Under Suspicion


1h 6m 1931

Film Details

Also Known As
The Red Sky, Tonight and You
Genre
Adventure
Release Date
Jan 4, 1931
Premiere Information
New York opening: week of 26 Dec 1930
Production Company
Fox Film Corp.
Distribution Company
Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Alberta--Jasper National Park,Canada

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 6m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
5,800ft

Synopsis

A group of Canadian Royal Mounted Police officers arrive home after serving overseas with the Allied Army. After enjoying a birthday banquet for the aged Major Manners amid much singing and revelry, Inspector Turner reveals suspicions about a new recruit, John Smith, whom he knows to be using a pseudonym and whose war record contains something potentially damaging. Smith is purported to have been a flyer during the war; he and his brother fell in love with the same girl who turned out to be a spy and to whom one of them revealed British Air Force secrets, which caused a squadron of planes to be attacked. John meets Freil, another Mountie, who gives him an encouraging talk about self-respect and unselfishness and promises never to dredge up the former's past record. Alice, Freil's daughter, returns home by canoe after visiting her ailing former nurse. When her canoe heads for the rapids, Smith rescues her, and Alice then promises to save a dance for him at a party that night at the lodge. During the festivities, as Turner and Alice dance, he confesses his love for her, as well as his jealousy of Smith, as he had witnessed the pair riding together after Alice's rescue. Smith cuts in, and the lovers take a walk in the moonlight. After the dance, Smith and Alice discuss a song she's given him, "'Round My Kingdom's Door," and Smith begins to sing a few bars. Turner then arrives and announces that he's selected Smith for a dangerous solo mission to rescue an injured hunter from some snowy climes. Smith returns from his mission unscathed and tells Alice that he did not want to take the mission alone, contradicting Turner's earlier claim that Smith requested the mission in order to prove his bravery. Smith then goes to the police barracks and encounters Turner, who informs Smith that he has sent for his official war record but will remain silent about its contents if Smith resigns. Smith refuses, saying that he will tell Alice everything, but when Turner threatens to inform Smith's English family about their son's dishonorable history, Smith agrees to resign. Doyle, Smith's friend during the war and the man responsible for bringing him to the Royal Mounties' camp, promises to help his buddy out of his predicament. Alice hears of John's resignation and vows to stand by him despite his past, while Doyle assures her that anyone would have transgressed in his situation. As Alice is asking Turner about Smith, Turner receives a report of a forest fire in the same region that Freil has been traveling. Smith, an ace flier during the war, takes a plane into the area and rescues Freil, who then reprimands Turner for his earlier act of revenge and asks for his resignation. Alice reads Smith's war record and reports that the "deplorable incident" was actually Smith's attempt to shield his younger brother from blame. The record also reveals that his real name is Sir Robert Macklin. Alice and Macklin, now with a clean slate in the Canadian Royal Mounted Police community, marry at the Mounties' barracks and raise their glasses with the other men.

Film Details

Also Known As
The Red Sky, Tonight and You
Genre
Adventure
Release Date
Jan 4, 1931
Premiere Information
New York opening: week of 26 Dec 1930
Production Company
Fox Film Corp.
Distribution Company
Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Alberta--Jasper National Park,Canada

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 6m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
5,800ft

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

The plot summary was based on a screen continuity in the Twentieth Century-Fox Produced Scripts Collection at the UCLA Theater Arts Library and the first reel of a print of the film. The viewed print, a Fox studio print, was titled Tonight and You, which was one of the film's working titles. The other working title was The Red Sky. The opening credits state that exterior scenes were shot at Jasper National Park, Province of Alberta, Dominion of Canada.