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He Walked by Night (1948) [Film Noir] [Thriller] 

Timeless Classic Movies
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If you like this movie and our channel, please subscribe: goo.gl/0qDmXe | On a Los Angeles street, Officer Hollis, a patrolman on his way home from work, stops a man he suspects of being a burglar and is shot and mortally wounded. The minor clues lead nowhere. Two police detectives, Sergeants Marty Brennan (Brady) and Chuck Jones (Cardwell), are assigned to catch the killer, Roy Morgan (Basehart), a brilliant mystery man with no known criminal past, who is hiding in a Hollywood bungalow and listening to police calls on his custom radio in an attempt to avoid capture. His only relationship is with his little dog.
Roy consigns burgled electronic equipment to Paul Reeves (Whit Bissell), and on his fifth sale is nearly caught when he shows up to collect on his property. Reeves tells police that the suspect is a mystery man named Roy Martin. The case crosses the paths of Brennan and Jones, who stake out Reeves' office to arrest and question Roy. He suspects a trap, however, and in a brief shootout shoots and paralyzes Jones. Jones wounds Roy, who performs surgery on himself to remove the bullet and avoid going to a hospital, where his gunshot wound would be reported to the police.
With his knowledge of police procedures, Roy changes his modus operandi and becomes an armed robber. During one robbery he fires his semi-automatic pistol, and the police recover the ejected casing. Lee (Jack Webb), a forensics specialist, matches the ejector marks on the casing to those recovered in the killing of Officer Rawlins and the wounding of Sgt. Jones, connecting all three shootings to one suspect.
Captain Breen (Roy Roberts) uses this break to gather all of the witnesses to the robberies. They assist Lee in building a composite photo of the killer. Reeves then identifies Roy from the composite. However, Roy hides in Reeves' car and attempts to intimidate him into revealing details of the police investigation. He barely eludes a stakeout of Reeves' house.
Because the police do not realize that Roy has inside knowledge of their work, the case goes nowhere. Breen takes Brennan off the case in an attempt to shake him up. Jones convinces his partner to stop viewing the case personally and to use his head.
Plodding, methodical follow-up by Brennan, using the composite photograph, results in information that Roy, whose actual name is Roy Morgan, worked for a local police department as a civilian radio dispatcher before being drafted into the Army. Brennan tracks him down through post office mail carriers and disguises himself as a milkman to get a close look at Morgan and his apartment.
The police surround and raid the apartment that night, but Morgan, forewarned by the barking of his dog, escapes through the attic and uses the Los Angeles sewer system as a means of escape. The film continues with a dragnet and chase through the sewers. Roy is finally cornered by the police in a passage blocked by the wheel of a police car. As the police shoot tear gas at Roy, he staggers and attempts to fire at them. He is then shot down and killed. The final scene is notable for its resemblance to the final scene in The Third Man in which Orson Welles is chased through the sewers of Vienna. No known connection between the films has been established.
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Directed by Alfred L. Werker and Anthony Mann, produced by Bryan Foy and Robert Kane, story by Crane Wilbur, screenplay by John C. Higgins and Crane Wilbur, starring Richard Basehart as Roy Martin/Roy Morgan, Scott Brady as Sgt. Marty Brennan, Roy Roberts as Captain Breen, Whit Bissell as Paul Reeves an electronics dealer, James Cardwell as Sgt. Chuck Jones and Jack Webb as Lee.
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Source: "He Walked by Night" Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.. 26 August 2013. Web. 26 August 2013. en.wikipedia.or....
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1 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 1,4 тыс.   
@TimelessClassicMovie
@TimelessClassicMovie 7 лет назад
If you like this movie and our channel, please subscribe: goo.gl/0qDmXe
@murraybrian7710
@murraybrian7710 6 лет назад
Jimmy
@christyeberhardt8968
@christyeberhardt8968 5 лет назад
Timeless Classic Movies NHLl
@richardc7721
@richardc7721 5 лет назад
Love old movies..
@Kim-hl8mf
@Kim-hl8mf 5 лет назад
Dragnet & Adam Twelve
@195511SM
@195511SM 5 лет назад
I've been trying to track down a film from around the same era......that I only remember a small scene from. Probably from the late 40s or early 50s......I saw it as a kid in the early 1960s on television. The only thing I remember......was there was some guy dressed in a tux & top hat with white gloves I think. It's late at night in some big city, but I think the streets were pretty much empty. The guy in the tux was standing in a store window.......I think acting as a mannequin on display. I believe he witnesses a murder outside. That's ALL I remember. No title.....nor the star. I was probably only around 8 or 9, but I know it was 'film noir' of some sort. I'm wondering if anyone recalls that movie. I've tried in the past to search it out, but to no avail. I think it creeped me out at the time though.
@GoodnightIrieMon
@GoodnightIrieMon 3 года назад
I’m old enough to remember when TV stations would run these old movies late at night before signing off. As a kid they would put me to sleep from boredom. Now I think they’re superior to 99% of movies made today, IMHO. Yeah...the acting and diction may have been occasionally stilted, but the writing was incredible! Actors and actresses could pull off sexy without being explicit, crass, or vulgar. Don’t mean to sound like I’m yelling at clouds but damn..... Also, props to the great cinematography of John Alton! What a gorgeous looking film!
@ItsMefromSnuffys
@ItsMefromSnuffys 6 месяцев назад
I concur
@thecaptain7238
@thecaptain7238 5 месяцев назад
There really are the best movies. I only watch old black and movies.
@angelawilliams9088
@angelawilliams9088 5 месяцев назад
Amen! Here where I live they showed these movies as well the Dracula Werewolf movies, were on the LATE, LATE, LATE SHOW. I was about 10 or 11. I'LL NEVER FORGET
@michaelfred8848
@michaelfred8848 3 месяца назад
The actor testing the nitro was the main character in the show called Dragnet. His famous line was Just the facts mam. Sorry , I can’t remember his name. I still watch these old black and white movies, mostly to see the old cars😊
@garys1092
@garys1092 3 месяца назад
@michaelfred8848 that would be Jack Webb, he played Detective Joe Friday.
@leecoffman2594
@leecoffman2594 5 лет назад
In 1946---1947 when this film was being made I was 12--13 years old and I actually saw some of the film crews making this film at storm drain locations around Los Angeles. It was a great experience for me at that young age.
@mohammadsaeed6720
@mohammadsaeed6720 4 года назад
Mr lee how was america during ww2?
