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I'd Give My Life (1936)
Character: N/A
The movie, like the play "The Noose" on which it is based, is the story of a young man wrongfully convicted of and sentenced to be hanged for a murder which he never committed.
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I'd Give My Life (1936)
Character: Doyle
The movie, like the play "The Noose" on which it is based, is the story of a young man wrongfully convicted of and sentenced to be hanged for a murder which he never committed.
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The Reckoning (1932)
Character: Ellis, the Detective
Two young lovers caught up in the underworld decide to get out and go straight, but a gang leader has other plans for them.
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Unashamed (1932)
Character: Captain Riorden
A debutante's (Helen Twelvetrees) brother (Robert Young) stands trial for killing her no-good lover.
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You, the People (1940)
Character: Vote Counter
This MGM Crime Does Not Pay series short features a big city crime boss's attempt to use his crime "machine" to fraudulently win reelection for the current corrupt mayor. By using several illegal tactics, and aided by voter apathy, the crime boss nearly continues his control of the city.
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A Fugitive from Justice (1940)
Character: Corkery
Leslie is being chased by the gangsters, the police and the insurance investigators. He is on the run. Falsely accused of a murder, he embarks upon a life-and-death journey to save his family.
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Reckless Living (1931)
Character: McManus
In order to be able to buy a gas station, a young couple run a speakeasy. Complications arise when the husband loses their money to bookies.
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A Son Comes Home (1936)
Character: District Attorney
A mother experiences the torment of discovering that her own son is a killer.
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Escapade (1932)
Character: Bennie
Upon release from the penitentiary, Phillip Whitney tells his friend, Bennie, that he is going straight, and visits his lawyer brother John. Phillip looks up to John and while incarcerated maintained contact with him through a continental mailing agency. As John has no idea he was in prison, Phillip tells him that he has just returned from Japan.
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No Place for a Lady (1943)
Character: Captain Baker, district attorney
A private detective and a blonde acquaintance whom he has rescued from a misdirected murder charge, discover a body in his beachside cottage; only it has disappeared by the time the police arrive, leaving him to be charged with hoaxing the police. With his license in jeopardy, his would-be fiancee and an inquiring reporter set out to investigate.
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Beau Geste (1939)
Character: Colonel in Recruiting Office (uncredited)
When three brothers join the Foreign Legion to escape a troubled past, they find themselves trapped under the command of a sadistic sergeant deep in the scorching Sahara. Now the brothers must fight for their lives as they plot mutiny against tyranny and defend a desert fortress against a brutal enemy.
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Nancy Drew... Reporter (1939)
Character: City Editor Bostwick
While participating in a contest at a local newspaper in which school children are asked to submit a news story, local attorney Carson Drew's daughter Nancy intercepts a real story assignment. She "covers" the inquest of the death of a woman who was poisoned. Nancy doesn't think the young woman accused of the crime is guilty and corrals her neighbor Ted into searching for a vital piece of evidence and stumbles onto the identity of the real killer.
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Doctor X (1932)
Character: Daily World Editor
A wisecracking New York reporter intrudes on a research scientist's quest to unmask The Moon Killer.
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Circumstantial Evidence (1945)
Character: Detective
A man waits on death row while his son and friend try to prove that he did not kill a grocer with an ax.
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Lady with Red Hair (1940)
Character: Mr. Frank Harper (uncredited)
An actress hopes to regain her lost son by making it to the top.
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The Avenger (1933)
Character: McCall
A disgraced former District Attorney plots his revenge on the members of a criminal gang who had him framed and sent to prison.
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Girl from God's Country (1940)
Character: Poker Player
Jim Holden, a young doctor practicing in Alaska, eagerly awaits the arrival of his new nurse, Anne Webster. All of his previous left within a few weeks by the rigors of the Alaskan winter....
