A Gun in His Hand

5.8
194519m

Production

Logo for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

In this MGM Crime Does Not Pay series short, a young man graduates from the police academy at the top of his class. He then teams up with some local thieves and uses his knowledge of police procedures to pursue a career of undetected crime.

Cast

Photo of Tom Trout

Tom Trout

Police Officer Dennis Nordell

Photo of Richard Gaines

Richard Gaines

Police Inspector Dana

Photo of Hugh Beaumont

Hugh Beaumont

Police Academy Graduate (uncredited)

Photo of William Challee

William Challee

Snorky (uncredited)

Photo of Roger Moore

Roger Moore

Police Instructor (uncredited)

Photo of Robert Emmett O'Connor

Robert Emmett O'Connor

Veteran Policeman McGuinnes (uncredited)

Photo of Arthur Space

Arthur Space

Calvin 'Whitey' Foster (uncredited)

Photo of Harry Strang

Harry Strang

Police Captain R.C. Johnson (uncredited)

Photo of William Tannen

William Tannen

Police Lab Technician Wilson (uncredited)

Photo of Ray Teal

Ray Teal

Police Lt. O'Neill (uncredited)

Photo of Charles C. Wilson

Charles C. Wilson

Chief of Police (uncredited)

Photo of Harry Wilson

Harry Wilson

Ex-Con Thug (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

“Nordell” (Tom Trout) is your ideal policeman. Top of his class, studious and meticulous and destined to go far in the force. We know, however, that he has other plans and that he using his skills and his knowledge of internal procedures to lead a gang on some daring warehouse robberies. His colleagues are baffled until one of their number cottons on to their diversionary the strategy and is gunned down. With police efforts redoubled, can “Nordell” keep pulling the wool over their eyes? It’s part of the “Crime Does Not Pay” series so jeopardy there isn’t, but this is still quite a decent short drama on the ingenuity of both the criminal and the forensic expertise of the scientists. Trout is actually quite effective as the cocksure officer and though the denouement is both rushed and a bit disappointing, it at least sets up a more substantial story to illustrate it’s point.

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