calvinnme
... because it basically throws just about every crime drama cliché and plot device from the 1930s into a bowl, mixes, and bakes until done, with one rather interesting exception which I will get to later.Richard Dix is the titular "Special Investigator", but first he is a defense attorney for guilty gangsters, Bill Fenwick. He gets the big checks from the acquitted gangsters, he has the stereotypical bleached blonde "moll" type for a girlfriend covered in furs, and he has a little brother who is a Fed. Little brother George comes into Bill's spacious office right before he is to be part of a raid to get Bill to see the light of what he is doing by putting crooks back on the street. Then George goes right out and gets killed by 'Eddie' Selton (J. Carrol Naish) in that raid. The gangsters fought back with everything they had because they had half a million in gold bullion.His brother's death at the hands of Selton, recently acquitted of a murder charge due to the efforts of a lawyer just like himself makes him abandon his profession. He wants to join up with the Feds and help then grab the criminal responsible for George's death, but the question is where? That question is answered, oddly enough, by the criminal he just got acquitted who considers Bill a friend of his. He says that gold is not a good commodity. You can't ship it, you can't use it to buy anything. He says the only way you could ever get your money back would be to turn it into ore from a fake mine. This is the one interesting plot device I was talking about as I don't think I have ever seen this trick employed before.So Bill does join up with the Feds and poses as a new small town lawyer near a mine that has recently struck gold owned by a bunch of outsiders that the locals had never seen before. But he needs to get inside that carefully guarded mine to figure out if it is indeed Selton's gang trying to launder their bullion. He finds a few excuses in the person of a female visitor to the ranch with whom he hits it off. She happens to be Eddie Selton's sister who has shown up concerned about her brother's health since he was wounded in the shootout with the Feds back in Chicago. Bill does not know she is Selton's sister, and she doesn't know this small time lawyer is in fact an undercover Fed. Yet they genuinely fall for one another.In another subplot, the trigger happy meathead members of Selton's gang do not comprehend the word "subtlety" when dealing with the locals and are starting to think they don't need Selton after all, especially with him bed ridden.How will this all work out? Watch and find out.It's interesting to watch everybody going to Reno for their nightlife since Las Vegas won't even be started until after WWII. It is also interesting to see this "gold problem" among thieves in a western environment. It had only been two years before that gold coins went out of circulation.I'd watch this one for Richard Dix who is a versatile actor who can play mouthpiece, special fed officer, and greenhorn lawyer all with great style. Honorable mention has to go to Erik Rhodes as Benny Gray, the guy Bill got acquitted in the first part of the film. He'd be a great guy if he wasn't a gangster. It's a departure from his parts as the comic relief in the Fred and Ginger films.
MartinHafer
Bill Fenwick (Richard Dix) is a very famous and well-to-do lawyer. However, he's gotten some bad people off and it's bothering his conscience. So, instead of becoming a mouthpiece for the mob, he decides to do something to help others. So, he travels out west and becomes a special undercover agent for the government. Unfortunately, the leader of the mob has a sister who has fallen for 'Richard' (Bill's undercover name). What's to become of the criminals with their fake gold mine as well as 'Bill's' girl?This is a B-movie from RKO and the studio made quite a few lower-budgeted films starring Richard Dix. While he's pretty much forgotten today, Dix was a fine actor and quite likable--even though he wasn't exactly handsome leading man material. The writing is solid as is Dix's performance. Worth your time.
MikeMagi
Back in the days of that mixed metaphor, Radio Pictures, you needn't need much of a premise to make a B movie. In this case, for example, the crooks solve the difficulty of selling stolen gold bullion by palming it off as gold ore. Nobody bothers to ask how that trick is pulled off. Or why no one is suspicious of a gang of out-of-town hoods holed up in an old Nevada mine. But after his kid brother is gunned down by the gang, ex-underworld lawyer Richard Dix turns special investigator and sets out to catch the bad guys. Stolid as ever, Dix manages two expressions -- his mouth creases up slightly when he's happy and down when he's gloomy. Margaret Callahan (who quit acting not long after this movie was made) wanders in as the comely sister of the gunman he's after. Fortunately, the gangsters are played by people with some acting chops -- like J. Carroll Naish as the snarling mob boss and Joseph Sawyer as his most pugnacious thug. And even Jed Prouty is on hand as a doctor-for-hire.
utgard14
Richard Dix plays a lawyer who represents criminals and is quite good at it. When his federal agent brother is killed by gangster J. Carrol Naish, Dix abandons his legal practice and goes undercover to bring down the criminals. But he needs to fall in love, right? Enter Naish's sister (Margaret Callahan). Routine little B crime drama. Dix is his usual square-jawed rugged self. Naish is good as always. Some solid character support from Joe Sawyer and Erik Rhodes. The love story part of the movie is probably the weakest. Seeing Dix flirt is like watching your grandfather breakdance. It's just wrong. It's an ordinary little crime flick. Nothing exceptional but something to pass an hour with.