Richard Arlen (Jim Clark), Jean Parker (Shirley Brooks), Eddie Quillan (Riley), Nils Asther (Eric Karolek), Roger Pryor (Rocky Drake), Marie Wilson (Veronica Gimble), Grady Sutton (Chester Gimble), Dick Purcell (Bob Fuller), Kay Sutton (Danila), Joseph Crehan (Nunnally), Charlotte Henry (Corenson's secretary), William C. Thomas (Corenson), William Hall (Lew West, the test pilot), Dwight Frye (Leo Qualen), James Seay (Dave, the Los Angeles dispatcher), Richard Keene, George McKay, Gayle Mellott (bits).
Director: FRANK McDONALD. Screenplay: Richard Murphy, Maxwell Shane. Film editor: Robert Crandall. Photography: Fred Jackman, junior. Art director: F. Paul Sylos. Set decorator: Ben Berk. Wardrobe: James Wade. Music: Dimitri Tiomkin. Assistant director: Howard Pine. Sound recording: Mac Dalgleish, Ferrol Redd. Producers: William H. Pine, William C. Thomas.
Copyright 29 August 1941 by Paramount Pictures, Inc. No recorded New York opening. U.S. release: 29 August 1941. Australian release: 24 December 1941. 6,357 feet. 70 minutes.
SYNOPSIS: Spies attempt to smuggle secret formula on board a return honeymoon flight from Las Vegas to Los Angeles.
COMMENT: Like "Emergency Landing", this one starts off as a wacky romantic comedy, then suddenly switches mid-stream into a highly charged espionage drama. Unlike the other movie, however, the drama is more successful here. Both the crash landing and the escape from the inferno are particularly well staged.
The players are reasonably skillful too. Richard Arlen, one of Hollywood's busiest stars, enacts his usual forthright self, Miss Parker makes an entrancing heroine, whilst Dick Purcell excels as the "other man". Cultists will enjoy the brief appearance of a blond-ed Dwight Frye as a venal traitor, although Marie Wilson's fans will be disappointed by the extremely labored puns she is forced to contend with.
It's also nice to see a few good close-ups of a grown-up Charlotte Henry (the star of Paramount's 1933 "Alice in Wonderland"). And is that producer William C. Thomas playing the part of her handsome boss, Corenson? (The whole sequence involving Henry, "Corenson", Arlen and Purcell would seem to have little point unless it is in fact an elaborate inside joke).