

Behind Green Lights
An unscrupulous private investigator with a penchant for blackmail is found dead in a car and the leading suspect is Janet Bradley, the daughter of a mayoral candidate. With the election just weeks away, shady and ruthless individuals muscle the medical officer into switching the corpse with another body. Lieutenant Sam Carson, one of the few good apples in the bunch must find a way to get to the bottom of it all.
Available on
Production
Languages
Cast

Carole Landis
Janet Bradley

William Gargan
Lt. Sam Carson

Richard Crane
Johnny Williams, Reporter

Mary Anderson
Nora Bard

John Ireland
Det. Oppenheimer

Charles Russell
Arthur Templeton

Roy Roberts
Max Calvert

Mabel Paige
Flossie

Stanley Prager
Ruzinsky, Milkman

Charles Tannen
Ames, Reporter

Don Beddoe
Yager

Bernard Nedell
Walter Bard
Reviews
CinemaSerf
When a recently slain body is dumped at the entrance to the police station, it falls to "Lt. Carson" (William Gargan) to get to the bottom of things. Snag is, he thinks he has his culprit then the body disappears, the clues seem to conflict and he seems to be back at square one. Might the sassy "Janet Bradley" (Carol Landis) be behind it all? Well, sadly, Otto Brower doesn't really provide us with very much to get our grey matter stimulated. Gargan always was exceptionally mediocre and even with the presence of the usually lively Miss Landis, and some attempts at humour now and again, this still lurches along as a sort of breadcrumb following cop-noir with a few red herrings and not much else as we spend twenty-four hours looking for the perpetrators - dead and/or alive! It only lasts an hour, and is reasonably well stitched together to pass a wet Saturday afternoon - and it does make a sly dig at the integrity (or lack of) of police, media and their respective priorities and paymasters, too. You won't remember it afterwards, but it just about holds the attention while it is on.