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Midnight Manhunt | |
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Directed by | William C. Thomas |
Written by | David Lang |
Produced by | Maxwell Shane |
Cinematography | Fred Jackman Jr. |
Edited by | Henry Adams |
Music by | Alexander Laszlo |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 64 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Midnight Manhunt is a 1945 film noir crime film mystery directed by William C. Thomas and written by David Lang. The film premiered on July 24, 1945 and is in the public domain.
The film stars William Gargan, Ann Savage, Leo Gorcey and George Zucco.
Master criminal Joe Wells is shot and left for dead in his hotel room. Wells rouses himself and wanders into the street before finally expiring in an alley next to a wax museum. Reporter Sue Gallagher, who lives upstairs from the museum, is first on the scene, and conceals the body among the wax exhibits in order to get a scoop. She is soon in competition with fellow reporter Pete Willis. When the museum's caretaker, Clutch, discovers the corpse, he fears a troublesome police inquiry and persuades Mr. Miggs, the elderly museum owner, to help him take it away and dump it in a railyard.
The killer, Jelke, follows the trail of blood from Wells' room to the wax museum, where he confronts Sue. He discovers that she is writing a story about her discovery of Wells' body, and demands to know where she has hidden it. When police arrive at the museum, Jelke knocks Sue unconscious and escapes undetected. After Sue learns where Clutch and Miggs have taken the body, Jelke returns and forces her to accompany him to the railyard. When they arrive the body is missing, having been moved by Pete to prevent Sue from getting the story. After much additional subterfuge, Jelke and the body are turned over to the police. Pete and Sue, who have been increasingly attracted to each other, share credit for the story they give to the newspaper.
The film was known as Cheese It, Corpse. [1]
House of Wax is a 1953 American mystery-horror film directed by Andre de Toth and released by Warner Bros. A remake of the studio's own 1933 film, Mystery of the Wax Museum, it stars Vincent Price as a disfigured sculptor who repopulates his destroyed wax museum by murdering people and using their wax-coated corpses as displays. The film premiered in New York on April 10, 1953 and had a general release on April 25, making it the first 3D film with stereophonic sound to be presented in a regular theater and the first color 3D feature film from a major American studio. Man in the Dark, released by Columbia Pictures, was the first major-studio black-and-white 3D feature and premiered two days before House of Wax.
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