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  1. Find out who starred in the 1950 film Convicted, directed by Henry Levin and based on a play by Martin Flavin. See the full list of actors, writers, producers, composers, and more on IMDb.

  2. Cast. Glenn Ford as Joe Hufford; Broderick Crawford as George Knowland; Millard Mitchell as Malloby; Dorothy Malone as Kay Knowland; Carl Benton Reid as Captain Douglas; Frank Faylen as Convict Ponti; Will Geer as Convict Mapes; Martha Stewart as Bertie Williams; Henry O'Neill as Detective Dorn; Douglas Kennedy as Det. Bailey; Roland ...

  3. Convicted: Directed by Henry Levin. With Glenn Ford, Broderick Crawford, Millard Mitchell, Dorothy Malone. A D.A. becomes the prison warden where he tries to help an inmate he prosecuted, because he believes his sentence was excessive.

    • (1,4K)
    • Action, Crime, Drama
    • Henry Levin
    • 1950-08
  4. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › 10004628-convictedConvicted | Rotten Tomatoes

    Glenn Ford. Joe Hufford. Broderick Crawford. George Knowland. Dorothy Malone. Kay Knowland. Millard Mitchell. Malloby. Carl Benton Reid. Capt. Douglas. Frank Faylen. Convict Ponti. Show all...

    • (7)
    • Glenn Ford
    • Henry Levin
    • Columbia Pictures Corporation
  5. One of the few films to present a positive portrayal of a prison warden, the incarceration drama Convicted opened in 1950 during a wave of jailhouse films following the classic Brute Force in 1947. American everyman Glenn Ford stars as Joe Hufford, who's sent up the river following his dubious conviction for the nightclub death of a bigwig ...

    • Henry Levin, Frederick Briskin
    • Glenn Ford
  6. Henry Levin. Director. William Bowers. Screenplay. Seton I. Miller. Screenplay. Fred Niblo Jr. Screenplay. A prison warden fights to prove one of his inmates was wrongly convicted.

  7. Convicted is a 1950 American crime film noir directed by Henry Levin and starring Glenn Ford and Broderick Crawford. It was the third Columbia Pictures film adaptation of the 1929 stage play The Criminal Code by Martin Flavin, following Howard Hawks 's The Criminal Code (1930) and John Brahm 's Penitentiary (1938).