Home Sweet Homicide

{{Short description|1946 film by Lloyd Bacon}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2023}}

{{Use American English|date=December 2023}}

{{more footnotes needed|date=February 2012}}

{{Infobox film

| name = Home Sweet Homicide

| image = Home Sweet Homicide Poster.jpg

| caption = Movie poster

| director = Lloyd Bacon

| producer = Louis D. Dighton

| writer = F. Hugh Herbert

| based_on = {{Based on|Home Sweet Homicide|Craig Rice}}

| narrator =

| starring = Peggy Ann Garner
Randolph Scott
Lynn Bari
Dean Stockwell

| music = David Buttolph

| cinematography = John Seitz

| editing = Louis Loeffler

| studio = 20th Century-Fox

| distributor = 20th Century-Fox

| released = {{Film date|1946|10|02}}

| runtime = 90 minutes

| country = United States

| language = English

| budget =

| gross =

}}

Home Sweet Homicide is a 1946 American comedy mystery film directed by Lloyd Bacon and starring Peggy Ann Garner, Randolph Scott and Lynn Bari. It was based on the 1944 eponymous mystery novel by Craig Rice.Goble p.388 Though he would make a further 39 films, Home Sweet Homicide is the second-to-last non-western film of Randolph Scott's career.{{Cite web|url= https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000068/|title= Scott's second-to-last non-western film}}

Plot

When gunshots are heard next door, the three children of widowed mystery novelist Marian Carstairs try to help the police help their mother solve the case or solve it themselves.

Polly Walker, an actress, runs from the neighbors' house, telling police lieutenant Bill Smith that she had gone there to see Flora Sanford and found her dead. Flora was an agent who represented Polly as well as Marian, whose books feature a detective character with the same name as Bill's.

Various suspects are considered, including other neighbors and Flora's hiding husband, who had fallen in love with Polly and wanted a divorce. The children begin sending anonymous letters, believing they are helping the investigation, until Bill finally persuades them to let him handle the case. He solves it, then expresses a romantic interest in Marian, pleasing the kids.

Cast

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

  • Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter, 1999.