Lured (1947) starring Lucille Ball, George Sanders, Boris Karloff, Charles Coburn, Sir Cedric Hardwicke
Synopsis of Lured
A serial killer in London is murdering young women whom he meets through the personal columns of newspapers. He announces each of his murders to the police by sending them a cryptic poem. After a dancer disappears, the police enlist her American friend to answer advertisements in the personal columns and so lure the killer.
Cast
- George Sanders (Village of the Damned, The Picture of Dorian Gray) … Robert Fleming. Rich, debonair, handsome. And he becomes the police’s chief suspect. But is he guilty?
- Lucille Ball (The Facts of Life, I Love Lucy) … Sandra Carpenter. The American, who’s willing to become bait. She’s frightened, but willing to do it for the sake of her murdered friend.
- Charles Coburn (Vivacious Lady) … Inspector Harley Temple. The police inspector who’s trying to find the serial murderer. With the help of Sandra.
- Boris Karloff (The Ghoul, The Mummy 1932) … Charles van Druten. One of the suspects. A once-great dress designer, who’s gone mad …
- Cedric Hardwicke (On Borrowed Time, Invisible Agent) … Julian Wilde. Robert’s business partner. Who just might be more …
- Joseph Calleia (Five Came Back) … Dr. Nicholas Moryani
- Alan Mowbray (Merrily We Live) … Lyle Maxwell. The stuffy butler. He may have designs on Sandra.
- George Zucco (The Mad Monster, The Mummy’s Ghost) … Officer H. R. Barrett
- Robert Coote (Theater of Blood) … Detective
- Alan Napier (The Mole People, Batman the Movie) … Detective Gordon
- Tanis Chandler … Lucy Barnard. Sandra’s friend, and victim of the serial killer.
Editorial review of Lured, courtesy of Amazon.com:
Maybe best of all, the film has a crowd of good character actors: Charles Coburn (as a Scotland Yard inspector who becomes protective of his amateur agent), Cedric Hardwicke, Alan Mowbray, Joseph Calleia, and especially George Zucco, a frequent movie villain in a sympathetic role as an avuncular cop. Sirk brings his Germanic precision to the details, and cameraman William Daniels (Greta Garbo’s favorite) no doubt had a hand in making Ball look good Lured was subsequently re-titled Personal Column, much to Sirk’s annoyance. –Robert Horton
(Updated July 30, 2021)