When the Clock Strikes | |
---|---|
Directed by | Edward L. Cahn |
Written by | Dallas Gaultois |
Produced by | Edward Small (executive) Robert E. Kent |
Starring | James Brown Merry Anders |
Cinematography | Kenneth Peach |
Edited by | Robert Carlisle |
Music by | Richard LaSalle |
Production company | Harvard Film Corporation |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
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Running time | 72 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
When the Clock Strikes is a 1961 gangster film directed by Edward L. Cahn and starring James Brown and Merry Anders. [1]
James Brown is at Henry Corden's lodge near the state prison, where they're hanging a man on his testimony. Brown is an honest man, and his identification was not certain, and he said so. But it hanged the man, and now another has confessed. Brown meets Merry Anders, the dead man's widow at the lodge, who's looking for a clue towards $160,000 he stole from a bank.
Sir John Falstaff is a fictional character who appears in three plays by William Shakespeare and is eulogised in a fourth. His significance as a fully developed character is primarily formed in the plays Henry IV, Part 1 and Part 2, where he is a companion to Prince Hal, the future King Henry V of England. Falstaff is also featured as the buffoonish suitor of two married women in The Merry Wives of Windsor. Though primarily a comic figure, Falstaff embodies a depth common to Shakespeare's major characters. A fat, vain, and boastful knight, he spends most of his time drinking at the Boar's Head Inn with petty criminals, living on stolen or borrowed money. Falstaff leads the apparently wayward Prince Hal into trouble, and is ultimately repudiated after Hal becomes king.
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