@OLDCATNOW
@OLDCATNOW 4 года назад
cool
@CaptZdq1
@CaptZdq1 4 года назад
Wow, it must have a great experience alright. Closest I ever came to stardom was a girl who lived on the opposite corner who was doing TV commercials, but I didn't see any of them (sigh), but I saw her once when she was walking across the corner. That would have been probably in the '70s in my '20s. And I have a vague memory of maybe a film crew being on her front lawn...hhhmmmm...not sure about that one. And I don't remember her name.
@robertvillarreal4525
@robertvillarreal4525 4 года назад
I’ve Seen B & W movies of L.A. in those years.......amazing. I’m so nostalgic of that slower pace of life. I may not be young anymore but I always dream of having been in California in those years. Gangster movies. The dress code proper even. The hats. The cigarette smoking [not recommended of course], the lingo[what’s the gimmick?, Brother, sister, holy mackerel, etc.].
@ritaswann7185
@ritaswann7185 4 года назад
@@mohammadsaeed6720 1a
@alberttabron3177
@alberttabron3177 3 года назад
Between 1940 and 1950 some of the best movies ever made during this time period.
@cterri60
@cterri60 5 месяцев назад
Absolutely !
@patbrennan6572
@patbrennan6572 29 дней назад
And this was certainly one of them.
@alberttabron3177
@alberttabron3177 29 дней назад
@@patbrennan6572 absolutely was !!!😊
@rubenoteiza9261
@rubenoteiza9261 Год назад
From an impoverished Italian street performer in La Strata de Fellini to an Italian scam artist in Il Bidone of the same Fellini to a passanger of theTitanic to a psycho killer here to Admiral Nelson in Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, among many other roles. Quite a career for Richard Basehart.
@surfmanx796
@surfmanx796 4 года назад
I had no idea of the existence of this film. This is clearly the origin of the Dragnet TV and radio series. Jack Webb is in this too. Very cool to see this early police procedural.
@garys1092
@garys1092 3 месяца назад
Dragnet, a movie in 1954, directed and starred by Jack Webb, was based upon a radio series of the same name. It went on to become the TV show also starring Jack Webb, as Detective Joe Friday.
@PointyTailofSatan
@PointyTailofSatan 4 года назад
The best part of all? No stupid romantic component. A real police movie.
@ioodyssey3740
@ioodyssey3740 3 года назад
Oh? I guess I'll skip this one. A woman hovers over every man who fails.
@tmo.48
@tmo.48 4 месяца назад
​?
@MrIrons-og3rg
@MrIrons-og3rg 4 года назад
They don't make movies like this anymore. First-class! Brilliant.
@brendano5440
@brendano5440 3 года назад
I always love movies that are narrated like this. Great movie.
@dennisojohnson
@dennisojohnson 4 года назад
Doing a burglary in a suit and tie , times has changed .
@joannealbertson2600
@joannealbertson2600 3 года назад
Martha, iron my shirt. I've got a job to pull tonight.
@joelonzello4189
@joelonzello4189 2 года назад
@@joannealbertson2600 Today it's " have you seen my hoody ? "
@ItsMefromSnuffys
@ItsMefromSnuffys 5 месяцев назад
Times have changed. They didnt make a lot of junk clothing back then.
@tmo.48
@tmo.48 4 месяца назад
Thanks for the LOL❤
@robertclark972
@robertclark972 29 дней назад
- Some of the biggest Crooks in the world wear custom suits and perform their crimes with MontBlanc pens .
@ogarzabello
@ogarzabello 4 года назад
Excellent. Shows the beginning of police forensic procedures combined with smart and disciplined detective work. Thank you.
@kevinhealey6540
@kevinhealey6540 3 года назад
The story is based on Erwin Mathias Walker, born 1917. He served in WW2 and was promoted to first lieutenant. After he was discharged, his crime career began. The beginning of this film really did happen. The man he killed was Officer Loren Cornwell Roosevelt, police chief of Arcadia, California. He was later arrested and sentenced to the gas chamber. After a string of appeals the death sentence was revoked. Walker applied for parole in 1974, which was granted, and was released. Later he worked as a chemist. Walker died in 1982, without ever offering an apology to the family of the police officer.
@keanuuchiha1306
@keanuuchiha1306 2 года назад
He died in 2008
@davidb2206
@davidb2206 Год назад
Look at all the "insane" and "mentally ill" treatments that he scammed and gamed the system and the psychiatrists with for decades. He was a classic sociopath: He functioned when HE wanted to.
@looloo4029
@looloo4029 Год назад
Thank you for the background information.
@scarletmacaw
@scarletmacaw Год назад
I am glad that he was released and became a contributing member of society.
@davidb2206
@davidb2206 Год назад
@@scarletmacaw Yeah, unless he had murdered YOU or a member of YOUR family. Lame .
@charliemorris2338
@charliemorris2338 4 года назад
What a good performance by Richard Basehardt...love this old film noir.
@DIANNEELEE
@DIANNEELEE 4 года назад
Awesome movie and the beginning of Jack Webb's career of Dragnet. I miss him.
@arneldobumatay3702
@arneldobumatay3702 4 года назад
While watching the movie, I was wondering if Webb got his Dragnet inspiration from working in this film.
@formica.
@formica. 3 года назад
He is just a skinny lab nerd here, very young! His personality changed so much when older. I think dragnet is just a fishing term now, do police use it anymore?
@charlesdowns1691
@charlesdowns1691 2 года назад
380 acp.
@joelonzello4189
@joelonzello4189 2 года назад
Jack Webb also appeared in Sunset Boulevard...
@jennifermiller7139
@jennifermiller7139 Год назад
I loved Jack Webb. A great actor.
@robheidel5627
@robheidel5627 4 года назад
This movie is a gem. I like everything about it. The production values were above average, the cinema photography was excellent and the lighting perfect. Very, very well done. I'm gonna watch it again right now!
@RanBlakePiano
@RanBlakePiano 4 года назад
robin heidel agree
@joelonzello4189
@joelonzello4189 2 года назад
See Stumbled across it last year. Had never seen it. He did a good one with Audrey Totter around same time...
@tubespring
@tubespring 2 месяца назад
Fine movie. Richard Baseheart and the other actors gave great performances! Thank you.
@angelawilliams1451
@angelawilliams1451 4 года назад
Who’s here in 2020? 🤔
@michaelgiovanni1924
@michaelgiovanni1924 4 года назад
We’re all here in 2020. You expect a new comment from 1986 or something?
