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Without Orders

Without Orders
Without-orders-movie-poster-1936.jpg
Theatrical film poster
Directed by Lew Landers
Charles Kerr (assistant)
Produced by Samuel Briskin
Cliff Reid
Screenplay by J. Robert Bren
Edmund L. Hartmann
Based on the short story, "Without Orders"
by Peter B. Kyne
Starring Sally Eilers
Robert Armstrong
Frances Sage
Charley Grapewin
Vinton Haworth
Music by Max Steiner
Roy Webb
Cinematography J. Roy Hunt
Edited by Desmond Marquette
Production
company
Distributed by RKO Pictures
Release date
  • October 23, 1936 (1936-10-23)
Running time
64 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Without Orders is a 1936 American drama film directed by Lew Landers and produced by RKO Radio Pictures who released the picture on October 23, 1936. The screenplay was written by Samuel Briskin and Cliff Reid, based on the short story of the same name by Peter B. Kyne, which had appeared in the February 8, 1936 edition of Collier's magazine. The film stars Sally Eilers, Robert Armstrong, Frances Sage, Charley Grapewin and Vinton Haworth.

At Portland, Oregon, playboy pilot Len Kendrick (Vinton Haworth) lands at the end of a cross-country record flight, met by his father J.P. Kendrick (Charley Grapewin) who owns Amalgamated Air Lines. Len is a media darling, adored by fans for his daring flights. He is in love with Amalgamated stewardess Kay Armstrong (Sally Eilers) who is dating veteran pilot "Wad" Madison (Robert Armstrong). Len dates her sister Penny (Frances Sage) who learns that his hard-drinking and recklessness has caused the death of his co-pilot. Penny knows that he was drinking before the fateful flight and only escaped prosecution by bribing a bartender. She leaves Len who ends up at Amalgamated as a line pilot, being tutored by Wad.

Len pursues Kay, and she falls for his charm but asks her sister for advice about marrying him. Realizing that marriage would be a mistake, Penny tells Len that she will expose him; he angrily reacts by knocking her down, fracturing her skull. On an outbound flight, Len attempts to rush Kay into accepting a proposal of marriage but she learns that her sister is seriously injured and in the hospital. Kay asks Wad to fly her back to Portland. On the same flight, Len locks his rival out of the cockpit, takes over the flight and after landing at the airline's home base, accuses Wad of cowardice and dereliction of duty, resulting in a fistfight between the two men. Wad is fired, but finds out from Penny that Len has a terrible secret to hide.

On a flight to Salt Lake City, Len's aircraft not only has been battling a blizzard for hours, but also experiences engine trouble. Instead of landing, in a repeat of the earlier tragic incident, Len knocks out his co-pilot, and again takes to a parachute, leaving Key and the passengers behind. This time, his parachute fails to open. Wad radios instructions to Kay who takes over the controls and successfully makes an emergency landing. Kay and Wad are hailed as heroes and, after the veteran pilot gets back his old job, takes up where they had left off.


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