Jerry, the son of a bank depositor who was cheated out of his savings, is sent to prison after he robs the bank of the exact sum his father lost. Captain Bill Bourne lives on the grounds of the prison along with his wife, their daughter Bonnie and an adopted daughter, Ellen.


Alright, so One-Way Ticket. Is it worth tracking down today? Well, if you’ve got a soft spot for those old, earnest melodramas from way back when, and you don't mind a story that takes itself pretty seriously, then yeah, maybe. It’s a ride, but a specific kind of ride. If you’re here for snappy dialogue or modern pacin...


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

Herbert J. Biberman

Edgar Jones
Community
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"Alright, so One-Way Ticket. Is it worth tracking down today? Well, if you’ve got a soft spot for those old, earnest melodramas from way back when, and you don't mind a story that takes itself pretty seriously, then yeah, maybe. It’s a ride, but a specific kind of ride. If you’re here for snappy dialogue or modern pacing, you'll probably want to give this one a wide berth. For the rest of us, it’s… interesting. The setup is pretty stark. Jerry (Robert Middlemass) ends up in the big house, not f..."
Thurston Hall
Grover Jones, Ethel Turner, Joseph Anthony, Oliver H.P. Garrett, Vincent Lawrence
United States

1936 · IMDb 6.5