@TrilloSuede
@TrilloSuede 4 года назад
I just discovered this channel, so I'm here now...
@-oiiio-3993
@-oiiio-3993 4 года назад
@@filledwithpeace None of the people you've mentioned live in Los Angeles, fool.
@SHANN0N0HARA
@SHANN0N0HARA 4 года назад
Checking in from the computer in my Delorean in 2022. Im sorry to say it looks like Covid 19 took out everyone.
@SHANN0N0HARA
@SHANN0N0HARA 4 года назад
@João Fernando dos Santos on my way !
@jimstokes6742
@jimstokes6742 8 лет назад
Inspiration for Jack Webb's DRAGNET, of course. Even the opening narration is a harbinger of how DRAGNET opens. "This is the city, Los Angeles, California."
@johnarntz4640
@johnarntz4640 5 лет назад
Also the disclaimer that the story is true and only the names were changed to protect the innocent.
@demetriusdion286
@demetriusdion286 5 лет назад
Jack Webb was in the right movie at the right time, without this movie, Dragnet would be a pipe dream. This is the movie that started it all, and made Jack Webb rich, because he created not only Dragnet, but the Serial Cop Drama One Adam 12.
@garys1092
@garys1092 3 месяца назад
Interesting. I thought the radio series was before this, but the dragnet radio series started after this film.
@tomc642
@tomc642 4 года назад
Based on a real life person by the name of Erwin Walker. A soldier during WW2 who had a mental breakdown and became a criminal. His story is as amazing as this movie. Much of the movie actually parallels his crime spree. He did kill a police man, but was paroled and became a chemist. One of the best film noirs, right next to DOA.
@joelonzello4189
@joelonzello4189 2 года назад
DOA with those loopy sound effects when he saw a pretty girl lol
@kathleenmckeithen118
@kathleenmckeithen118 Год назад
DOA is my favorite of these but those stupid sound effects every time Edmond O'Brien say a pretty girl were annoying.
@andrewfrancis4462
@andrewfrancis4462 Год назад
I was curious too about the real life case. Walker has a Wiki entry for anyone inclined to look it up. No doubt he suffered from severe PTSD from his war service. He lived to 2012 aged 91.
@nancyfahey7518
@nancyfahey7518 9 месяцев назад
​@@andrewfrancis4462thanks.
@briseboy
@briseboy 5 месяцев назад
When you were chased for zero reason by police other than hair length and their dimwit marine slug brains, kicked, tossed into juvie twice, and even the bag of avocados from your orchard stolen by them, and when you demanded it back, they took you into one of their cells with nothing but a drain in center floor, and rolled up their sleeves to abuse you, you realize that MANY should be shot, then you might not be so STUPID as to equate police with "good." Later they did NOTHING to prevent two cars being stolen or to arrest actual criminals breaking in and stealing anything of value i had, claiming they couldn't arrest, even though i identified them. Once a drunk woman ran a red light, destroying my car, and NOT her, but me, had to take a drunk test. Nags hate police for good reason, and though they suck as humans, (i had many experiences disabusing me of my childhood notion they were human, too) i do agree with them on their attitude toward the psychopaths who constitute police.
@antidotenyhc6562
@antidotenyhc6562 9 лет назад
This is easily one of the best old crime films, ever. Everyone i've ever turned onto this movie has placed it into their all-time favorites category.
@maxiegrobner9018
@maxiegrobner9018 4 года назад
A gem of a movie ahead of it’s time! Forensics, sketch artists and a serial offender combine with a tight script and even tighter performances to deliver a gripping tale.
@williamdean4101
@williamdean4101 4 года назад
No kidding! It's easy to see where Jack Webb got his ideas for his two Dragnet series--Clipped dialogue, terse narration, everyday people in extraordinary situations. Great movie!
@ricksummit5141
@ricksummit5141 4 года назад
The cop killed was violating the guy's civil rights. To be stopped as a pedestrian and asked to give identification with no probable cause is a civil rights violation.
@yvonne2546
@yvonne2546 4 года назад
This movie was based on an actual event.
@michelegosse7116
@michelegosse7116 3 года назад
A milkman fit like a SEAL warrior...
@mundoapoc8626
@mundoapoc8626 3 года назад
the csi of the 40´s
@rhagedorn
@rhagedorn 8 лет назад
The dog should have gotten an Oscar for best supporting actor.
@johnnyray1121
@johnnyray1121 6 лет назад
HaHaHa that's a good one.
@quester09
@quester09 5 лет назад
eh, I thought he overdid it lol. good scenery-chewing though.
@reeblesnarfle5443
@reeblesnarfle5443 5 лет назад
Truly!
@demetriusdion286
@demetriusdion286 5 лет назад
@Robert Gardea , now, that's just old nasty!🐾🌭🏆🐕
@rubiconklbrutorowman7577
@rubiconklbrutorowman7577 4 года назад
what type of dog was it? Australian sheepdog?
@1116may11
@1116may11 7 лет назад
Outstanding! Acting, directing, script, lighting, everything. Old move, new favorite! Thanks for uploading this 5 star film. Wow! :)
@henryweaver667
@henryweaver667 4 года назад
Richard Basehart should have received an Oscar. Great acting as a baddy.
@johnnyray1121
@johnnyray1121 6 лет назад
Richard Baseheart had his own TV series in the 1960's called Voyage to the Bottom Of The Sea.
@scottevans748
@scottevans748 5 лет назад
Baseheart's physicality and movement is similar to that of Harrison Ford. Also the hairline and subdued tone of his voice. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-8rBZ7Hoaf5o.html Richard was a voice actor in L.A. back in the early '80s, shortly before he passed.
@christinehorner1856
@christinehorner1856 5 лет назад
Voyage to bottom of the sea was good program. Rich Baseheart was good in everything I saw him do. Very consistant style of acting.
@shananalexander9789
@shananalexander9789 4 года назад
John Baginski That was one of my father’s favorite shows along with Combat. Every Friday night.
@charliemorris2338
@charliemorris2338 4 года назад
Well,one would be remiss in not mentioning his role as Ismael, in Moby Dick,I believe.
@canadiannuclearman
@canadiannuclearman 4 года назад
I thought that was a great series. Richard Basehart had a great voice acting too. His best film was 24hrs.
@Bill23799
@Bill23799 5 лет назад
If you want " just the facts " this film inspired Jack Webb one year later in 1949 to create his Radio series " Dragnet ". Later he would make the first TV Series, Dragnet, in the 1950's.
