Don't Turn 'em Loose (1936) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
10 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
No good to the end
bkoganbing16 October 2019
There was need for a man to play a father figure in Don't Turn 'Em Loose and RKO got Lewis Stone over from MGM and he's perfect as the Judge Hardy like father who gets appointed to the state parole board of his midwestern state.

Bruce Cabot is his son and they think he's abroad working as an engineer, but in reality he's a John Dillinger like criminal operating under an alias. In fact a lot of the Dillinger legend gets worked into the plot of this movie.

When Stone in his official capacity meets up with Cabot in his criminal persona at last is the climax. What follows after is the crux of the film.

This so far is Bruce Cabot's best performance on screen. How easily he slips in and out of a loving son and a public enemy is something to behold. Lewis Stone's anguish at seeing what he really has raised is outstanding acting. And you will not often see James Gleason as the hero cop.

Others in here are Betty Grable as Cabot's wholesome sister and Grace Bradley as his luckless moll who betrays him.

This one is a sleeper from RKO.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
"It's tears, not curves, that moves them mugs."
utgard142 September 2014
Violent criminal Bat Williams (Bruce Cabot) is released from prison on parole. He wastes no time getting back to robbing and killing. We discover Bat is really Robert Webster and he comes from a nice family. They believe he's an engineer working in South America. He left them years before and turned to a life of crime, dropping in every once in awhile to let them know he's still alive. Soon enough, Bat's back in prison. When he comes up for parole again, he's surprised to see his father (Lewis Stone) on the parole board.

Interesting crime drama from RKO. Cabot is great as the cold-blooded desperado. Stone's character reminds you a lot of Judge Hardy until the ending. No heartwarming father & son talks here! James Gleason nails it as the tough police detective determined to put Cabot away. Grace Bradley, future Mrs. Hopalong Cassidy, is Cabot's sexy moll. Betty Grable plays his sister and she's full of pep. The movie takes a cynical view of the prison parole system. They didn't choose that title for nothing. Can't say that I blame them much.
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Mostly good but spoiled by inconsistent writing towards the end.
planktonrules31 August 2014
There is a lot to like in "Don't Turn 'em Loose" and that is why it was so frustrating when the film seemed to lose its way towards the end of the film. It's really a shame, as up until then it was awfully good.

When the film begins, a real scum-bag, Bat Williams (Bruce Cabot), manages to fool the stupid parole board into releasing him. Soon, he's on a crime spree--killing and stealing. Heck, he even kills his friends he's so mean. However, the creep hides a secret life--a nice family who thinks he's been out of the country working when he was instead in prison. They don't realize just how horrid he is. Eventually, Williams ends up in prison again and once again the board is more than willing to let him out again--but this time there is a twist--his father is on the board. While this is a neat twist, what follows really disappoints. It's a shame, as Cabot was wonderful as this sick creep but the ending just made me cringe it was so ridiculous and hard to fathom.
7 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Taut Moral Crime Drama...
xerses1331 August 2014
This could/should have been a break-out role for Bruce Cabot (Robert Webster/Bat Williams, Criminal) just like the PUBLIC ENEMY (1931) was for James Cagney. Cabot though already had his chance in KING KONG (1933) and by 1936 had firmly established himself as a dependable character actor. In this film he does show he had more to offer and was particularly effective as a murderous sociopath.

Webster/Williams has two (2) lives, as Webster respected engineer and Son of John Webster (Lewis Stone) pillar of society. Then as Williams a criminal mastermind who uses the parole system to duck in and out of prison at his convenience. John Webster is finally confronted by the truth just prior to his Daughters Wedding, Mildred Webster (Betty Grable). Webster/Williams once more gets off, black-mailing his Father now on the Parole Board, though trying for one more BIG SCORE meets his undoing.

