The Fat Man

1951 "DANGER UNDER THE BIG TOP!"
6.2| 1h18m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 19 May 1951 Released
Producted By: Universal International Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

A innocent dentist is murdered and the only apparent motive seems to be to steal a set of dental x-rays. To the police it looks like an accident, but private eye Brad Runyan thinks there's more to it.

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Reviews

Redwarmin This movie is the proof that the world is becoming a sick and dumb place
PlatinumRead Just so...so bad
CrawlerChunky In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.
FirstWitch A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.
MartinHafer "The Fat Man" was a radio program that was eventually brought to the big screen. However, only two movies were made--this first one starring J. Scott Smart and another made at the end of the decade by another actor. Apparently, the radio success couldn't be translated to the silver screen.When the show begins, Jane Adams (Jayne Meadows) approached Brad Runyan ('the Fat Man') and begged him to look into the death of her boss, a dentist. The death was ruled an accident or a suicide but she knows it was murder. The trail then leads to a guy named Roy (Rock Hudson) as well as a clown and along the way, other folks meet the same fate as the dentist.The biggest reason to see the film is to see a couple actors before they were stars--Rock Hudson and Jayne Meadows. Julie London, Emmett Kelly (not surprisingly, as a clown) and John Russell also appear in the film--giving it a few more quality actors than you'd expect in such a movie. Aside from that, it was a decent enough mystery but also one that had some stupid clichés. The worst was when Jane called Runyan and said "I need to see you right away...I know who killed Dr. Bromley"....and you KNOW what's going to happen to her very, very soon!! Why didn't she just tell Runyon OVER THE PHONE who the killer was?!?! Duh!! It also was rather low energy and not exactly exciting compared to other films in the genre. Worth seeing if you love these detective films, otherwise very skippable.By the way, the film like MANY Bs was directed by William Castle-- before he became inextricably associated with horror films.
bkoganbing I guess we're fortunate to have this visualization of the radio series, The Fat Man made just as it was going off the air. The character was a creation of Dashiell Hammett who was blacklisted in Hollywood. Star J. Scott Smart was as beefy on the screen as his radio character was purported to be.The mystery borrows a bit from Ernest Hemingway's The Killers as the missing person that Smart is seeking as it turns out is dead. At that point it becomes a quest for justice for the missing Rock Hudson as we see Hudson in flashback from the various character's points of view.Smart is originally hired by Jayne Meadows who is a dental assistant as her boss is thrown out his office window. The police call it suicide, but she's convinced it's murder. But who would want to kill a dentist?It all ties in with a heist and a circus. Such other various and sundry folk Smart meets during his investigation are John Russell, Harry Lewis, and Julie London who married Hudson. And we get to see famed circus clown Emmett Kelly with and without makeup giving a good dramatic performance.Rock Hudson gives a good account of himself in an early role as the luckless hoodlum. No doubt he was going to be a big star.Also Clinton Sundberg as Smart's assistant and Teddy Hart as a tipster they use have some very good lines.Sad that this could have been an interesting series had Universal chosen to do more films of The Fat Man.
csteidler The Fat Man opens with the murder of a dentist. We spend a good chunk of the next hour wondering not so much who did it, as why. It's a fairly straightforward plot, but one with many threads and characters, including a clown, some dental records, a just-released convict who comes into some money and then disappears, and a police detective who—unusually for private eye movies—is open, cooperative, and even intelligent! J. Scott Smart looks comfortable in the role of Brad Runyan, aka the Fat Man. Familiar faces fill the rest of the cast, including Jayne Meadows in a good serious role as the dentist's nurse; Jerome Cowan as the helpful if bemused policeman; Clinton Sundberg as a kind of goofball assistant; and an eager-looking young Rock Hudson as the con and Julie London as his sometime girlfriend.The Fat Man was apparently a radio detective making a jump to movies that didn't take; not having any familiarity with the radio program, I can only say that this portly detective is considerably more physically active than the obvious comparison: whereas Nero Wolfe rarely emerges from his brownstone on 35th Street, Brad Runyan thinks nothing of hopping a flight to California, risking life and limb in a shootout, or even dancing in a nightclub. (He does, however, share Wolfe's passion for fine food.) To put it another way—Smart as Runyan is easily closer akin to William Conrad as Cannon than Conrad as Wolfe.The film as a whole offers bits of humor, some action, and a pretty fair mystery with quite a well done climactic scene. If they had indeed turned this into a series, I would seek out the other entries; however, I'm afraid 1951 was not the right time to start a detective series—at least, not one for the big screen.
Brian Ellis Curiosity picture mainly because it is one of Rock Hudson's earlier films. I won't bother going over the film's many faults except to note the awkward humor. For example, after the nurse was killed, I couldn't believe the joking around. Also, why was she killed in the first place? It was never explained. This bummed me out because she was very attractive even if she couldn't act. It was obvious that this supposed to the first of a series of "Fat Man" detective movies, ala the "Thin Man" movies, but fortunately we are still waiting for the second one.