After an opening theme song that sounds like it was written for a TV sitcom, we see the host of a radio quiz show call Hattie O'Malley (Marjorie Main), a Montana widow, and when she guesses the name of a Phantom Tune, she wins $50,000 and a train trip to New York City to get the money. (The song she identifies, "Possum Up a Gum Stump," is apparently an actual traditional fiddle song. It was the song her late husband was singing when he got drunk and died trying to fly.) On the train, she reads an article in a true crime magazine about the exciting exploits of Chicago attorney John J. Malone. Meanwhile, in Chicago, Malone (James Whitmore), drunk and penniless after a gambling binge, wakes up in the city morgue with a hangover. He discovers that Steve Kepplar, a former client, has just been released from Joliet Prison on parole (thanks to Malone) and will be hopping a train to New York, as it happens, the same one that Hattie O'Malley is on. Malone decides to get on that train in order to collect the fees that Kepplar owes him. Also on that train following Kepplar: detective Tim Marino who thinks Kepplar will head straight for the missing $100,000 from his bank robbery; Connie, Kepplar's ex-wife, who wants her alimony payments; Brynk, Kepplar's former business partner; and Lola, Kepplar's new gal. Malone meets Hattie at dinner and they hit it off well enough that she gets entangled in the attempts to find Kepplar, who got on the train but hasn't been seen since. Eventually there are dead bodies which appear and vanish, and then have to be moved, leading to the movie's best line: as Hattie and Malone walk a corpse down the train aisle past another passenger, she says, "Come now, mother, hardly a quart in you and you stagger around like you were drunk."
This second-feature comic mystery was an unexpected delight. I do like Marjorie Main but I'm more used to her in supporting parts rather than as the star (I saw one Ma and Pa Kettle movie with her so many years ago I have no memory of it), so I wasn't sure about this. I'm not especially a fan of craggy-faced James Whitmore who usually does fairly dramatic roles, but he does a nice job being light on his feet with good comic timing, and he has good chemistry with Main. They make a fun pair, and it's too bad this didn't become a series of films. The interesting backstory is that this was based on a one-off short story collaboration between mystery writers Craig Rice (and her lawyer character John J. Malone) and Stuart Palmer (and his older lady character Hildegarde Withers). Withers had been featured in a series of B-films in the 1930s and MGM ran into copyright issues so they changed the character's name and background. This is sometimes referred to as a screwball comedy, though it's not antic or romantic enough for that, but it is amusing and fast paced, and has a great supporting cast. Ann Dvorak (Connie), Dorothy Malone (Lola), Fred Clark (the detective) and Phyllis Kirk (in the small role of Malone's secretary Kay) are all great fun. Smaller roles are filled by Douglas Fowley, Clinton Sundberg and Willard Waterman. Trivia note: Clark and Waterman would be standouts in AUNTIE MAME many years later, Clark as Mame's nemesis Mr. Babcock and Waterman as Claude Upson, maker of dreadfully sweet daiquiris. Great fun. [TCM; also on Warner Archive DVD]