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  1. The Great Hotel Murder

    The Great Hotel Murder

    1935 · Mystery · 1h 10m

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  1. The Great Hotel Murder is a 1935 American mystery film directed by Eugene Forde and starring Edmund Lowe, Victor McLaglen, Rosemary Ames and Mary Carlisle. It is based on Recipe for Murder a 1934 story by Vincent Starrett .

  2. The Great Hotel Murder: Directed by Eugene Forde. With Edmund Lowe, Victor McLaglen, Rosemary Ames, Mary Carlisle. Crime novelist Roger Blackwood competes with hotel house detective Andy McCabe in solving a murder by poisoning at a medical convention.

    • (81)
    • Comedy, Crime, Mystery
    • Eugene Forde
    • 1935-02-27
  3. In this Golden Age mystery, a man is found dead inside a Chicago hotel, and amateur detective Riley Blackwood sets out to prove it's murder and not suicide. Starrett's writing is solid, and at times excellent.

    • (218)
    • Hardcover
  4. Sep 1, 2020 · When a New York banker is discovered dead from an apparent morphine overdose in a Chicago hotel, the circumstances surrounding his untimely end are suspicious to say the least. The dead man had switched rooms the night before with a stranger he met and drank with in the hotel bar.

    • (79)
    • $11.99Save $6.00 (33%)
    • $17.99
    • Amazon.com Services LLC
  5. Sep 1, 2020 · When a New York banker is discovered dead from an apparent morphine overdose in a Chicago hotel, the circumstances surrounding his untimely end are suspicious to say the least. The dead man had switched rooms the night before with a stranger he met and drank with in the hotel bar.

    • (79)
    • American Mystery Classics
    • $15.47
    • Vincent Starrett
  6. Edmund Lowe, Victor McLaglen, Rosemary Ames A murder investigation gets out of hand for two detectives who wind up suspecting each other of the crime. Initial release: February 27, 1935 Director...

    • 70 min
    • 147
    • Recall Theater
  7. At a fancy hotel in San Francisco, house detective Andy McCabe repeatedly is refused dates by women who prefer to flirt with debonaire mystery writer Roger Blackwood. Mac calls Roger's theories on crime "bunk" and states that anyone can solve a crime if they also provide their own answers.

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