Just as gangster Steve Murkil is escaping from Alcatraz prison, rival San Francisco radio operators Ray Grayson and Bob MacArthur find themselves assigned to a freighter run by Captain Glennan, headed out to sea.
Among those on board are a new nurse, Dale Borden, and passengers including a young woman and her mother. The younger one is Murkil's moll and the mother is Murkil himself in disguise, making a getaway, with several of his cronies also aboard ship.
Ray and Bob both develop a romantic interest in Dale and both end up in confrontations with Murkil. A fight results in Ray being wounded, with Dale receiving radio instructions on how to perform an operation that he immediately needs. Murkil nearly makes his escape until he is shot by Glennan. On shore, Ray and Dale decide to get married, with Bob their best man.
New York Times critic Frank Nugent called the film "a trim little melodrama, tightly written and logically contrived."[1] Kate Cameron of the New York Daily News gave the film three of four stars. She praised Florey's direction and Nolan's performance.[3] An Orlando Sentinel reviewer called the film "a conglomeration of the old gangster films with a not quite conscientious triangle added."[4]