@bullitt7544
@bullitt7544 8 лет назад
What a great movie. LA is one strange place. Great to see Jack Webb get his teeth into the Detective work and lifetime career of it on Radio and Cinema. Loved this one too. Thank You
@frankdenardo8684
@frankdenardo8684 5 лет назад
Aframe Antiques Joe Friday of dragnet.
@Kim-hl8mf
@Kim-hl8mf 5 лет назад
Right On Jack Webb ☆♡☆
@demetriusdion286
@demetriusdion286 5 лет назад
@@Kim-hl8mf Jack Webb Created both Dragnet and One-Adam 12, he was well off financially for the rest of his life. His destiny was pre-set from the Crime Dramas that acted in. His destiny was pre-set for him.
@BrianCarnevaleB26
@BrianCarnevaleB26 3 года назад
more like a "disgrace" now LA a good example of failed left-wing policies and their EPIC failure. Trump was right about tht one.
@BrianCarnevaleB26
@BrianCarnevaleB26 3 года назад
hope they crumble into the sea. GONE!
@badweetabix
@badweetabix 9 лет назад
This movie is loosely based on the real life crime spree from 1945 to 1946 committed by William Erwin Walker (Richard Basehart's character Roy Morgan).
@karlynnelangerak4549
@karlynnelangerak4549 3 года назад
Thank u
@fromtheparkbench1979
@fromtheparkbench1979 3 года назад
Thanks for giving the info. It isn't too clear in the 'Description' section. It's more of a rambling on and on and even gives away the ending. Your 'summary' said it best!
@smoky3302
@smoky3302 3 года назад
Unlike the movie he didn't get full justice and live a long life till his 90s.
@fromtheparkbench1979
@fromtheparkbench1979 3 года назад
Wow! Thanks for the 'reply-back'! Luv this type of history...definitely looking into it now. Also, isn't this the video where one viewer said she was there when this movie was being shot on her street? Cool! Check it out! Thanks again!
@Heart2HeartBooks
@Heart2HeartBooks 4 года назад
about 7 minutes into this and I am :"They don't make em like this anymore." What a production. Absolute attention to detail. Love it.
@marylouschmidt5906
@marylouschmidt5906 8 лет назад
Enjoyed the thrilling film. Loved to see a young Jack Webb.
@wyattbrown8992
@wyattbrown8992 8 лет назад
a young skinny Jack Webb.....lol
@andiarrohnds5163
@andiarrohnds5163 7 лет назад
also enjoyed
@higgsbosongirl
@higgsbosongirl 4 года назад
Likewise. I remember how deadpan he was in Dragnet, but in this he seemed to be acting.
@mavericklewis4392
@mavericklewis4392 3 года назад
Young indeed.
@Bill23799
@Bill23799 5 лет назад
I was kind of surprised that while running through those tunnels they did not run into them......Them......THEM!!!!!!!
@neuromantoo
@neuromantoo 4 года назад
I saw THEM as a little boy at a drive-in when it came out. Scared me to death, on the way home cicadas and crickets were chirping and my older brothers kept teasing me that it was the giant ants. Gave me a life long fear of insects. I'll never forgive those assholes.😀
@leelarson107
@leelarson107 4 года назад
I saw 'THEM!' when it first came out in 1953, and I and my friends all thought that it was kinda hokey. But at the age of 10, I was still interested in the lady scientist.
@philipmarlowe5035
@philipmarlowe5035 4 года назад
Them was the first movie I saw ... about 4.. terrified me as well !
@LobeJean8
@LobeJean8 4 года назад
A ha ha ha baddest ants ever!
@Bill23799
@Bill23799 4 года назад
@@LobeJean8 Lori did you know there is an Off Broadway Live production in the works based on this classic SciFi Thriller from the 50's? It is being performed by an all Brooklyn born cast. They are calling it " DEM! "
@moss8448
@moss8448 6 лет назад
lotta familiar faces...good to see these old flicks 👍
@reedmorris6559
@reedmorris6559 4 года назад
Dogs are the best alert tool in the world..they will signal a predator creeping up on yu even if 100 yards away
@kennyc388
@kennyc388 3 года назад
True story.
@deezynar
@deezynar 4 года назад
For those people who think life was much better back in those days, forget it. If you were transported back in time to then, you'd be happy about some things, but even more upset about others. You'd be appalled by sexism, and racism, even if you are a bit of a sexist, or racist today. You'd also have a bit more faith in God, because you'd become aware that medicine was not able to cure a lot of things they can now. I am alive today only because of a medical procedure invented in the 1980's. And I know people who survived cancer because of treatments invented very recently. This may sound silly, but cars were death traps back then. No seat belts, and they folded up around you like a steel trap. I saw a news story yesterday about a crash. The vehicle had hit a pole sideways. After seeing it, I couldn't believe the driver and passenger survived. Every period in history has its own troubles. We have it pretty good today, so good that you are free to wear a suit and tie everywhere you go if you want to. Just don't call women you don't know, "Sweetheart".
@georgiahorton1591
@georgiahorton1591 4 года назад
deezynar , I would have liked to take my chances because there was freedom then. Government didn’t tell you you can’t do this, you have to do that. I’m sick of that.
@deezynar
@deezynar 4 года назад
@@georgiahorton1591 I agree with you that government has expanded its power beyond the level envisioned by the founders. It would be nice if voters woke up and realized how much of their liberty has been stolen from them, and were consistent in voting only for politicians who promised to peel back government overreach.
@davidhull1481
@davidhull1481 4 года назад
Thanks. I’m fed up with people who can only see what they want to see about the past. It wasn’t better.
@MichaelGunner123
@MichaelGunner123 3 года назад
And, GLBTQ people have it much better NOW than anytime in the 40's, 50's, or 60's; NOT even close.
@shananalexander9789
@shananalexander9789 4 года назад
Merry Christmas everyone 12/25/2019. Happy New Year 🎊🎈
@TheWriterWalker
@TheWriterWalker 4 года назад
Merry Christmas!
@alanaronald244
@alanaronald244 4 года назад
Same to you!
@EB-nz1qv
@EB-nz1qv 3 года назад
Oh if you only knew....
@TrilloSuede
@TrilloSuede 4 года назад
This is a top-notch, suspenseful, well-crafted movie. I'm not sure I'd consider it a film noir, but rather a police procedural with noir atmosphere and elements. The typical noir protagonist struggles with a moral dilemma of some sort whereas the Richard Basehart character is a purely evil psychopath. And there is no femme fatale character. The film does have a very noirish atmosphere and is shot beautifully, so I would consider it borderline noir. But no matter how you classify it, it's an excellent, gripping movie. Thanks for posting it.
