Suchergebnisse
Suchergebnisse:
The Judge: Directed by Elmer Clifton. With Milburn Stone, Katherine DeMille, Paul Guilfoyle, Stanley Waxman. A crooked lawyer blackmails a client into a murder plot against his wife.
- (171)
- Crime, Drama, Film-Noir
- Elmer Clifton
- 1949-01-31
The Judge is a 1949 American crime film directed by Elmer Clifton and starring Milburn Stone, Katherine DeMille and Paul Guilfoyle. [1] Plot. Cast. Milburn Stone as Martin Strang. Katherine DeMille as Lucille Strang. Paul Guilfoyle as William Jackson. Stanley Waxman as Dr. James Anderson. Norman Budd as James Tillton.
- Anson Bond
- Gene Lanham
- Emerald Productions
Title: The Judge. Summary: A crooked lawyer blackmails a client into a murder plot against his wife. Directed by: Elmer Clifton. Actors: Milburn Stone, Katherine DeMille, Paul Guilfoyle. Production Company: Emerald Productions Inc. Release Date: 31 January 1949 (USA) Aspect Ratio: 1.37 : 1.
- 69 Min.
- 7,7K
USA (1949) | Drama, Kriminalfilm | 69 Minuten. NEU: PODCAST: Die besten Streaming-Tipps gibt's im Moviepilot-Podcast Streamgestöber. The Judge ist ein Drama aus dem Jahr 1949 von Elmer...
6. Feb. 2021 · One of the last films directed by the great Elmer Clifton, whose career dates back to the mid-teens and D.W.Griffith, The Judge was also the first production of Ida Lupino’s production company, first called Emerald Productions, later called The Filmmakers. This is a quirky film which is both hard-boiled and pretentious, raw and artsy.
Judge Allan J. Brooks relates a case history from his files about a noted criminal lawyer, Martin Strang, who cheated the forces of law and order: James Tilton, a murderer for whom Strang had won an acquittal, is driven berserk by the violin playing of an eleven-year-old, disabled boy and shoots the boy and his dog, killing them. Meanwhile ...
Summaries. A crooked lawyer blackmails a client into a murder plot against his wife. Martin Strong (Milburn Stone), prominent criminal attorney, becomes conscience-stricken when his is forced to come to the defense of an insane killer whom he had freed from a similar charge a year earlier.