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Dead End (1937)
Character: Police Lieutenant at Killing (Uncredited)
Mobster "Baby Face" Martin returns home to visit the New York neighborhood where he grew up, dropping in on his mother, who rejects him because of his gangster lifestyle, and his old girlfriend, Francey, now a syphilitic prostitute. Martin also crosses paths with Dave, a childhood friend struggling to make it as an architect, and the Dead End Kids, a gang of young boys roaming the streets of the city's East Side slums.
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The Jury's Secret (1938)
Character: Jackson, Editor
A reporter covering a murder trial guesses that the murderer of a ruthless businessman is her ex-fiancé and persuades him to confess and clear the innocent man on trial.
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Stronger Than Desire (1939)
Character: Tom Thompson - Flagg's Investigator (uncredited)
An attorney handling a murder case in unaware his own wife played a crucial role in the killing.
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A Big Hand for the Little Lady (1966)
Character: Rt. Rev. Mr. Monckton (uncredited)
A naive traveler in Laredo gets involved in a poker game between the richest men in the area, jeopardizing all the money he has saved for the purpose of settling with his wife and child in San Antonio.
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Carnival (1935)
Character: Mac
"Chick" Thompson is a puppet-master in a traveling carnival whose wife dies in childbirth and leaves him with an infant son he names "Poochy." His father-in-law and the baby's grandfather sues him for custody of the baby and Chick takes his son and hides out for a couple of years. He joins his former assistants, Daisy and "Fingers", in a circus act only to find that the persistent grandfather is still on his trail.
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Blondes at Work (1938)
Character: Parker
When a rival newspaper publisher complains to his captain about possible collusion between himself and reporter Torchy Blane on scooping her rivals in crime news reporting, Det. Lt. Steve McBride determines to thwart her efforts to get inside information - and she determines to go on getting it, by whatever means necessary.
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Fugitive in the Sky (1936)
Character: Dave Brandon
Reporter Terry Brewer goes to the Los Angeles airport to say goodbye to his sweetheart, airline hostess Rita Moore. He notices G-Man Mike Phelan among the passengers and assuming Phelan is on the trail of a criminal, decides to go along to get a story.
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Melody in Spring (1934)
Character: House Detective
It's love at first sight for singer John Craddock and Jane Blodgett who meet while John is seeking a radio job with the "Blodgett Dog Biscuit Hour," and John learns that the sponsor is Jane's father, Warren Blodgett, an avid souvenir and antiques collector. John gets himself in bad with Blodgett when he accidentally ruins a deal in which Blodgett was attempting to acquire a bedpost for his collection. To break up the romance, Blodgett and his wife take Jane to Switzerland, where Blodgett has his heart set on obtaining a jealously-guarded cowbell.
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24 Hours (1931)
Character: Police Commissioner
A nightclub singer is carrying on an affair with a married man. When she is found murdered, her lover is suspected of the crime.
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The Lawless Woman (1931)
Character: 'Paddy' Reardon
Dancer June Page is charged with the murder of gangster "Honest Ed" Baker. Allan Perry, an ambitious journalist at the dawn of his career, seeks at all costs to cover the case to obtain exclusivity and impress his hierarchy. He falls in love with the young woman, but Ed Baker's former friends, determined to take revenge, have not said their last word ...
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Little Miss Nobody (1936)
Character: Dutch Miller
A runaway orphan is befriended by a kind-hearted pet store owner with a criminal past.
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Free, Blonde and 21 (1940)
Character: Inspector Saunders
Stories of women who live in an all-women hotel. One (Bari) works hard and marries a millionaire; another (Hughes) cheats and goes to jail.
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The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse (1938)
Character: Inspector Connors (uncredited)
A wealthy society doctor decides to research the medical aspects of criminal behaviour by becoming one himself. He joins a gang of thieves and proceeds to wrest leadership of the gang away from it's extremely resentful leader.
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Little Caesar (1931)
Character: Sergeant Flaherty
A small-time hood shoots his way to the top, but how long can he stay there?
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A Man Betrayed (1936)
Character: Detective Ryan
A businessman during the Great Depression discovers that his partners are crooked con-men, and he tries to make things right for the stockholders, but gets framed.