@colemanalbright7134
@colemanalbright7134 Год назад
THIS was the comment I was looking for. If you hadn’t written it I would have! It’s not noir but an excellent movie nonetheless which I will be sure to recommend to others
@ItsMefromSnuffys
@ItsMefromSnuffys 5 месяцев назад
Its Noir and you know it
@shanniworld8310
@shanniworld8310 4 года назад
Love it. Thank you for posting good clean films.
@nancyhowell4505
@nancyhowell4505 2 года назад
Really enjoyed the unique storyline! All the top notch actors did a great job handling all the action and for once weren't shown stumbling around, befuddled, and overacting. Watching the composite sketch being made of his face was fascinating to me. Thanks and blessings to all who made it possible for us to see this movie! 🙏👏👍👍😀
@thurgooddukes7381
@thurgooddukes7381 Год назад
Now that's what I call a good movie!😊
@philgray1000
@philgray1000 8 лет назад
12:45 mr. drucker, green acres, excellent. flick should be required viewing in film 101. silly clowns down thumbed this? here's 2 digits pointing up
@mavericklewis4392
@mavericklewis4392 3 года назад
Sam Drucker (smile)
@redradiodog
@redradiodog 5 лет назад
My dad was born in 1909 and he wore a hat all through the 1950's.
@johnkean6852
@johnkean6852 4 года назад
Tee hee l am retired in Cyprus - no Brit leaves the house without a hat 🤠
@jayachandran.a
@jayachandran.a 4 года назад
You mean the same hat ?
@petercollinson8039
@petercollinson8039 5 лет назад
Raymond Chandler really liked this movie, recommending it a couple times in his letters. When the guy who wrote The Big Sleep and created Philip Marlowe thinks a crime movie is good, you can take that to the bank.
@8176morgan
@8176morgan 4 года назад
So did Jack Webb - take it to the bank!
@DyEsp
@DyEsp 4 года назад
I love old movies, especially noir, but this lost me at the ending. We got zero satisfaction from the criminal's death (sorry spoiler). He just dies. And after all the pursuit, the build-up, the mystery...nothing. At least give the guy one last line. Or show us why he was a criminal. Just my disappointment. imho
@8176morgan
@8176morgan 4 года назад
Don't feel too bad Dyann, because this movie was based on a real life case and in the actual case the cop killer is tracked down to his bungalow and then captured after a scuffle. He then spent many years in prison and eventually was released and quietly rejoined civilian life a free man once again.
@DyEsp
@DyEsp 4 года назад
@@8176morgan Thanks. Sounds like the real story wasn't hard enough on the criminal to suit the filmmakers. Up until the ending, it had some suspense and drama. And it was fun seeing Jack Webb in a supporting role (but still sounding like the Jack Webb we all know). Cheers!
@8176morgan
@8176morgan 4 года назад
Yes, cheers to you too!
@CissyBrazil
@CissyBrazil 4 года назад
I wonder if the dog's name was changed, too, to protect an innocent dog? ;)
@ricardocantoral7672
@ricardocantoral7672 Год назад
His real name was Mr. Buttsniffer
@geographicoddity9444
@geographicoddity9444 5 лет назад
12:15 I can see why they questioned the Oriental man. He fits the ID description to a tee.
@westlock
@westlock 5 лет назад
Maybe they anticipated what would happen seventy years later, when some police forces cannot describe suspects by ethnicity.
@glendooer6211
@glendooer6211 5 лет назад
He was delivering a Sweet and Sour Pork but ended up in the wrong que.
@TheWriterWalker
@TheWriterWalker 4 года назад
Just goes to show you that police dragnets have to be cast wide in the hopes of catching the right guy.
@jaroncreed
@jaroncreed 4 года назад
@@westlock 70 years later? what exactly did happen?
@ricksummit5141
@ricksummit5141 4 года назад
The cop killed was violating the guy's civil rights. To be stopped as a pedestrian and asked to give identification with no probable cause is a civil rights violation.
@jeffwilliams936
@jeffwilliams936 3 года назад
Based on the true life 1940's crime spree of Erwin '' machine gun '' Walker . A former police officer from Glendale , Ca. and W W 2 veteran .
@alvideoprod
@alvideoprod 10 лет назад
So, this film is 66 years old and it still holds up well ! A triumph to the people involved in the making of this. I can't say that for most of the films that are produced today.
@dorianphilotheates3769
@dorianphilotheates3769 3 года назад
alvideoprod - 72 years old, now: tempus fugit...
@ernestkovach3305
@ernestkovach3305 2 года назад
@@dorianphilotheates3769 Nope. you 2 need to do your math ...73 years and counting!
@dorianphilotheates3769
@dorianphilotheates3769 2 года назад
Ernest Kovach - Chronological measurement is not static: ergo eighteen months ago, in early 2020, when I wrote this comment, the film was seventy-two years old. Now, in December 2021, as you correctly observed, it is “73 years and counting”. Tempus fugit...
@patbrennan6572
@patbrennan6572 29 дней назад
Incredible, Richard Basehart , among the best.
@RideMyBMW
@RideMyBMW 6 лет назад
I consider "He Walked by Night" a prequel to "Dragnet". Having Jack Webb in it gives Sgt.Joe Friday a back story. :D
@johnarntz4640
@johnarntz4640 5 лет назад
He was so iconic, that when he died, he was given a police burial.
@williamsnyder5616
@williamsnyder5616 4 года назад
UI was thinking of that when the narrator mentione3d "dragnet" and Jack Webb appeared shortly after. Also, Roy Roberts played Capt., Green here and he also played the hotel manager in "Gentleman's Agreement" who harrassed Gregory Peck, who played Phil Greene.
@DiamondCutter423
@DiamondCutter423 4 года назад
Even the intro showing L.A. from above is a Dragnet staple.
@JaneFrieman
@JaneFrieman 4 года назад
💣A film which seems to have influenced the series called Dragnet. Jack Webb (Joe Friday) had a supporting role.🔫
@degreco4199
@degreco4199 9 лет назад
This movie and "The Big Sleep" and "The Naked City" are my favorites. I mean where else can you see such classy dames with those long gorgeous gams. And all those shifty characters ready to plug you if you make any false moves. And all those lousy flatfoots on the beat (those dirty coppers, take that pow, pow). This movie was only missing Edward G. and or Cagney. Adios Amigos.
