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  1. Language. English. Boston Blackie Goes Hollywood is a 1942 American crime film, fourth of the fourteen Boston Blackie films of the 1940s Columbia 's series of B pictures based on Jack Boyle 's pulp-fiction character.

  2. Boston Blackie Goes Hollywood: Directed by Michael Gordon. With Chester Morris, William Wright, Constance Worth, Lloyd Corrigan. Boston Blackie and his pal, The Runt, are ready to board a train for Florida when Blackie gets a telegram from his friend Arthur Manleder asking Blackie to go to Manleder's New York apartment, get $60,000 from a wall ...

    • (460)
    • Comedy, Crime, Drama
    • Michael Gordon
    • 1942-11-05
  3. 22. März 2022 · 7.9K subscribers. Subscribed. 1.9K. 249K views 2 years ago. Boston Blackie and his pal, The Runt, are ready to board a train for Florida when Blackie gets a telegram from his friend Arthur...

    • 68 Min.
    • 253K
    • ONESMEDIA
  4. Boston Blackie is a fictional character created by author Jack Boyle (1881–1928). Blackie, a jewel thief and safecracker in Boyle's stories, became a detective in adaptations for films, radio and television—an "enemy to those who make him an enemy, friend to those who have no friend."

    • Jack Boyle
    • Male
    • "The Price of Principle" (1914)
    • Jewel thief, safecracker, detective
  5. Rehabilitated ex-convict Boston Blackie (Chester Morris) doesn't crack safes anymore, but single-minded Inspector Farraday (Richard Lane) is determined to link him to the theft of a priceless...

    • (4)
    • Michael Gordon
    • Crime, Drama
    • Chester Morris
  6. Boston Blackie Goes Hollywood. Summaries. Boston Blackie and his pal, The Runt, are ready to board a train for Florida when Blackie gets a telegram from his friend Arthur Manleder asking Blackie to go to Manleder's New York apartment, get $60,000 from a wall safe and fly to Hollywood.

  7. Although he had been in films since 1917, Boston Blackie Goes Hollywood was by far Morris's most successful screen venture. After the Blackie series ended in 1949, he worked almost exclusively in television for most of the remainder of his career.