At 65" the film moves right along at a quick pace and would not disgrace the efforts over at WARNER BROTHERS. RKO being very efficient and turning out these programmers needed in filling out its release schedule and theater chain. Also to cover expenses for such flops as MARY OF Scotland. A film that cemented Katherine Hepburn for being 'Box Office Poison' through the balance of the 1930s.
6 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
More Melodrama Than Message
boblipton24 November 2023
Robert Armstrong is a vicious criminal who keeps getting paroled by the state board, despite everything that cop James Gleason can do. His father is Lewis Stone, who doesn't know he is a crook; Armstrong has a henchman send post cards from around the world, fooling Stone, wife Nella Walker, and daughter Betty Grable, while he serves his time under a fake name. But Stone is appointed to the parole board, and discovers the truth the hard way.

There was a spate of movies with messages about urging parole reform in the second half of the 1930s. This one offers a bit of argument in that direction with a list of well-known criminals who made parole. Mostly, though, this one cynically blames a corrupt process, hints at bad faith in the boards, and offers criminal thrills with Armstrong, as well as a reaction shot of Stone on seeing Armstrong.

It's directed by Benjamin Stoloff, another of the forgotten, competent directors who flourished in the studio system. His movies show a typical progression, from short comedy in the silent era, to westerns in the sound era, and dramas in the later 1930s. He never got out of the B ranks, and his career stopped right after the war, when the industry turned down. The record vanishes then, with some TV directing in 1960, and a death notice that year. Stoloff was 64 when he died.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Excellent RKO parole drama
jarrodmcdonald-116 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This RKO crime flick seems like it would have been made during the precode era. It's brimming with violence, and includes not-so-subtle references to sex and illegal activity. It also seems like a movie that would come from Warner Brothers, which usually had the market cornered on gangster pics. DON'T TURN 'EM LOOSE is a hard-edged, fast-moving story that contains gritty performances.

Bruce Cabot, third-billed, is really the lead. He's an attractive smooth operator that has women wrapped around his proverbial finger. He also has plenty of male pals who idolize him, and they help establish alibis. They're eager to go in on his latest crime sprees, as he usually never gets caught.

The drama begins as Cabot is released from prison on parole when a loving but "phony" wife and a kid that's not his, make an appearance at his parole hearing. They pour on the tears and the board is moved to authorize Cabot's release. But their compassion will be betrayed. On the same day that he's sprung from the penitentiary, Cabot organizes a heist. His boldness in the face of the law is something to see.

We watch how he two-times a 'dame' and how he kills a dude that gets in the way of the heist. It's all in a day's work for him. Cabot is having a field day in the role.

The reason this somewhat unlikely casting succeeds is because Cabot is no Cagney, Raft or Bogart. The character he plays is supposed to be highbrow, not a working class guy who spent his teen years in reformatories. He displays sophistication that differentiates him from other crooks. He is athletic and all-American, a good boy who sends postcards to his sister and mother when he's away from home for long periods of time.

The story becomes infinitely more fascinating when Cabot goes missing after his latest crimes. As his cronies speculate where he's gone, we watch him arrive home at a well-to-do suburban home in New York. The twist is that he's from a respectable background. His father, Lewis Stone (on loan from MGM) is an influential attorney and college law professor. Mother Louise Latimer is perfectly refined, and bratty kid sister Betty Grable is beautiful and engaged to be married. In short, they are the perfect upper-middle class family.

Family issues come to the surface during Cabot's visit. Initially, nobody knows he's been somewhere else using an alias, having recently completed a prison term. It would shock and scandalize them if they did. While staying with his relatives, Cabot even has the audacity to commit another robbery. He ends up killing a jewelry store owner, then uses his unsuspecting law-abiding family as his cover.

Part of the effectiveness of this tale is how it causes us to feel sadness for Cabot's loving family. For years they have been duped about how bad he really is. We know it's all going to come crashing down, and it does. The next twist involves Cabot getting busted by a determined cop (James Gleason, familiar as Inspector Piper in the Hildegarde Withers mysteries).