@mjonhouston
@mjonhouston 7 лет назад
...and Peter Lorre., that man can do no wrong in my opinion., I like everything he's in, lousy movie, or great.
@devilzdandruff9199
@devilzdandruff9199 6 лет назад
Scarlet Street
@MrKmanthie
@MrKmanthie 5 лет назад
DeGreco Another great noir flick, from 1950: ASPHALT JUNGLE, starring Sterling Hayden & directed by the great John Huston who also co-wrote the screenplay. Awesome movie from beginning to end!
@garywilloughby6893
@garywilloughby6893 5 лет назад
The Naked City was fantastic
@gentillydanny
@gentillydanny 5 лет назад
What dames? This was a strictly men only picture!
@VanlifewithAlan
@VanlifewithAlan 11 лет назад
Los Angeles - suburbs in search of a city. I think that that sums it up pretty well!
@williamdean4101
@williamdean4101 4 года назад
Today it's a city in search of a place to sleep on the streets.
@kenbellchambers4577
@kenbellchambers4577 4 года назад
@@williamdean4101 or in the storm drains.
@heru-deshet359
@heru-deshet359 4 года назад
Can you imagine all the screaming and accusations of racism and police profiling if "Suspects" within a four square mile area were rounded up today?
@jimervin387
@jimervin387 8 лет назад
So many old movies to choose from but I'm glad I chose this one. I was expecting the usual science fiction but got more interested after seeing that it was based on a true story. Then with Jack Webb in it and seeing that cop get plugged in his '34 Chevy coupe, I just had to watch it.
@samjones4451
@samjones4451 5 лет назад
Seventy years ago LA was beautiful. Grew too much and too fast. More population means more problems.
@jimm6386
@jimm6386 3 года назад
This title was referred to on the Firesign Theater's "Nick Danger, Third Eye" - even those crazies thought the movie was great.
@danielrobertoarchila7336
@danielrobertoarchila7336 9 лет назад
My favorite part is the cinematography. You can really show the full range of an actor just by keeping a shot on them for a while, seeing their expressions and reactions. Professional.
@sammohunk
@sammohunk 9 лет назад
Daniel Roberto Archila Please rate this classic noir on IMDb here: www.imdb.com/title/tt0040427/combined
@MrRazorblade999
@MrRazorblade999 9 лет назад
Yeah, John Alton was a master
@SwarthySkinnedOne
@SwarthySkinnedOne 8 лет назад
+Daniel Roberto Archila They tended to be very psychologically driven.
@jdale1259
@jdale1259 8 лет назад
I had very low expectations for this movie, having never heard of it. It was a pleasant surprise. Great cinematography, low-key but solid performances. I have ADHD so it's not easy to watch an entire movie in one sitting but this one kept me focused. Only negative, albeit minor: it never rains but the pavement is always slick for the camera work.
@mohammadsaeed6720
@mohammadsaeed6720 4 года назад
Strange to know that america was so strong technalogically in mid fourties. Amazing tools for investigation. Our muslim countries espacially the middle east with huge resources of oil did nothing in the field of technology. Thay do polygamy to have a lot of children and nothing more
@stephenarling1667
@stephenarling1667 4 года назад
Without western technology, the oil wells that keep the Middle East prosperous would never have been built.
@cantseeneedcaps
@cantseeneedcaps 3 года назад
THEY HAVE BEEN MAKING IT SEEM LIKE IT'S OK TO VIOLATE OUR RITES FOR A LONG TIME, BUT IT WAS A GOOD MOVIE.
@amirkhannoir3946
@amirkhannoir3946 9 лет назад
The film noir - the greatest chapters in the history of cinema! Starting with the 1930 and 1955's film noir created by great directors and actors of high class! Which of the current actors can now replace Hamfreya Bogart, Peter Lorre, and Edmond About Brian ...? No one! There are no such persons, who could now mimic film noir. America, as most of these films belong to the film companies of the country, created a fashion, clothes, hats, cigars, whiskey, cars, sparkling night of advertising, casinos, restaurants, and so forth, just yet created ideal breeding ground for crime novels, which served the script for the black-and-white films. Prohibition has created a mafia and gangsters, in their turn became the heroes of many "black" films. The great director Alfred Hitchcock, Fritz Lang, John Huston, Robert Siodmak, Rudolph Mate, Billy Wilder and Otto Perminger, Raoul Walsh, Jean Negulesco, Edward Dmytryk, ........ they are not repeatable !!! See the film noir. About 200 of the immortal masterpieces of world cinema! Long live the film noir !!! My eternal love of film noir !!!
@SwarthySkinnedOne
@SwarthySkinnedOne 8 лет назад
+AMIRKHAN NOIR Which is why I'm a big-time collector and avid watcher of such films. Another contributing factor to the creation of these fine flicks, not much thought of in a positive light however, is the Hayes Code. If you think about it, believe it or not censorship played an unwitting role behind the careful and tight crafting of such silver-screen gems, as the novelist and Hollywood professionals back then were compelled to be artistically resourceful in coming up with clever to ingenious narration, dialogue, and action to get around or deal head on with what was considered verboten by the HC boys for the Public audience. This indirectly raised movie making production standards to a new level, causing an outpouring of "Melodramas" having that distinctive finish, film historians and informed laymen alike nowadays find impressively intriguing and highly esteem, that otherwise perhaps wouldn't have that serious adult-level sophistication and polished "look and feel and sound" we get so endlessly enamored by today. Btw I was surprised a bit to see a young Richard Basehart, on first view of this film, cast in such a cold blood-curdling dangerously resourceful anti-social role, as I'm accustomed to seeing him play in his latter years the wholesome morally up-right Admiral Nelson of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.
@amirkhannoir3946
@amirkhannoir3946 8 лет назад
+SwarthySkinnedOne You are quite right, my friend. Hays Code thoroughly played his role in the history of cinematography USA. This code has appeared after the time of great economic depression 1920-1930. When the film company shut down many of the financial crisis, big bankers gave loans on the condition of the moral code of Hayes. All items of the Code are respected by strict rules. In the flesh to the fact that actors kissing in romantic scenes could not more 4-5 seconds .. in the police could shoot, but he did not have to die, and so on. As you can see, all of this gave the dignity of the film .... The audience is not distracted ... But now it's different, writers and directors out of control. Virtually nothing is respected! It is not possible to guess what a disgraceful scene or dialog waiting for us in the next episode: the children when the parents are discussing vulgarity, send them .... and the bloody scenes of violent murder ... In today's audience a different flavor and a true connoisseur of the art treasures that created our ancestors!
