilla.
Indeed, it is Peters. Stevens explains
to Norma that his special investigator, Conway, dreamed up this scheme to flush
out the Gorilla. It seems that the
Gorilla had been preying on Stevens’ clients.
“The Man in the Iron Mask” director
Allan Dwan’s version of “The Gorilla” (*** OUT OF ****) is the second remake of the Ralph Spence
stage play. Spence was a comic
scriptwriter, too. He wrote the
screenplay for the Wheeler and Woolsey comedy “Hook, Line, and Sinker.” Scenarists
Rian James and Sid Silvers have penned some snappy, rapid-fire dialogue for the
Ritz Brothers that aptly illuminates their idiocy. The gobbygook dialogue is amusing in its
lunacy. Dwan doesn’t squander a second
in this fast-paced laffer. He gets more
mileage than you might imagine out of the weird sounds that a Zenith radio receiver
emits with warnings about Stevens’ impending demise. Bela Lugosi is cast as a sinister butler. Typically, the cliché in murder mysteries
such as this one is that the butler committed the crime. Dwan uses Lugosi as an effective red
herring. Nobody likes or trusts the
butler. Dwan gets as much mileage out of
Lionel Atwill as Stevens. Patsy Kelly
spends most of her time screaming in fright.
The fake gorilla that is supposed to be a real gorilla is hilarious
because it is so obviously ersatz.