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Myrt and Marge (1933)
Character: Jackson the Angel
Myrt has a show chock full of talented performers that deserves to be on Broadway, but can't raise the necessary money. Jackson, a lecherous "producer", provides the money in order to get his hands on the show's pretty young star, Marge. Myrt teams up with Marge's boyfriend to try to thwart the randy producer and get the show to Broadway.
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The Guilty (1947)
Character: Tim McGinnis
Two friends land in hot water when they begin dating twins and one of the women ends up dead.
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Good News (1930)
Character: Coach
A college football star falls for his mousy French tutor.
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The Irish in Us (1935)
Character: Doc Mullins (as Thomas Jackson)
A boxer and his policeman brother feud over a police captain's daughter.
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Wanted: Jane Turner (1936)
Character: Lansing - Postal Chief (uncredited)
Investigators set out to capture a gang of thieves transporting stolen cash through the U.S. mail.
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Call of the Wild (1935)
Character: 'Tex' Rickard
Jack Thornton has trouble winning enough at cards for the stake he needs to get to the Alaska gold fields. His luck changes when he pays $250 for Buck, a sled dog that is part wolf to keep him from being shot by an arrogant Englishman also headed for the Yukon. En route to the Yukon with Shorty Houlihan -- who spent time in jail for opening someone else's letter with a map of where gold is to be found -- Jack rescues a woman whose husband was the addressee of that letter. Buck helps Jack win a $1,000 bet to get the supplies he needs. And when Jack and Claire Blake pet Buck one night, fingers touch.
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The Doorway to Hell (1930)
Character: Undetermined Secondary Role (uncredited)
A vicious crime lord decides that he has had enough and much to the shock of his colleagues decides to give the business to his second in command and retire to Florida after marrying his moll. Unfortunately, he has no idea that she and the man are lovers.
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The Accusing Finger (1936)
Character: Lead Investigator Logan
A proud, pro-capital punishment district attorney with a 90% execution rate, finds himself wrongly convicted of murdering his estranged wife and sentenced to die. The woman he loves and his investigator rival for her affections rally to find the real killer, while he is confronted by the misery of life on death row.
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Below the Deadline (1936)
Character: Pearson
After a good-natured Irish cop is framed for a diamond robbery and murder and presumed dead in a train wreck, he gets plastic surgery and returns to expose the real killers.
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Torchy Gets Her Man (1938)
Character: Henchman Gloomy (as Tommy Jackson)
A notorious counterfeiter passes himself off as a Secret Service agent to Steve and gets him to unwittingly help him bilk the racetrack out of tens of thousands.
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International Crime (1938)
Character: Commisioner Weston
The second and final Grand National Pictures film to feature The Shadow, played again by Rod La Rocque. In this version, Lamont Cranston is an amateur detective and host of a radio show with his assistant Phoebe (not Margo) Lane. Cabbie Moe Shrevnitz and Commissioner Weston also appear.
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Blonde Alibi (1946)
Character: Lawyer Allen (Uncredited)
Soon after a young woman breaks off her engagement to a doctor, the doctor is found murdered. Suspicion falls on his ex-fiancé and a pilot with a checkered past.
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Special Agent (1935)
Character: State Police Commander's Assistant (uncredited)
Newspaperman Bill Bradford becomes a special agent for the tax service trying to end the career of racketeer Nick Carston. Julie Gardner is Carston's bookkeeper. Bradford enters Carston's organization and Julie cooperates with him to land Carston in jail. An informer squeals on them. Julie is kidnapped by Carston's henchmen as she is about to testify
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I Stand Accused (1938)
Character: Detective Gilroy
Fred, a young lawyer fresh out of school, climbs quickly to success as the mouthpiece for a gangland mob. His friend Paul, however, reaches equally quick success - in the district attorney's office. Inevitably, they meet on opposite sides of the courtroom.
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How DOooo You Do (1945)
Character: Detective
Murder occurs when several of the most popular radio personalities of the '40s converge on a desert resort.
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The Guilt of Janet Ames (1947)
Character: (uncredited)
A hard-drinking reporter tries to help the embittered widow of the soldier who had saved his life during the war.
