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Hazard | |
---|---|
Directed by | George Marshall |
Screenplay by | Arthur Sheekman Roy Chanslor |
Based on | Roy Chanslor |
Produced by | Mel Epstein |
Starring | Paulette Goddard Macdonald Carey |
Cinematography | Daniel L. Fapp |
Edited by | Arthur P. Schmidt (as Arthur Schmidt) |
Music by | Frank Skinner |
Production company | Paramount Pictures |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Hazard is a 1948 American comedy drama film starring Paulette Goddard and Macdonald Carey, [1] and directed by George Marshall.
A compulsive gambler, Ellen Crane owes a large debt to Lonnie Burns, a club owner. He cuts a deck of cards with her—if she wins, Burns will forget the IOU, but if she loses, Ellen must marry him. She loses.
Ellen leaves town. A furious Burns hires private eye JD Storm, who tracks her to Chicago. She wins enough money there gambling to continue to Los Angeles, but first finds Storm waiting in her hotel room. She gets the better of him and flees.
An ex-con named Beady takes her to a craps game, where both are arrested. Storm shows up and pays their bail on the condition Ellen return east with him. Storm falls for her along the way, even after Ellen pulls a fast one and has him arrested for abducting her against her will.
Storm talks his way out of that fix. Ellen crashes the car, which catches fire. Storm saves her but is hurt. Ellen goes to Las Vegas but returns to Storm, who wants a justice of the peace to marry them. She feels betrayed when Burns turns up, but Storm fights for her. He proves that Burns won the card-cut with a crooked deck, and he and Ellen are free to get on with their lives.
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Cora Crane, born Cora Ethel Eaton Howarth was an American businesswoman, nightclub and bordello owner, writer and journalist. She is best known as the common-law wife of writer Stephen Crane from 1896 to his death in 1900, and took his name although they never married. She was still legally married to her second husband, Captain Donald William Stewart, a British military officer who had served in India and then as British Resident of the Gold Coast, where he was a key figure in the War of the Golden Stool (1900) between the British and the Ashanti Empire in present-day Ghana.
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