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  1. The Clue of the New Pin is a 1929 all-talking sound British crime film directed by Arthur Maude and starring Benita Hume, Kim Peacock, and Donald Calthrop. The soundtrack was recorded using the British Phototone sound-on-disc system. It was made at Beaconsfield Studios.

  2. The film, a co-production between British International Pictures and Efzet Film. In March 1929, this film and The Clue of the New Pin , filmed in the British Phototone sound-on-disc process, were previewed in London. [1]

    • Plot
    • Partial Cast
    • Critical Reception

    TV journalist Tab Holland assists Scotland yard with the murder of a reclusive millionaire whose corpse is discovered locked in a vault. The key to the vault is mysteriously found on the table beside the corpse.

    TV Guidecalled it "slightly better than most of the 47 Edgar Wallace second features that producer Greenwood put out between 1960 and 1963."

  3. The part-sound The Clue of the New Pin, based on the novel by Edgar Wallace, and filmed in British Phototone, a sound-on-disc system using 12-inch discs. The Crimson Circle , a UK-German silent film, also based on a Wallace novel, dubbed after the fact with the Phonofilm sound-on-film process.

  4. 71 minutes. Country. United States. Language. English. The Return of Sherlock Holmes is a 1929 American Pre-Code mystery film directed by Basil Dean and written by Arthur Conan Doyle, Basil Dean and Garrett Fort. The film shares its title with the third volume of the Sherlock Holmes stories, The Return of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle.

  5. Language. Silent (English intertitles) The Flying Squad is a 1929 British silent crime film directed by Arthur Maude and starring John Longden, Donald Calthrop and Wyndham Standing. The film was made at Beaconsfield Studios. It was based on the 1928 novel The Flying Squad by Edgar Wallace, which was later remade with sound in 1932 and 1940 .

  6. English. The Hole in the Wall is a 1929 pre-Code mystery drama film directed by Robert Florey, and starring Claudette Colbert and Edward G. Robinson. This early talking picture was the first appearance of Edward G. Robinson in the role of a gangster, and "can be viewed as a dry run for his eventual success (in 1931 in Little Caesar )".