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Meet Me at the Fair (1953)
Character: Billy Gray
In 1904, Doc Tilbee, medicine show huckster and champion tall-tale teller, gives a ride to a young boy escaped from an orphanage, where bad conditions (the result of political graft) are being investigated by new appointee Zerelda Wing, who doesn't know that her fiancée is one of the politicians responsible. Tad wants to stay with his new friend Doc, who is attracted to Zerelda, to the discomfiture of his old flame Clara...all amid nostalgic musical numbers.
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Strictly Personal (1933)
Character: Flynn
Soapy Gibson (Edward Ellis) and his wife Annie (Marjorie Rambeau) run a lonely hearts club in a small town. Even during the Depression years these were often "clip joints" - places where people with money but no mate got taken by someone offering the promise of companionship. However, Soapy and Annie are strictly on the level - and they have more than one reason to want to stay on the level. You see Soapy escaped from the law years ago, had some plastic surgery and changed his name, and has been living on the lam with his wife ever since.
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A Fever in the Blood (1961)
Character: Peters
A judge, a district attorney and a U. S. senator--each hoping to be elected the next governor--attempt to manipulate a murder trial to advance their own political ambitions. Director Vincent Sherman's 1961 drama stars Efrem Zimbalist Jr., Don Ameche, Jack Kelly, Angie Dickinson, Herbert Marshall, Jesse White, Parley Baer, Carroll O'Connor, Ray Danton, Andra Martin, Rhodes Reason and Louise Lorimer.
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The Thin Man (1934)
Character: Reporter (uncredited)
A husband and wife detective team takes on the search for a missing inventor and almost get killed for their efforts.
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The Case of the Curious Bride (1935)
Character: Toots Howardv
After giving the District Attorney another stinging defeat, Perry plans to take a vacation in China. That is, he was, until Rhoda, his old flame, meets him at a restaurant. It seems that her husband Moxley, who had been allegedly dead for four years, is alive and demanding money as she has married into wealth. The case escalates when the police find the body of Moxley and charge her with the murder.
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Manhattan Melodrama (1934)
Character: Asst. Dist. Atty. Richard Snow
The friendship between two orphans endures even though they grow up on opposite sides of the law and fall in love with the same woman.
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Millionaires in Prison (1940)
Character: Warden Tom Hammond
A crop of millionaire inmates struggle to get accustomed to prison life, while inmate Nick Burton watches out for everyone's interests on the inside.
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Phone Call from a Stranger (1952)
Character: N/A
Four strangers board a plane and become fast friends, but a catastrophic crash leaves only one survivor. He then sets off on a journey to discover who these people were, but ultimately discovers the devastating truth about himself.
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Just Before Dawn (1946)
Character: Walter Cummings (uncredited)
In the 7th film of the "Crime Doctor" series based on the radio program, Dr. Robert Ordway is summoned to take attend a diabetic, and gives an injection of insulin taken from a bottle in the patient's pocket. The man dies and Ordway discovers that what he thought was insulin was really poison. Oops! Two other people are murdered before Ordway discovers who replaced the insulin with poison and what the motive was
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The Last Hurrah (1958)
Character: Man (uncredited)
In a changing world where television has become the main source of information, Adam Caulfield, a young sports journalist, witnesses how his uncle, Frank Skeffington, a veteran and honest politician, mayor of a New England town, tries to be reelected while bankers and captains of industry conspire in the shadows to place a weak and manageable candidate in the city hall.
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Gypsy (1962)
Character: Station Master (uncredited)
Rose Hovick lives to see her daughter June succeed on Broadway by way of vaudeville. When June marries and leaves, Rose turns her hope and attention to her elder, less obviously talented, daughter Louise. However, having her headlining as a stripper at Minsky's Burlesque is not what she initially has in mind.
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Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933)
Character: Detective at Morgue
The disappearance of people and corpses leads a reporter to a wax museum and a sinister sculptor.
