The policy-racket reaches it lean, bony fingers into the ivy-towers of a large university and the underworld trying to "beat the numbers-racket" with applied mathematics. One of the professors, Tom Barry (Earle Foxe) is murdered in the Dean's office.


If you have a soft spot for 1930s mystery movies where everyone talks at 100 miles per hour and smokes in every single room, Murder Goes to College is worth a look. It’s not exactly high art, but it’s got that specific, scrappy energy that feels like a B-movie trying its absolute best to be an A-list thriller. Don’t ex...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Charles Reisner

Reggie Morris
Community
Log in to comment.
"If you have a soft spot for 1930s mystery movies where everyone talks at 100 miles per hour and smokes in every single room, Murder Goes to College is worth a look. It’s not exactly high art, but it’s got that specific, scrappy energy that feels like a B-movie trying its absolute best to be an A-list thriller. Don’t expect to be intellectually challenged here, folks. The whole thing kicks off with a professor buying the farm in his office. Naturally, the suspects are lined up like they're at a..."
Kurt Steel, Robert Wyler, Eddie Welch, Brian Marlow
United States