At the same time, the governor's appointed Stone to serve on the state penitentiary's parole board. You can guess where this is going...When Cabot comes up for parole again, Stone is confronted with the truth about what his son's been up to all this time. Will Stone agree with the other board members who want to release Cabot again, or will he vote to keep him locked up because he's a danger to society?

This is a riveting crime yarn that covers a lot of ground in 65 minutes. It differs from other gangster pics in that it presents a more domestic angle on things. We see how criminal activity directly affects the culprit's family. Lewis Stone is brilliant in this film as the anguished father...a far cry from Judge Hardy who always knew how to fix everything.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
ok crime story from the 1930s
ksf-28 November 2019
Crime story from RKO. when Bat Williams (Bruce Cabot, friend and costar with John Wayne) comes up for parole, his dad, played by hollywood pro Lewis Stone, gives him the thumbs up, that's the start of all the trouble. Cabot was best known for rescuing Fay Wray in King Kong 1933. Co-stars Betty Grable, James Gleason, and Louise Latimer. Latimer quit hollywood the year after making this, but Gleason and Grable went on for MANY more years. so... when Williams returns to his old ways of crime, everything falls apart again. the script, the acting, and the editing are all pretty bad. Grable is Bat Williams' sister Mildred. Grable died quite young.. she was married to musician Harry James for twelve years, and probably best known for "How to Marry a Millionaire". Lewis Stone had been co-star in some REAL big films..Grand Hotel, Queen Christina, Red Headed Woman. James Gleason had made a few silents, but with his dry, sarcastic, sardonic wit, he easily fit into the talkies. it's all very so-so. can't give this one very high marks; it's mildly entertaining, but no surprises or fancy plot in this one. Directed by Ben Stoloff; did some silents, did some talkies, but looks like he didn't win any oscars.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Good Flick
max84331 August 2014
Bruce Cabot jumps off the screen as the hardened criminal. You know how they say Marlon Brando and then James Dean revolutionized acting during the 50s? Well, Bruce Cabot does it here in 1936.

All the acting is first-rate - Lewis Stone, James Gleason (always liked him), Louise Latimer and others. Personally I thought Betty Grable's character was sort of silly in this one! But Bruce Cabot was ahead of his time in naturalness, a real person.

The story shows the true difficulties in raising children. As a parent you cannot be responsible for your child's actions as an adult - we are each our own person, for good or bad. All a mother or father can do is guide your kids along the right path while they are under your roof - but then they are on their own.
7 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Good Melodrama
ebpbc15 November 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Robert Webster aka Bat Williams was born into a wealthy upscale family. Robert becomes a hardened criminal and ruthless killer serving time then getting paroled. He sends postcards to his family from prison lying about where he has been. Robert's father is head of the parole board and initially doesn't want to parole him as Robert's name is "Bat Wiliams" in jail. Once the father sees who Bat is, Robert blackmails his father to parole him or else he will ruin the family name.

Beautiful Betty Grable as Robert's sister is a joy to watch. Bruce Cabot is convincing as the cold killer. A crafty James Gleason is the detective who is on to Robert's tactics. Light but fast moving movie.
5 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Crooked Parole Boards and Public Enemies!!!
zardoz-1329 December 2023
Warning: Spoilers
RKO contract director Benjamin Stoloff's B-movie quickie "Don't Turn 'em Loose" (1936) capitalized on the 'crime doesn't pay' theme that M-G-M had already embarked on a year earlier with its own "Crime Does Not Pay"(1935-1947) franchise that consisted of 20-minute short subjects shown before the feature picture. Mind you, the 1930s were rift with cautionary films about the scourge of crime and the rise of gangsters. Gangland movies had become a staple for Warner Brothers, the studio that released "Little Caeser" (1931) with Edward G. Robinson and "The Public Enemy" (1931) with James Cagney. Stoloff's "Don't Turn 'em Loose" scrutinized the parole racket and focused on a parole board that was releasing career criminals as swiftly as the courts convicted them. Although scenarists Harry Segall, Ferdinand Reyher, and Thomas Walsh do not come outright and accuse the parole board in "Don't Turn 'em Loose" of graft and complicity, you have to suspect the Hays Office must have drawn the line of implicating the system since it usually gave the Hollywood studios little leeway in pointing fingers. Suffice it to say, "Don't Turn'em Loose" provides hints about the graft and corruption inherent in the system by labeling the job as a 'political' function, with the law exerting little pressure on them. Every one of these natty fellows on the board give their silent assent to virtually every case that comes before them. In the case of a notorious felon named Bat William, this bloodthirsty murderer who robs and kills the innocent to line his pockets with his ill-gotten gains, they all too readily release him back into society after his shyster attorney moves them to sympathy with Bat's wife and infant child appearing before the board. No sooner than Bat has been released than his mouthpiece pays off the dame and shuffled off the infant without a shred of remorse.