@moonglow1311
@moonglow1311 5 лет назад
How about William Holden who can replace him today ❓😎🇺🇸
@samopaik8695
@samopaik8695 4 года назад
Yeah you love noir! I get it!!
@patrickmurphy4376
@patrickmurphy4376 4 года назад
I love Film Noir and this is one of the best In my humble opinion- and Richard Basehart's awesome performance!
@8176morgan
@8176morgan 4 года назад
Agree wholeheartedly.
@mavericklewis4392
@mavericklewis4392 3 года назад
Voyage To The Bottom of the Sea
@joelonzello4189
@joelonzello4189 2 года назад
He was also good in Command Decision...
@donschilling3422
@donschilling3422 4 года назад
One of the best film noir movies I’ve seen and I’m a big fan of them!
@8176morgan
@8176morgan 5 лет назад
Great movie and great acting. Film noir at its finest as they say. Whit Bissell gives an excellent performance in this movie and has a much larger role than he does in other films that I have seen him in, such as “Creature From the Black Lagoon” and “Invasion of The Body Snatchers”. Suspenseful from beginning to end.
@ceciliapreziose3783
@ceciliapreziose3783 4 года назад
Watching these old movies reminds me how low our creativity has gone in this country, how sad. Maybe that is why people don't go to the movies like they used too
@MichaelGunner123
@MichaelGunner123 3 года назад
People don't go to the movies like they used to b/c of COVID - 19. I'm VACCINATED. Hope U are the SAME.
@theenforcerbadguy6566
@theenforcerbadguy6566 8 лет назад
why this film hasn't in Brasil? Come on, do it! I can't see this one with audio in English. Speak a little.
@goopah
@goopah 8 лет назад
Everyone seemed to be wearing HATS except the bad guy. All they had to do was look for the guy without a hat. Case solved. Did everyone really wear hats back in those days?
@juangalt3496
@juangalt3496 8 лет назад
Not everyone but the majority. Hats 'died' when men stopped getting haircuts and started getting their hair styled - the 'wet head' was dead. The Beatles, longer hair on men and the 'dry look' killed the hat (mostly fedoras) as a fashion statement. There's RU-vid vids on 'the dry look'.
@monmel26
@monmel26 8 лет назад
My late grandfather "always" wore a hat and had a cloth hankerchief. Everyone from his era wore a hat (he was born in 1908) and carried a cloth hankerchief.
@juangalt3496
@juangalt3496 8 лет назад
Moni Mon LOL You are so right. My grandfather was born in the 1880s, and handkerchiefs were the staple Xmas gift I would give him when I was a child in the 1950s.
@monmel26
@monmel26 8 лет назад
Same here. I gave my grandpop handkerchiefs and Old Spice. Did your grandfather wear hats?
@juangalt3496
@juangalt3496 8 лет назад
Moni Mon He had an everyday kinda beat up hat and a real nice one for special occasions that he kept in the original box. He lived in a small town and seldom wore the 'good' one'.
@Joesfosterdogs
@Joesfosterdogs 8 лет назад
@10:06 "Let's see what they picked up in the dragnet" ironic? i guess wearing jeans and a t shirt was a good 40 years out! dude walks the street looking at a store front in a suit w/hat. great realistic footage of old LA...like watching ADAM 12 or Dragnet...you get a history of architecture, culture, and fashion.
@boc234
@boc234 4 года назад
This is one of the all time great examples of Film Noir. Also a direct line from this movie to the classic "Dragnet" radio, TV and Movie franchise.
@lizajane55555
@lizajane55555 5 лет назад
Sounds and looks like Dragnet with Jack Webb :)
@garytewa2538
@garytewa2538 4 года назад
Love all these classic movies - most I've never seen before & keeps me in suspense, thanks for sharing,
@philipinchina
@philipinchina 4 года назад
I can see where "Dragnet" came from.
@genkatqltr8517
@genkatqltr8517 5 лет назад
Outstanding movie! As a lover of logic puzzles, etc., this was a real treat with a extremely logical bad guy who planned every detail meticulously. From start to finish, especially appreciated the escape route through the storm drains! He even had a rifle stashed there, routes planned out. Then watching all the police picking up little details and the help of the crippled policeman that gave the case breaking hint, superb! Gripped my interest throughout. Thanks a million for posting this! 😃👍👍👏
@kaitlynmacias1587
@kaitlynmacias1587 2 года назад
Uououououo
@TTundragrizzly
@TTundragrizzly 8 месяцев назад
But robbed stores with no mask
@markturner3504
@markturner3504 7 лет назад
On this movie Webb met LA policeman who furthered his interest in forensics and gave birth to Dragnet.
@garyb3397
@garyb3397 10 лет назад
Wow!! What a great little film. I had never seen this before. Beautifully lit and paced, it just never lets up. And Richard Basehart - who once said he wasn't good-looking enough to be a leading man - was super HOT when he was young! Great film. Thanks for uploading this.
@gentillydanny
@gentillydanny 5 лет назад
I liked Basehart in this, too. I think my favourite of his was "La Strada".
@Will-sj1kx
@Will-sj1kx 7 месяцев назад
Back when police departments weren’t politicized like today
@naturalhairchickonabudgett849
@naturalhairchickonabudgett849 4 года назад
Watching my favorite old black & whites durning march 2020 Quarantine from the Jesus Christ over Corona virus.. we’re Vegas 💪🏾🙏🏽✝️ omgoodness!! Jack web looks so young in this movie 🍿 🎥 such a coincidence I’ve been watching all dragnet shows I can get my hands on and what do you know this is the original dragnet! Thank you so much for the upload!! Love and blessings! Take care of yourself people!!
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад
Film Noir doesn't get much better. Great locations, excellent acting, spot on cinematography, seamless editing, a director who knew how to stay out of the way and a story that kept me interested the whole way through. Sorry to say, while I think they could make movies as good as this today, they just don't. Thanks very much for the upload! Where have I seen the chief detective before? He's a great character actor. Basehart was marvelous.
@sammohunk
@sammohunk 9 лет назад
Joe Postove Please rate this classic noir on IMDb here: www.imdb.com/title/tt0040427/combined
@EliezerPennywhistler
@EliezerPennywhistler 9 лет назад
Joe Postove "while I think they could make movies as good as this today, they just don't." Like Chinatown? Five Easy Pieces?
