The Inside Story | |
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Directed by | Allan Dwan |
Screenplay by | Mary Loos Richard Sale |
Story by | Ernest Lehman Geza Herczeg |
Produced by | Allan Dwan |
Starring | Marsha Hunt William Lundigan Charles Winninger Gail Patrick Gene Lockhart Florence Bates |
Cinematography | Reggie Lanning |
Edited by | Arthur Roberts |
Music by | Nathan Scott |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Republic Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Inside Story is a 1948 American comedy drama film directed by Allan Dwan and written by Mary Loos and Richard Sale. The film stars Marsha Hunt, William Lundigan, Charles Winninger, Gail Patrick, Gene Lockhart and Florence Bates. The film was released on March 14, 1948 by Republic Pictures. [1] [2] [3]
The story is laid in a Vermont town in 1933 in which six residents find themselves in some kind of a predicament because the government had declared a Bank Holiday to avoid run-on-the-bank situations happening across the country. By a curious turn-of-events ten $100 bills are put in an inn's safe. Innkeeper Horace Taylor finds them and concludes they are payments from his debtors. He immediately pays off his own debts---only to be told later by his clerk, Uncle Ed, that the money belonged to a guest at the inn. Taylor begins a frantic effort to trace and regain the money, which is merrily circulating around the town from storekeeper J. J. Johnson to a landlady, Geraldine Atherton, to a lawyer, Tom O'Connor and his wife Audrey, to an artist, Waldo Williams and his fiancée Francie Taylor, the inn-keepers daughter. Plus, two rum-running bootleggers are conducting their own search for the bills. As Taylor trails the elusive money, the individual dramas of the various possessors are revealed."Money is like blood needs to circulate".
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