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The Panther's Claw (1942)

6 | Mar 03, 1942 (US) | Thriller, Mystery, Crime | 01:10

A Shriek Of Death - As The Sleek Nocturnal Prowler STRIKES Again!

The police arrest a man climbing over the wall of a cemetery after midnight. He claims that he is being blackmailed and is following instructions he received by mail to leave $1000 on a certain grave. It turns out that he's not the only one who got a blackmail letter from the same person--calling himself "The Black Panther"--and it also turns out that all the recipients are connected to an opera company.

Featured Crew

Director
Screenplay
Costume Design
Music
Sound Engineer
Cinematography
Executive In Charge Of Production
Dialogue
Production Manager

Cast

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Sidney Blackmer
Police Commissioner Thatcher Colt
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Rick Vallin
Anthony 'Tony' Abbot (as Ricki Vallin)
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Byron Foulger
Everett P. Digberry
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Herbert Rawlinson
District Attorney Bill Dougherty
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Lynn Starr
Miss Spencer
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Barry Bernard
Capt. Edgar Walters / Frank Galloway
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Trude Rosen
Nina Politza
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Thornton Edwards
Enrico Lombardi
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John Ince
Police Captain Mike Flynn
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Martin Ashe
Officer Murphy

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
6 | Jun 26, 2022
As cheap and cheerful B-features go, this is actually quite quickly paced and entertaining. It all centres around wig-maker "Digberry" (Byron Foulger) who is apprehended up to no good in a cemetery after hours. His explanation makes little sense to the police officer - he is being blackmailed by the mysterious "Panther" into leaving $1000 on the graveyard of one of his aunts. Turns out that he is not the only recipient of such a letter - many of his friends have also, and this leaves Police Commissioner "Thatch" (Sidney Blackmer), and his sidekick "Abbott" (Rick Vallin) to try to get to the bottom of things. The story is a bit far-fetched, but Foulger is on quite good form as the plot offers intrigues from the operatic to a bit of skull-wiggery, and it passes 70 minutes effortlessly. The ending is a bit obvious, but still - it shows what can be done with a tiny budget if the story is decent and the performances are too.