Gambling on the High Seas

1940 "See the G-Men stamp out the mobsters of the high seas!"
6| 0h55m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 22 June 1940 Released
Producted By: Warner Bros. Pictures
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

A reporter enlists the help of a gangster's secretary to obtain evidence to bring her boss to justice.

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Reviews

Linkshoch Wonderful Movie
Steineded How sad is this?
Claysaba Excellent, Without a doubt!!
Stellead Don't listen to the Hype. It's awful
utgard14 Strange B crime picture from Warner Bros. starring Wayne Morris as a cocky reporter out to bring down Gilbert Roland, a gangster who runs a floating casino. The weird thing about this one is that Roland's character seems like a pretty OK guy, as far as murdering gangsters go. We only see him kill or even threaten people who threaten him first, and he is pretty nice to those who are nice to him. This includes our rat hero, who has a smug grin plastered on his face throughout the picture that made me root for him to fail at every turn. Basically the whole film is Roland being nice to Morris while Morris plots his demise behind his back. Some hero. Oh and Jane Wyman is around counting the minutes until her inevitable kidnapping and rescue. She's a rat, too, so the whole thing just feels weird, you know? We have a picture where the gangster is a pleasant enough fellow if you don't cross him and the hero is an unsavory rat gleefully plotting the downfall of a guy who, at least by what we're shown on screen, is not that bad. Strange but worth a look.
gridoon2018 "Gambling On The High Seas" is a painless programmer that's so short (barely 55 minutes) it was probably always destined to be part of a double feature. Jane Wyman, who is second-billed, has a secondary part and barely even appears in the first half; the lead (Wayne Morris) is also the blandest person in the film, and his character poses two different credibility problems: it's hard to believe that the police and the district attorney would send a newspaper reporter to do so much of their dirty work, just as it's hard to believe that a smart gambling racketeer (a well-cast Gilbert Roland) would trust a newspaper reporter with so many of his guilty secrets no matter how "neutral" the reporter seems to be. The film is mostly talk, but it does climax with a fair boat chase. ** out of 4.
blanche-2 Wayne Morris stars with Jane Wyman and Gilbert Roland in "Gambling on the High Seas," a 1940 second feature from Warner Brothers.Morris plays a reporter,Jim Carter and Roland is Morella, a crook who runs a gambling ship with rigged tables. The authorities haven't been able to get enough evidence to convict him. Carter approaches Morella's secretary, Laurie, who knows plenty. Carter wants proof of the fixed games and also evidence that Morella had his partner, Max Gates, murdered.Wayne Morris had all kinds of problems with Warner Brothers, and even lost out on the Burt Lancaster role in "The Killers" because Warners wouldn't lend him out. It's a shame - he was cute, had a nice, light presence, and was very boyish. He became well known for westerns until his untimely death. Wyman is blond, young, and beautiful, and does a good job as Laurie. Gilbert Roland is incredibly handsome as the cruel Morella and is also very good.Nice cast, very short film, decent story.
misctidsandbits Found out that Jane Wyman's 30's and early 40 pictures were interesting, so caught this dark horse recently. She does that snappy dialog like no other. There was a lot more of it in some of the detective venues she did for a while ("Crime by Night," "Private Detective"). Old story of an actress/actor getting started in a type, doing it well, and then getting stuck there. It's a wonder they break out, but we know she did. After being featured in this type of picture, Ms. Wyman moved up to better ones, playing the female star's girlfriend and similar for a while. Always strong, more energetic and assertive than her later starring dramatic roles. Of course, there are others of interest in the subject picture. It's a programmer actually, with some good actors on their way up. Those can be a bit of a find at times. The Gilbert Roland character was a change from what we have gotten used to seeing from him. Low key, understated performance. Kind of a relief from the more typical volatile crime boss type. Interesting picture to me for these reasons.