Naturally, Detective Daniels (James Gleason of "Night of the Hunter") complains that the parole board isn't doing society any favors by turning these hardened criminals loose to commit more crimes. Eventually, the governor of the state contacts a high regarded educator, John Webster (Lewis Stone of M-G-M's later "Andy Hardy" franchise), an implores this speech teacher to take a seat on the board. The revelation in "Don't Turn'em Loose" is the Bat Williams is in truth named Robert Webster, the educator's own son! Of course, John the father has no idea what he is getting himself into when he complies with the governor's request. John complains to his wife, Helen Webster (Nella Walker of "Sabrina"), that he prefers to shun politics. Later, the governor asks him again, and John takes the assignment with great misgivings. Meanwhile, Bat/Robert has been on a crime spree, robbing and killing, but since the methods of identification back then were primitive in comparison because photographs were not on driver's licenses, Robert has gotten away with his crimes. Basically, Robert has fooled his family into believing that he is an engineer who takes time off his job from South America to visit them and then leave once he has either lined up a job or has already carried one out.

Detective Daniels gets the drop on Bat's mistress and leverages a confession out of her that sends him back to prison. It just so happens that when Bat takes his case before the same parole board, he is shocked to find his father on board. John is floored by this surprise of all surprises. Reluctantly, he agrees to let his 'no-good' son loose as long as the dastard leaves both the town and the state and never comes back. Not surprisingly, Bat decides to stage one final robbery, but he realizes too late he has been caught in a trap from which he cannot extricate himself. Daniels is lying in wait for him at a construction office with a big, fat safe awaits Bat's pleasure. Although he gets the drop on Bat initially, Daniels gets too close to the felon who simply knocks his revolver out of his fist and they struggle. Meantime, his father has gone to see his son off at the railway depot. When he doesn't find him at the depot, some sixth sense sends him to the construction office and he intervenes on behalf of Detective Daniels. Indeed, he shoots his own son, but Daniels sends John home with mum's the word and takes the fatally wounded Bat out of town to die instead of alerting he coroner and damaging John's scholarly reputation.

"Don't Turn 'em Loose" is a snappy little B-picture. There is a lot of violence, but the Hays Office forced RKO to keep from showing Bat's heartless crimes in gratuitous detail. At one point, Bat confront his moll who turned him in, and he breaks out of prison and murders her at point blank range. Afterward, his accomplices with a lumber company who delivers wood to the prison picks him up to take him back. Bat leaves a lunch box in the crawlspace between the truck's cab and its bed. Later, as the driver is cruising along a road that hugs the side of a cliff, the lunchbox bomb detonates and the driver is killed when his vehicle plunges into a ravine. The robbery at a milk company is violent, too. As the villainous Bat/Robert Webster, Bruce Cabot grins sadistically and takes advantage of everybody he deals with in both his criminal affairs and his family affairs. Seems that John never believed he could raise a 'bad' child, but in retrospect, he realizes that all the petty crimes that happened in their household were engineered by his rogue son. Clocking in at 65 lean and mean minutes, "Don't Turn 'em Loose" is a good movie that moves at a fast clip.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed