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CrimeMystery

I Wouldn't Be in Your Shoes

- CORNELL WOOLRICH'S sizzling shocker!

An innocent dancer is accused of murder after his shoe prints are found at the scene, but his wife follows the trail of clues to find the real perpetrator.

Release Date : 1948-05-23

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Monogram PicturesThe Mirisch Company

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Don Castle

Character Name : Thomas J. 'Tom' Quinn

Original Name : Don Castle

Gender : Male

Elyse Knox

Character Name : Ann Quinn

Original Name : Elyse Knox

Gender : Female

Regis Toomey

Character Name : Police Inspector Clint Judd

Original Name : Regis Toomey

Gender : Male

Charles D. Brown

Character Name : Inspector Stevens

Original Name : Charles D. Brown

Gender : Male

Rory Mallinson

Character Name : Harry

Original Name : Rory Mallinson

Gender : Male

Robert Lowell

Character Name : John Kosloff

Original Name : Robert Lowell

Gender : Male

Bill Kennedy

Character Name : 2nd Detective

Original Name : Bill Kennedy

Gender : Male

Steve Darrell

Character Name : District Attorney (uncredited)

Original Name : Steve Darrell

Gender : Male

Esther Michelson

Character Name : Mrs. Finkelstein (uncredited)

Original Name : Esther Michelson

Gender : Male

Ray Dolciame

Character Name : Shoeshine Boy (uncredited)

Original Name : Ray Dolciame

Gender : Male

William Ruhl

Character Name : Police Lieutenant (uncredited)

Original Name : William Ruhl

Gender : Male

John Sheehan

Character Name : Judge (uncredited)

Original Name : John Sheehan

Gender : Male

John Elliott

Character Name : Mr. Lake (uncredited)

Original Name : John Elliott

Gender : Male

Dorothy Vaughan

Character Name : Mrs. Alvin (uncredited)

Original Name : Dorothy Vaughan

Gender : Female

Herman Cantor

Character Name : Jury Foreman (uncredited)

Original Name : Herman Cantor

Gender : Male

Hugh Charles

Character Name : Counterman (uncredited)

Original Name : Hugh Charles

Gender : Male

Laura Treadwell

Character Name : Mrs. Stevens (uncredited)

Original Name : Laura Treadwell

Gender : Male

Joseph E. Bernard

Character Name : Apartment House Manager (uncredited)

Original Name : Joseph E. Bernard

Gender : Male

Tito Vuolo

Character Name : Campana, the Grocer (uncredited)

Original Name : Tito Vuolo

Gender : Male

Jimmy Aubrey

Character Name : Tramp (uncredited)

Original Name : Jimmy Aubrey

Gender : Male

John Shay

Character Name : Salesman (uncredited)

Original Name : John Shay

Gender : Male

Donald Kerr

Character Name : Vaudeville Man (uncredited)

Original Name : Donald Kerr

Gender : Male

Stanley Blystone

Character Name : McGee (uncredited)

Original Name : Stanley Blystone

Gender : Male

Matty Fain

Character Name : Death Row Prisoner #3 (uncredited)

Original Name : Matty Fain

Gender : Male

John Doucette

Character Name : Death Row Prisoner #2 (uncredited)

Original Name : John Doucette

Gender : Male

Dan White

Character Name : Death Row Prisoner #1 (uncredited)

Original Name : Dan White

Gender : Male

Bill Walker

Character Name : Death Row Prisoner #4 (uncredited)

Original Name : Bill Walker

Gender : Male

Ray Teal

Character Name : Death Row Guard (uncredited)

Original Name : Ray Teal

Gender : Male

Paul Bryar

Character Name : Death Row Guard (uncredited)

Original Name : Paul Bryar

Gender : Male

Walden Boyle

Character Name : Priest (uncredited)

Original Name : Walden Boyle

Gender : Male

Wally Walker

Character Name : Clerk (uncredited)

Original Name : Wally Walker

Gender : Male

Eddie Parker

Character Name : Policeman (uncredited)

Original Name : Eddie Parker

Gender : Male

Lou Marcelle

Character Name : Radio Announcer (voice) (uncredited)

Original Name : Lou Marcelle

Gender : Male

Bert Stevens

Character Name : Dancing Academy Customer (uncredited)

