Bulldog Drummond's Bride is an American crime comedy thriller film produced in 1939. It was the last film of Paramount Pictures' Bulldog Drummond film series.
Bulldog Drummond's Bride | |
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Directed by | James P. Hogan |
Screenplay by | Stuart Palmer Garnett Weston |
Based on | The Oriental Mind 1937 story in Strand Magazine by H.C. McNeile |
Produced by | William LeBaron (producer) Stuart Walker (producer) |
Starring | John Howard Heather Angel H.B. Warner |
Cinematography | Harry Fischbeck |
Edited by | Chandler House |
Music by | John Leipold |
Production company | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 56 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
In London, a shape charge-wielding master criminal comes up with a foolproof plan for robbing a bank and outwitting Scotland Yard's pursuit, but during the getaway he hides his haul in a radio set in the new flat of Capt. Bulldog Drummond (John Howard) and his to-be wife Phyllis Clavering (Heather Angel), leading to a murder, punch-ups, an expedition to France, a night in a French jail cell and a break-out, in a race to reach Bulldog's fiancee.
Phyllis is waiting for Drummond in a French village with her aunt Blanche Clavering (Elizabeth Patterson), to be married the next day. She has sent a telegram, asking him to send her the radio, both unaware of its content. The villains meet their end in a roof-top fight and Bulldog finally ties the matrimonial knot in an explosive finale to his bachelorhood.
H. C. McNeile's Bulldog Drummond | |
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