I Promise to Pay

1937 "LOAN SHARK RACKET EXPOSED!"
6.6| 1h8m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 21 April 1937 Released
Producted By: Columbia Pictures
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A man goes to a loan shark to finance his family's vacation.

Genre

Drama, Crime

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Director

D. Ross Lederman

Production Companies

Columbia Pictures

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I Promise to Pay Audience Reviews

Platicsco Good story, Not enough for a whole film
Arianna Moses Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.
Erica Derrick By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
Mathilde the Guild Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.
kidboots I thought this was a pretty nifty drama - almost like a feature length "Crime Does Not Pay" entry. "Crime Does Not Pay" was a MGM short subject series that kicked off in 1935 with "Buried Loot". It was a series that not only tried to keep youth on the straight and narrow (the series started when America was in the midst of the "Public Enemy" era) it also gave starts to future Hollywood stars ie Robert Taylor in "Buried Loot".The city is going through the worst heat wave in years and Eddie Lang (Chester Morris), who is counting on his bonus coming through in a couple of weeks, goes to his manager for a $50 loan. He wants to take his family away from the city heat but his boss says no!! He is finally tipped off about a loan company who will be pleased to give him the money - all he has to sign is a "I Promise to Pay" slip. He takes his family on a great holiday, but of course, when he returns, there is no bonus. He is now in the clutches of loan sharks who insist on repayments of $10 a week. He goes to the police but not before he makes the mistake of confiding to his friend, Al, who in reality works for the loan sharks. Ed steals from petty cash and is sacked from his job. The family can't escape from the vicious punks - even in a new town, with a new job, Eddie is tracked down and severely beaten.Chester Morris had the ability to lift up whatever film he was in - even a programmer like this, and give it a touch of class. His finest moment is when he is making his impassioned speech to the "little guys" - all the victims of loan sharks, who have been too afraid to come forward. Interestingly Henry Brandon, who played the educated foreman and victim of the "Black Legion", in this movie was on the wrong side of the law playing one of Farra's henchmen - "Fancyface". The one person who didn't ring true was Leo Carrillo as loan shark kingpin Farra - his giggling didn't really instill fear - it made me think he must have yearned to be in a comedy. Marc Lawrence more than made up for Carrillo's shortcomings. Was there ever a badder bad guy than Lawrence - here he played a very evil henchman, "Whitehat", who wants to take little Judy and her brother "for a ride". Helen Mack was also excellent as Eddie's helpful wife.Highly, Highly Recommended.
Alonzo Church Chester Morris, low paid office guy with a cheap flat in the city, a wife and two kids, wants a vacation to escape the worst heat in years. When he signs on the dotted line with a shady loan outfit, he soon finds that he has said "I PROMISE TO PAY" far more than he can afford. Will Chester and his family escape his debt to Leo Carillo's new-style, can't miss racket? Despite a script that seems downright naive in spots, probably because of our exposure to numerous loan sharks in the movies, this a rather good programmer, that answers the question posed by many a Boston Blackie movie -- Is it possible for Chester Morris to put in a good performance? In this one, Morris' customary cockiness is only an aspect of his character (rather than his raison d'etre), and is mostly subordinated in his depiction of a decent but quietly desperate guy in a dead-end job who just wants to give his wife and kids a week in the country. The depiction of Morris' disintegrating life is contrasted, in best 30s fashion, against the over-the-top vulgarity of Carillo's mob-fueled wealth. Eventually, because movies like this had to have a happy ending in the 30s, the plot spins into a d.a. vs. mobsters vs. witnesses that won't talk that's resolved in favor of law and order. But until that point is reached, this movie is better than most of that era in showing the trials and tribulations of the lower middle class, and how a family copes with slowly creeping financial disaster.Well worth seeing, both as a decent Warner's style crime drama, and a depiction of the 30s socially conscious mindset.
ksf-2 Chester Morris started as a teenager in the silent films, and by the 1940s had the role of "Boston Blackie" locked up. This film "I Promise to Pay" was a couple years before he got the Boston Blackie gig. The film opens by showing us how hot the city is, and Morris is Eddie Lang, who is short on money for his wife and kid. Keep an eye out for Thomas Mitchell, the only other big name in here that I recognize - he was in about half the movies made in the 1930s, usually the father or the president of the company. In this one, he plays the D.A. Leo Carillo is the big mob boss "Farra" on the take, squeezing folks for money when they take out loans, and of course, our hero Lang becomes one of his "customers". Lang and his family go off on vacation to a lodge on a lake, but as of today, the filming locations aren't listed - too bad. Pretty good, for a Columbia Pictures shortie, at only 68 minutes. It's almost like a long episode of Dragnet. Good way to kill an hour.
sol **SPOILERS** With a major heatwave hitting the city office worker Eddie Lang, Chester Morris, want's to take his wife Mary, Helen Mack, and two young children to the country for the week vacation that's coming him from his employer Rushmore inc.Needing a cash advance Eddie is steered to this loan shark Richard Farra, Leo Corrillo, by one of his friends Al Anslie, John Gallaudet, who secretly works for Farra in getting him new suckers or customers. As things turn out the $50,00 that Farra, through a local candy store owner, loaned Eddie had a 20% interest-or vig-thatched on to it! The 20% vig was not just annually or even monthly but weekly! This means by the end of the year with Eddie paying $10.00 a week in paying off Farra's loan he'll end up paying an astounding $520.00! That amounts to some 1,000% over what Farra loaned him!Realizing he's way over his head in paying his entire weekly saleary,$10.00, to Farra just to keep it above water Eddie tries to pay just $2.00 weekly until the loan is paid off. This leads to Eddie and his family getting threatened with psychical violence by Farra's hoods if he doesn't pay up! Desperate Eddie robs his office to make his weekly loan payment which has him being fired, or laid off, from his job after confessing his crime, and paying back the stolen money, to his very understanding boss B.G Wilson, Willis Clark. Moving to a cheaper apartment and getting a new job at the US Government sponsored W.P.A. Eddie finally thought he was through with Farra and his debt collectors! As things turned out Eddie troubles with the loan shark was just beginning!***SPOILERS*** Shocking expose of the brutal loan shark racket and how it turns decent and law abiding citizens like Eddie Lang into desperate criminals! Eddie finally realizes that the only way to get Farra off his and his family's backs is go to the D.A's office and turn evidence against him. The trouble is that to get Farra Eddie and the D.A. will have to find a link in the Farra crime syndicate that's close enough to both finger and turn states evidence against him! Eddie who doesn't consider himself to be any kind hero becomes one by, with Farra ordering a hit on him, setting himself up as a target for Farra's hoods. Who in the end warn't that loyal to their boss to go to the eclectic chair for a murder he ordered them to commit!