No Questions Asked

No Questions Asked

Year: 1951

Runtime: 80 mins

Language: English

Director: Harold F. Kress

Drama

Young attorney Steve Keiver teams up with seedy gangsters to make quick cash by bending the law. His skill impresses the mob, who recruit him as a regular middleman. When Police Inspector Matt Duggan uncovers Steve’s illegal dealings, the lawyer is forced into a dangerous showdown. To clear his name, Steve must turn on the criminals he’s been aiding.

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No Questions Asked (1951) – Full Plot Summary & Ending Explained

Read the complete plot breakdown of No Questions Asked (1951), including all key story events, major twists, and the ending explained in detail. Discover what really happened—and what it all means.

Arlene Dahl as Ellen Sayburn Jessman returns from a skiing vacation, and Barry Sullivan as Steve Keiver is waiting at the airport to pick her up in his pal Danny Dayton’s taxi. Keiver, an insurance investigator, dreams of a life beyond his paycheck, but his career path is constrained by a steady need to prove his value. He longs for a secure future with Ellen, yet the financial reality of his job makes that future seem distant and precarious, a tension that fuels his risky decisions throughout the story.

Keiver’s thrill-seeking boss, Moroni Olsen as Henry Manston, hints at a more lucrative angle when he casually mentions that recovering stolen furs could yield a $10,000 payout for the company—enough to relax their careful watch on Keiver’s ambitions. Keiver seizes the idea with a mixture of bravado and desperation, approaching known mobsters and pitching a straightforward deal: recover the merchandise, and the insurance company will not question the method. The plan is dangerous, and the consequences blur the line between legality and criminal cunning. After a brutal encounter where he is roughed up, Keiver negotiates a backhanded victory, earning a $2,500 bonus from his boss and a rush of adrenaline that convinces him he’s found a shortcut to wealth.

That shortcut proves hollow when Ellen returns with a shattering reveal: she has left town to marry a wealthy man she encountered during the vacation, leaving Keiver to grapple with a mix of humiliation and anger. The setback could break a man, but Keiver channels it into a sharpened resolve. He doubles down on his scheme, using his newly earned confidence to strike deals with criminals for returned stolen merchandise, and the money begins to flow in a way that makes his earlier, more modest ambitions seem almost quaint. In the process, he starts dating Jean Hagen as Joan Brenson, a colleague who has long been drawn to him, while Ellen’s exit opens a space for his success—yet it also intensifies the underlying tension of who truly controls his fate.

The police, already wary of Keiver’s unorthodox methods, grow more irritated as his legal yet barely aboveboard activities gain momentum. George Murphy as Police Insp. Matt Duggan and Richard Anderson as Detective Walter O’Bannion take a closer interest, recognizing that Keiver’s conduct skirts the edge of propriety and law. The tension between the pursuit of wealth and the pursuit of justice becomes a central theme, coloring every choice Keiver makes and every risk he takes. Ellen’s return isn’t the end of the story—it’s the spark that reignites a love triangle with Joan Brenson, and a complicating factor in a city that wants to see him succeed but cannot ignore the shadows his deals cast.

The action moves to a Broadway intermission, where Ellen and Joan end up in a large women’s lounge. Two women slip away with the jewelry of the other guests, only to reveal themselves as men when the wigs come off in the chill night air. The scene is a startling reversal that tests loyalties and raises the stakes for everyone involved. Joan, still smarting from Keiver’s renewed interest in Ellen, receives a message from Danny Dayton as Harry Dycker about a possible way to retrieve the stolen gems. The message pulls Keiver deeper into a web of deceit, even as Ellen—who has herself taken a personal risk—has her own plan to control the fate of the jewels she longs to possess.

The trail leads to Franko, a mobster played by Howard Petrie, who operates with a disturbing calm and a chilling insistence on control. Franko currently holds the jewels, and Keiver finds himself drawn into a dangerous game where each move could be fatal. Double crosses become the order of the day, and Keiver is knocked unconscious as the jewels vanish from his grasp. He suspects that either Joan or Harry has betrayed him, yet the truth proves more merciless: Ellen is the betrayer, nursing a different motive that centers on money and power rather than affection or loyalty.

Tensions escalate as Ellen—now entangled with her husband Gordon N. Jessman—seizes the jewels and edges toward a hidden stash that could alter everyone’s fortunes. Franko, determined to extract information, tortures Ellen to reveal the location of the jewels and their hidden money. The confrontation ends in tragedy as Ellen and Gordon are killed, leaving Franko to surface in a brutal struggle with Keiver. The underwater fight turns into a desperate battle, with Franko briefly gaining the upper hand, only to be met by police who have closed in. When Duggan and the waiting officers finally close in, Franko is arrested, and Keiver is pulled from the water, gasping but alive.

In the aftermath, the case leaves Ellen’s circle shattered and Keiver’s future uncertain, yet a thread of possibility remains: Joan Brenson’s lingering affection for Keiver hints at a fragile, tenuous reconciliation. The film closes on a note of grim resilience, with Keiver alive and the romance between him and Joan still flickering, suggesting that the road to redemption or ruin now depends on choices made in the shadows of ambition and desire.

Last Updated: October 09, 2025 at 12:38

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