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Scarlet Street (1945)
Character: Chief of Detectives (uncredited)
Cashier and part-time starving artist Christopher Cross is absolutely smitten with the beautiful Kitty March. Kitty plays along, but she's really only interested in Johnny, a two-bit crook. When Kitty and Johnny find out that art dealers are interested in Chris's work, they con him into letting Kitty take credit for the paintings. Cross allows it because he is in love with Kitty, but his love will only let her get away with so much.
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La Conga Nights (1940)
Character: Agent
In this comedy, actor Hugh Herbert plays six different roles. Only one of the roles is a man. The story centers around a dizzy music lover, who has grown rich through real estate deals. Also figuring in the story are a cab driver/performer, and a down-on-her-luck, aspiring singer. They meet when she hails his cab as she skips out on her former boarding house because she cannot pay rent.
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George White's Scandals (1934)
Character: Al Burke (as Tom Jackson)
Reporter Miss Lee is looking for a story and approaches George White as he's assembling the latest edition of his famous revue. As it turns out, she has lots of backstage gossip to choose from
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The Face of Marble (1946)
Character: Inspector Norton
The story of Dr. Charles Randolph, a scientist dedicated to deciphering the secrets of life and death. Aided by assistant David Cochran, Charles conducts experiments that have horrifying side effects. Charles's lonely wife, Elaine, is frightened by his work, and in order to protect her, housekeeper Maria unleashes a torrent of voodoo that wrecks havoc.
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The Devil Plays (1931)
Character: Captain Brown
A mystery novelist's detective skills are put to the test when he attends a party where a murder is committed.
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It Conquered the World (1956)
Character: George Haskell
An alien from Venus tries to take over the world with the help of a disillusioned human scientist, as his wife, his best friend and the friend's wife try to intervene.
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Strange Justice (1932)
Character: Smith
Socialite banker Henry Judson maintains his extravagant lifestyle by embezzling from his bank, but is caught by sleazy assistant manager Waters and is blackmailed by him into continuing. Close to being found out, the two devise a scheme which sends Wally, the ex-con boyfriend of pretty hat check girl Rose Abbott, to death row.
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Law of the Tropics (1941)
Character: Det. Maguire
Jim Conway, who works on a South American rubber plantation, leaves to meet a girl from the United States whom he is to marry. But he receives a telegram from her telling him she has married someone else. He goes to a waterfront café where he meets a singer, Joan Madison, and tells her his troubles. He asks her to marry him and return to the plantation with him using the name of the girl he was to marry. This strikes her as a great idea as she is a wanted fugitive.
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Parachute Jumper (1933)
Character: Detective Lt. Coffey
An Air Force washout and his buddy room with a pretty young lady. Desperate for jobs during the Depression, they finally land employment with the mob.
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Castle on the Hudson (1940)
Character: Seated Reporter on Train (uncredited)
A hardened crook behind bars comes up against a reform-minded warden.
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The Devil's Mask (1946)
Character: Det. Capt. Quinn
A San Francisco airplane bound for South America crashes, and among the scorched debris is found a shrunken native human head, neatly packaged. The perplexed police contact a local anthropology museum about this unclaimed piece of grisly baggage, where they intersect with Jack and Doc, two private eyes, called there to meet a mysterious woman who had a case for them and wanted to meet in private.
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For the Defense (1930)
Character: Daly
William Foster is a slick attorney who stays within the law, but specializes in representing crooks and shady characters. He's adept at keeping them out of jail, winning acquittals, and having decisions reversed, thus springing criminals out of prison. He is romantically involved with dancer Irene Manners, who is two-timing him, although she wants to marry him. She kills a man driving while out with her other man, Jack Defoe, who takes the blame. Unfortunately, a ring Foster had just given Irene is found at the crime scene. Foster ends up defending Jack, but when the ring is found, he thinks he is protecting Irene, so pleads guilty to jury tampering.
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Tell No Tales (1939)
Character: Eddie (uncredited)
A newspaper editor turns a kidnapping into the banner headlines and exclusive story that could save his publication.