@EliezerPennywhistler
@EliezerPennywhistler 9 лет назад
zebrazxx Chinatown - Paramount Studios.
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 9 лет назад
zebrazxx And kids and young adults eat more of that garbage they sell at criminal prices at the movies. However...whatever the market will bare I say. If they can get 2 bucks for a candy bar and 3 for a bucket popcorn and $2.50 for a soda, viva the marketplace. I bring my own goodies to the film. Fun fact: on first run (and these days most pictures are first run and off to cable and videoland) The moviemakers get about 90% of the box office, at least for the first week or so, so they have to make their money on all those delicious poisons we shove down our throats.
@blusnuby2
@blusnuby2 7 лет назад
L.A. Confidential was done well.
@terrancebigham6765
@terrancebigham6765 4 года назад
I noticed Leonid Raab scored this film. He’s best known as the orchestrator for many of Frank Waxman’s Forties scores.
@johnfunck6181
@johnfunck6181 9 лет назад
"The work of the police, like that of a woman, is never done". Smarter than witty.
@serling3520
@serling3520 4 года назад
Dumber than shit
@heavyweaponsscout9990
@heavyweaponsscout9990 3 года назад
Dumber than shit, like, what is thay comparison even supposed to mean lol Just some basic koan wannabe phrase
@ricardocantoral7672
@ricardocantoral7672 3 года назад
That line referenced an old proverb, "A man works from sun to sun but a woman's work is never done".
@cruncherblock3834
@cruncherblock3834 9 месяцев назад
This movie must have inspired "Dragnet".😊
@MarkHenstridge
@MarkHenstridge 5 лет назад
What a bloody ripper of a movie, old school movies rock.
@19330131
@19330131 10 лет назад
I was in H.S. when these films were shown. Weren't they great? The whole family could go together to enjoy them. Today the family is separated by many things and seldom can even watch TV together. Sorry, but at least there are these videos that some kind people take the time to save for us. Kira
@ergbudster3333
@ergbudster3333 10 лет назад
Don't read the "about" blurb. It's a total spoiler. Shame on you, video guy. Ruining a good mystery is verboten!!
@matildafaltyn6253
@matildafaltyn6253 4 года назад
That scene when the group came up with his face was amazing.
@aileenwagner2576
@aileenwagner2576 6 лет назад
Omg!!! That's a young John Dehner!! HGWT radio!! Far out!
@lisagiles
@lisagiles 4 года назад
I liked the Dog!!!
@kenbellchambers4577
@kenbellchambers4577 4 года назад
Best acting dog I ever saw. If the man trained that dog, he was wasted on a criminal career.
@rebeccatanner2740
@rebeccatanner2740 8 лет назад
Thank you film noir and TMC(hoping I got the acronym correct)😊🐈🐈🐈😊
@michellebaker1974
@michellebaker1974 5 лет назад
A great film. Thank you for sharing.
@SOffenbach
@SOffenbach 2 месяца назад
After one of these old movies played late night on TV the TV would sign off at midnight and a picture of an Indian came on the screen till 6am. When TV signed back on at 6am there was a film of the US flag and the Star-Spangled Banner.
@chalmerbasham695
@chalmerbasham695 6 лет назад
Another great movie with sewer scene is “ The Third Man”...I believe.
@diankreczmer6595
@diankreczmer6595 5 лет назад
Yes, men wore hats fedoras, and wing tipped shoes and suits, wide lapels and pleated trousers
@LandondeeL
@LandondeeL 9 лет назад
Actually, contrary to what someone said below, "He Walk By Night" WAS a precursor to "Dragnet", and not just because Jack Webb's in it. This very movie inspired him to develop the series, that as you will see, used "He Walked By Night" as a blueprint. WARNING: No not press SHOW MORE. It gives away the entire plot.
@UberLummox
@UberLummox 5 лет назад
Of course. Effectively it's a pilot for the tv version, no?
@UNOwen1
@UNOwen1 5 лет назад
LandondeeL You're absolutely.. CORRECT!!! I'm a huge Jack Webb (as well as an 'ex-Ms Webb -fan; Julie London🤗)
@donhill3915
@donhill3915 4 года назад
Frank Cady, John Dehner and Whit Bissell. Missed the motivtion of the bad guy.
@russelljohnson2008
@russelljohnson2008 4 года назад
This movie was the precursor to Dragnet. Jack Webb used this movie as a model for his inspiration.
@michelleseg1560
@michelleseg1560 4 года назад
Inspired by an actual cold case that was solved decades after this was made.
@olive6405
@olive6405 8 лет назад
This is sort of an west coast version of NAKED CITY.
@jamesandersom2520
@jamesandersom2520 5 лет назад
RICHARD BASEHART was a great actor.So great ,that he was in 2 Felinni films
@davegreene8588
@davegreene8588 5 лет назад
He was also a fine person. Read his bio on Wikipedia.
@expat2010
@expat2010 4 года назад
A very wooden performance by Jack Webb. He improved a lot later on. Also, he looks like he weighs about 100 lbs soaking wet!
@martincollins9977
@martincollins9977 4 года назад
There's never a bad Film Noir movie.
@lisajouet4943
@lisajouet4943 3 года назад
i love film noir, but I'm not sure I'd go that far---there are a lot of hokey film noir's out there
@SuperZytoon
@SuperZytoon 3 года назад
I especially love the ones with Dana Andrews.
@scootergurl48
@scootergurl48 2 года назад
@@lisajouet4943 I totally agree. Some are good and some were bad in all genres.
@joelonzello4189
@joelonzello4189 2 года назад
You've never seen the Dame that Wouldn't Die 😝
@Sunny-vm4ry
@Sunny-vm4ry 2 года назад
Sometimes the worse the better!! Lol!!
@tinkles30
@tinkles30 5 лет назад
If anyone ever wondered where the inspiration came from for Anton Chigurh's self-surgery scene from No Country for Old Men....
@charliemorris2338
@charliemorris2338 4 года назад
They smoked like they were taking vitamins or something.
@ricksummit5141
@ricksummit5141 4 года назад
The cop killed was violating the guy's civil rights. To be stopped as a pedestrian and asked to give identification with no probable cause is a civil rights violation.
@johnarntz4640
@johnarntz4640 4 года назад
Yeah, and when Jack Webb created Dragnet, the first sponsor they picked up was Fatima Cigarettes.
@thepanel2935
@thepanel2935 4 года назад
Scott Brady when young looked like Ray Liotta.
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