Original Name : Bert Stevens

Gender : Male

Reviews

S

Steve

@felixxx999

2021-06-23

James M. Cain, Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, and Cornell Woolrich. All were great noir writers but Woolrich is mostly forgotten by readers today. All have had many of their stories adapted in Hollywood. In fact, Woolrich may have had more films made from his stories and novels than any one of the others. Of course, the Blackboard regulars and mystery readers know him well. The writer of “Rear Window” lived a hard life. He suffered from depression and apparently lived a sad, lonely life. If Woolrich lived today, he probably could have been treated for the depression and alcoholism that beat him later in life. But could a happy Woolrich write the dark Fear in the Night or Phantom Lady? Probably not. Want to know how dark this guy was? In an afterword to “The Fantastic Stories of Cornell Woolrich” the writer is quoted: “Life is death. Death is life. To hold your one true love in your arms and to see the skeleton she will become; to know that your love leads to death, that death is all there is, that is what I know and what I do not want to know and what I cannot bear.” I recently got my hands on “I Wouldn’t Be in Your Shoes,” another one of Woolrich’s unremitting nightmares turned into a very entertaining B-film. It’s interesting to see how dark this film is, even with an ending that is unsurprisingly upbeat. There will be spoilers ahead. The film starts with the title card of the film over the shadow of a nose swinging. Dangling from the rope is a pair of shoes. The shoes play a big part in the film. A young married couple is living together in a tiny one-room apartment in New York City. They both have dreams of making it big as dancers but lately they haven’t been able to get a break. The wife works at a dancing school at night, where she dances with lonely men for tips. The husband pounds the pavement every day looking for dancing work but not finding any. Making matters worse, the man is worried about his wife staying out all hours of the night with the guys at the dance school. I guess the “Ortiz Dance School” is the 40’s equivalent of a “Gentleman’s Club” today. The woman flirt with the men and the men walk out of the place with a smile on their face, perfume on their clothes, and a pound lighter in the wallet. Tom gets hotter and hotter as he waits for his wife Ann to return one night. When she finally does, she tells him she stayed to talk to “Santa Claus”’; a man who tips her well at the place. The dancing couple eventually makes up and goes to bed. Just as the lights go out, cats in the alley below begin to howl. Tom, a little drunk, throws his shoes down at them to shut them up. His wife tells him it’s his last pair of shoes – his tap shoes- and that he must go down now and get them. He goes out to get them but doesn’t find the shoes. In the morning, the shoes are at their doorstep. Happy that he can go out with a pair of shoes, the incident is forgotten. This then leads to Tom getting arrested for murder when the cops find a shoe print of his by a recently found dead body. Tom is tried and convicted. He’s sentenced to death “the Tuesday after Christmas.” So while the rest of the world is celebrating the holiday season, Ann counts down the days to Christmas… and to the day her husband will be killed. Finally, out of desperation Christmas Eve, Ann offers herself to “Santa Claus” – who also turns out to be one of the policemen that arrested her husband- in an attempt to get him to find the real killer. Ann promises to marry Judd if he can get Tom released. They seal the pact with a kiss. Actors Don Castle and Elyse Knox play Tom and Ann in the film, but the real star is third-billed Regis Toomey as the obsessive Judd. Usually when you see Toomey in a film he plays a straight-as-an-arrow cop, so when he turns out to be Ann’s creepy “Santa Claus” –and later even more- boy was I surprised. This is a treat of a film. The mystery story, at first confusing and unbelievable, turns out to be logical and clever. The film was directed by William Nigh, who knocked out a large amount of films in the 1930s including a handful of Mr. Wong mysteries. Nigh’s direction is stagy but some of the outdoor scenes, especially when Ann meets Judd at night by flashlight, have a shadowy film-noir look. There are some nice supporting players in the film too. Look out for Charles D. Brown, Esther Michelson (her only credited screen role as the nice Jewish lady who gives Ann a tiny Christmas tree), and everyone’s favorite Tito Vuolo.

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Broken mirrors, black cats and two dollar bills. I Wouldn't Be in Your Shoes is directed by William Nigh and adapted to screenplay by Steve Fisher from a story by Cornell Woolrich. It stars Don Castle, Elyse Knox, Regis Toomey and Charles D. Brown. Music is by Edward J. Kay and cinematography by Mack Stengler. Hoofer Tom Quinn (Castle) is convicted of murder on circumstantial evidence. Sentenced to death row, Tom must hope his wife Ann (Knox) can find the proof of his innocence before his date with death. Pretty routine noir exercise this one, but definitely of interest to film noir lovers looking for something they may not have seen before. In true noir fashion fate and coincidences play a huge part in the narrative drive, as does a bit of obsessive yearnings and questionable moral standing. The look is nifty, very noirish when the prison or the church is involved, or the nighttime shots in general, while there's a quirky edge to proceedings that always keeps the pic interesting. The ending is a disappointment (in true noir terms), and apart from the always reliable Toomey, the acting only just about passes muster, but it's worth a look see, even if it isn't the under seen gem some would have you believe... 6/10