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Crime Wave (1953)
Character: Bank Guard (uncredited)
Reformed parolee Steve Lacey is caught in the middle when a wounded former cellmate seeks him out for shelter. The other two former cellmates then attempt to force him into doing a bank job.
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Big Town Scandal (1948)
Character: Police Chief (uncredited)
A crusading editor and his star reporter aid underprivileged youths and crack down on racketeers out to fix basketball.
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Double Cross Roads (1930)
Character: Deuce Wilson
Ex-convict David Harvey attempts to go straight and settles in a small town where he meets and falls in love with Mary Carlyle. His former gang tries to persuade him to take part in a robbery of a wealthy woman but he refuses until discovering that Mary is in league with the gang.
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Big City Blues (1932)
Character: Detective Quelkin
An Indiana boy comes into an inheritance and moves to New York City, living it up with his girlfriend until he gets in over his head and someone gets killed.
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Terror Aboard (1933)
Character: Capt. Derick Alison
An ocean liner is found at sea with everyone on board dead. An investigation is begun to find out what happened.
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She Couldn't Take It (1935)
Character: Spieler at Car Exhibition
The wealthy Van Dyke family are constantly in the media for outrageous behavior, much to the frustration of the patriarch, Dan Van Dyke. His self-centered wife has a fondness for foreign imports, including "pet projects" like dancers and such and his spoiled children Tony and Carol have constant run-ins with the law. When Dan himself ends up in the clink for five years for tax evasion, he becomes bunk-mates with ex-bootlegger Joe "Spots" Ricardi. Ricardi lectures him on being such a push-over for an out-of-control family, so a dying Dan makes Ricardi his estate trustee once he is released from prison. Ricardi is then thrust into high society and must do everything he once nagged Dan to do.
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Reform School Girl (1957)
Character: Judge of the Juvenile Court (Uncredited)
A teen girl is thrown into reform school for refusing to squeal on her delinquent boyfriend where she ends up meeting his ex-girlfriend and the jealous tempers fly.
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Big Town (1946)
Character: Police Chief Berkley
A newspaper editor goes on an anti-crime crusade, but gets carried away.
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Here Comes Trouble (1948)
Character: Chief McClure (as Thomas Jackson)
A blundering rookie reporter runs into some unexpected difficulty when he is assigned to cover the police beat.
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No More Women (1934)
Character: Detective
Two deep-sea divers, known only by their nicknames of "Three-Time" and "Forty-Fathoms," find that no place on earth is big enough for both of them at the same time, even the bottom of the ocean. All day long they fight to salvage sunken gold at forty fathoms deep in the ocean, and all night long they fight over dames. This situation continues even when they both go to work for Helen Young, the owner of a tug-boat and a salvage business.
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Afraid to Talk (1932)
Character: Deputy Benchley
Corrupt politicians resort to murder and blackmail when a young boy accidentally witnesses them taking payoffs.
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Crime Takes a Holiday (1938)
Character: Brennan
A district attorney uses psychology to expose a criminal gang by publicizing the prosecution of an innocent man.
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The Fuller Brush Man (1948)
Character: Policeman in Park (uncredited)
Poor Red Jones gets fired from every job he tries. His fiancée gives him one last chance to make good when he becomes a Fuller Brush man. His awkward attempts at sales are further complicated when one of his customers is murdered and he becomes the prime suspect.
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The Westland Case (1937)
Character: Detective Lt. Strom
A detective must solve a case where a girl was murdered in a room--and all the doors and windows were locked from the inside.
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Hollywood Boulevard (1936)
Character: Detective
With a full Hollywood background and settings but more an expose of scandal-and-gossip magazines of the era, has-been actor John Blakeford agrees to write his memoirs for magazine-publisher Jordan Winston. When Blakeford's daughter, Patricia, ask him to desist for the sake of his ex-wife, Carlotta Blakeford, he attempts to break his contract with Winston.
