You'd Be Surprised

You'd Be Surprised (1926)


  • Genre: Comedy, Mystery
  • Release Date: 1926-09-24
  • User Rating: 6.3/10 from 3 ratings
  • Runtime: 1h 5min
  • Language: No Language
  • Production Company: Paramount Pictures
  • Director: Arthur Rosson
star 6.3/10
From 3 Ratings

Summary

A diamond is stolen at a houseboat party given by the district attorney. He gives the thief a chance to return it by putting an empty box on a table and turning out the lights. When the lights are turned back on the box is gone, and the district attorney has a knife in his back and is quite dead. The police and the coroner arrive. There are several attempts made on the life of the coroner. Ruth Whitman is found hiding in a grandfather-clock, holding the gem box. She claims the box was pushed into her hands and she was pushed into the clock. The district attorney's butler/valet tells the coroner he saw who killed his employer and a few minutes later he is also murdered. The mystery deepens.

You'd Be Surprised Trailer

Is You'd Be Surprised on HBO Max?

Unfortunately the movie You'd Be Surprised is not yet available on HBO Max.

  • Raymond Griffith

    as Mr. Green
  • Edward Martindel

    as Mr. White
  • Earle Williams

    as Mr. Black
  • Tom McGuire

    as Inspector Brown
  • Dorothy Sebastian

    as Dorothy
  • Granville Redmond

    as Grey – a Valet
  • Richard Arlen

    as Reporter (uncredited)
  • Monte Collins Sr.

    as Milkman "Juror" (uncredited)
  • Roscoe Karns

    as Party Guest (uncredited)
  • Isabelle Keith

    as Party Guest (uncredited)
  • Dick La Reno

    as "Jury" Foreman (uncredited)
  • Carl M. Leviness

    as Party Guest (uncredited)
  • Jerry Mandy

    as Hot Dog Salesman "Juror" (uncredited)
Directing Arthur Rosson Director
Writing Jules Furthman Story
Writing Jules Furthman Screenplay
Writing Robert Benchley Dialogue
Writing Ralph Spence Dialogue
Crew Adolph Zukor Presenter
Crew Jesse L. Lasky Presenter
Production B.P. Schulberg Associate Producer
Camera William Marshall Director of Photography
Writing E. Lloyd Sheldon Script Editor

keyboard_arrow_up