The Benson Murder Case

1930 "DID SHE KILL? Solve the crime that shocked New York!"
6| 1h5m| en| More Info
Released: 13 April 1930 Released
Producted By: Paramount
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

A ruthless, crooked stockbroker is murdered at his luxurious country estate, and detective Philo Vance just happens to be there; he decides to find out who killed him.

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Reviews

Voxitype Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.
Kaelan Mccaffrey Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.
Ezmae Chang This is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.
Lachlan Coulson This is a gorgeous movie made by a gorgeous spirit.
calvinnme The Benson Murder Case is the best of the three Philo Vance movies that Powell made at Paramount. That was partly because of advances in sound technology and partly because this script is more complex and the characters are more fleshed out.Anthony Benson is a stock broker - and he does not seem to be a crooked one as the synopsis states, though he is a bit of a rogue. The day is that of the great stock market crash, October 1929. As so many brokers did, those investors that had their stocks bought on margin were sold out when they could not cover those margins, and many lost everything.Add to this the complication of several people who have personal grudges against Benson that have nothing to do with the crash - two of which break into Benson's mansion that night - and you have a large number of suspects and a rather complex plot. Philo Vance (William Powell) comes calling on Benson that night and is having a discussion with dapper gangster Harry Gray (William Stage Boyd) about how Vance has only been able to solve the murders he has because the perpetrators were not professionals. At just about that time a shot rings out and Benson - minus the toupee he always wore if he was in the presence of anyone - rolls down the stairs, dead at Vance's feet.So here Vance has a house full of people who are glad to see Benson dead, yet they all seem to have alibis, and you have some proof (the missing toupee) that Benson must have been alone when he died, yet he did not commit suicide! What a mystery Vance must unravel, but he does.This one will keep you guessing as it is not quite so easy to figure out as the others. Also, there are a couple of other mysteries that Vance figures out but keeps mum about because they have nothing to do with the murder and because he is such a gentleman.I'd say watch this one, but watch it carefully, because there is quite a bit going on. Thus the plot is good and it is another fine chance for William Powell and Eugene Palette, as Vance's police detective friend, to show off their acting abilities.
gridoon2018 I have no doubt that "The Benson Murder Case" must have wowed audiences when it came out in 1930; the main plot gimmick is ingenious. However, since then this gimmick (or others close to it) has been used so many times (even by Agatha Christie herself!) that it has lost some of its luster. The pacing can also be torturously slow at times. But, on the positive side, there are a couple of startling moments, like the bullet that suddenly breaks through a car window and wounds a man, or what is possibly one of the first flashbacks ever put on film. Personally I preferred Basil Rathbone as Philo Vance ("The Bishop Murder Case"), but William Powell is adequate as well. Eugene Palette provides some welcome comic relief (his best line, after a reporter asks who-done-it: "The four Marx Brothers!"), and Natalie Moorhead, playing a very pre-code character, wears a sexy backless dress in several scenes. **1/2 out of 4.
bkoganbing Stockbroker Richard Tucker is the victim in The Benson Murder Case. In 1930 a lot of people would like to have murdered their stockbrokers. But in the Great Depression, Tucker is living high on the hog even after the Stock Market Crash.The Benson Murder Case is not a whodunit as much as it plays like a Columbo mystery. In this film, the perpetrator is practically daring William Powell to solve this one correctly. But you do really enjoy the film when Powell actually does.The film is a typical closed ring of suspects murder mystery as many people who would dearly like to have seen Tucker done in for calling in their stock margins before they were given a chance to make good. They all show up at Tucker's Westchester county estate, but unfortunately the District Attorney E.H. Calvert has the place next door and he's invited Philo Vance for the weekend.The Benson Murder Case keeps up the high standard of Vance film that Powell did. S.S. Van Dine and later his estate sold the various Vance novels to many studios one at a time which is why there were so many Philo Vances out there. Powell's next Vance film would be for Warner Brothers while he had a brief sojourn there before moving to MGM and The Thin Man.The Benson Murder Case was the last Philo Vance film that Powell did for Paramount and it was a good one.
dbborroughs William Powell plays Philo Vance for the third time in the story of the murder of a scheming stock broker in a room full of people. Vance is one of the people and he insists its so simple that anyone could solve it. Unfortunately it turns out that only Vance can. This is an early sound film that is curiously set bound. Its the sort of early sound film where there a large number of people gathered around close so as to show off the relatively new sound medium. Painfully formal at times the film seems more like a stage play then a movie. It comes off as the sort of mystery film that was sent up in countless spoofs from the same period. I find the films technical limitations odd since the earlier Canary Murder Case actually seemed to get out and about not to mention less confined by the limitations of microphones. Its not a bad film, but it's not a particularly exciting one. I kept wanting to yell "get on with it" at the screen.