• Warning: Spoilers
    As a pair of detectives, Barton Maclane and Ward Bond set up Humphrey Bogart for some of his best one-liners ever in 1941's "The Maltese Falcon". In this one, the pair find themselves on the outs for most of the picture in a prison story that's actually pretty good for a B flick, even if Universal Pictures is the company of record. The idea that MacLane's character is named Joaquin Shannon managed to keep me off balance for most of the story; an Irish-Portuguese fisherman is one combination I just couldn't wrap my head around.

    This is the kind of movie that was right up Warner Brothers' alley during this era. They had their own fair share of prison movies that dealt with victims caught up in unfortunate circumstances, films like "San Quentin", "Invisible Stripes", and "Crime School". MacLane portrays a tough prison guard who endures a demotion for his rough tactics in the first one mentioned, and to his credit was capable of portraying characters on both sides of the law quite effectively.

    The story presented here is somewhat improbable when you begin to analyze it, but I don't think that's what movie goers were doing back in the Thirties. What you have here is a fairly gritty prison drama in which MacLane's character simply wants to serve his time, but keeps getting sidetracked by career criminal Big Red Kincaid (Bond) who was inadvertently responsible for Shannon's conviction and sentence in the first place. It takes the entire picture to come full circle for Shannon to figure that out, and elsewhere might have made for a dramatic showdown. Here it was just a bit too anti-climactic to justify everything that went before, but at least the good bad guy came out on top.