Sin's Pay Day | |
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Directed by | George B. Seitz |
Written by | Betty Burbridge Gene Morgan |
Produced by | Ralph M. Like Cliff P. Broughton |
Starring | Lloyd Whitlock Dorothy Revier Mickey Rooney |
Cinematography | Jules Cronjager |
Edited by | Byron Robinson |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Mayfair Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 61 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Sin's Pay Day is a 1932 American pre-Code crime film directed by George B. Seitz and starring Lloyd Whitlock, Dorothy Revier and Mickey Rooney. [1] It was produced on Poverty Row as a second feature. [2] It was later reissued under the alternative title Slums of New York with advertising material devoting greater attention to child actor Rooney, who had since emerged as a star at MGM.
Attorney Robert Webb makes a good living as a defense lawyer for gangsters. This disgusts his wife, who leaves him and goes to set up a charitable clinic. After getting a notorious mob leader acquitted on a technicality, Webb develops a conscience and turns to alcohol letting his practice collapse. Living on the streets, he is befriended by a boy who helps him gain his self-respect. When the boy is then killed by a bullet fired from a gangster's gun, Webb goes undercover to pose as a defense lawyer once more while secretly recording the incriminating conversation, which he turns over to the police. A reformed man, he and his wife reconcile.
Poverty Row is a slang term used to refer to Hollywood films produced from the 1920s to the 1950s by small B movie studios. Although many of them were based on today's Gower Street in Hollywood, the term did not necessarily refer to any specific physical location, but was rather a figurative catch-all for low-budget films produced by these lower-tier studios.
Dorothy Revier was an American actress.
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