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City for Conquest (1940)
Character: Pep - Sportswriter (uncredited)
The heartbreaking but hopeful tale of Danny Kenny and Peggy Nash, two sweethearts who meet and struggle through their impoverished lives in New York City. When Peggy, hoping for something better in life for both of them, breaks off her engagement to Danny, he sets out to be a championship boxer, while she becomes a dancer paired with a sleazy partner. Will tragedy reunite the former lovers?
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Another Thin Man (1939)
Character: Detective (uncredited)
Not even the joys of parenthood can stop married sleuths Nick and Nora Charles from investigating a murder on a Long Island estate.
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The Preview Murder Mystery (1936)
Character: Detective McKane
Someone is murdering the cast and crew of a new Hollywood movie, and the leading lady may be next. As a police detective locks down the lot and refuses to let anyone leave, the studio’s publicity head and his secretary attempt to solve the murders themselves.
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The Lady in the Morgue (1938)
Character: Police Lieutenant Strom
A detective investigates the disappearance of a girl's body from the city morgue.
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The Fall Guy (1930)
Character: 'Nifty' Herman
Johnny Quinlan is so desperate for a job that he takes a gig as a "bag man" for the mob. Meanwhile, his beleaguered wife has to deal with her bizarre, unemployed, wise-cracking brother and various neighbors while keeping house in their Brooklyn tenement.
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The Personality Kid (1934)
Character: Rankin
An arrogant boxer (Pat O'Brien) discovers his wife (Glenda Farrell) had a hand in his success.
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Name the Woman (1934)
Character: Frank Martin
Directed by Albert S. Rogell. With Richard Cromwell, Arline Judge, Rita La Roy, Charles C. Wilson.
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The Escape (1939)
Character: Police Lieutenant
An embittered Louie Peronni returns from prison to find that his sister, Juli Peronni, is engaged to policeman Eddie Farrell, and also finds that his secret wife Annie Qualen has placed their baby girl in a foundling home. With his old gang again, Louie plans a robbery of a fur warehouse. Louie shoots down the night watchman and is trailed home where his father Guiseppe Peronni persuades him not to fight it out with the police. Determined to let Louie take the full rap, the gang kidnaps the district attorney's daughter.
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Women Without Names (1940)
Character: Detective Sergeant Reardon
Joyce and Fred MacNeil's honeymoon comes to an abrupt and unsatisfying halt when Fred is accused of murder. Railroaded into prison through the efforts of politically ambitious assistant DA Marlin, Fred awaits his doom on Death Row, while Joyce works overtime on the outside to clear her husband's name
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The Last Days of Pompeii (1935)
Character: The Lanista (uncredited)
In this action-filled spectacle set in ancient Pompeii, a blacksmith becomes a Roman gladiator, though his rise to wealth and power is jeopardized by his son's Christianity and the eruption of Vesuvius.
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The Hidden Eye (1945)
Character: Insp. Delaney (as Thomas Jackson)
A perfumed message provides the only clue for a blind detective bent on clearing a man accused of murder.
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Broadway (1929)
Character: Dan McCorn
A naive young dancer in a Broadway show innocently gets involved in backstage bootlegging and murder.
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Behind the Mask (1932)
Character: Agent Burke
A Secret Service agent nabs a scalpel-happy doctor who runs drugs in caskets.
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The Mysterious Mr. Valentine (1946)
Character: Police Lt. Milo Jones
Janet Spencer is driving down a country road when one of her tires blows out. This seemingly innocuous, everyday occurrence leads Linda into a labyrinth of murder, blackmail and intrigue.
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Why Girls Leave Home (1945)
Character: Police Captain Reilly
In this crime drama, a young woman leaves her unhappy life at home to become a sophisticated night club singer. Her first job is nearly fatal when she entangles herself with the mobsters who own the joint and learns too much about their operation. Her boss decides to kill her and make it look like suicide. An intrepid reporter disbelieves the report and exposes the truth to the public.
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Union Station (1950)
Character: Detective (uncredited)
Police catch a break when suspected kidnappers are spotted on a train heading towards Union Station. Police, train station security and a witness try to piece together the crime and get back the blind daughter of a rich business man.
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