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  1. Crossfire is a 1947 American film noir drama film starring Robert Young, Robert Mitchum and Robert Ryan which deals with the theme of anti-Semitism, as did that year's Academy Award for Best Picture winner, Gentleman's Agreement.

  2. Crossfire: Directed by Edward Dmytryk. With Robert Young, Robert Mitchum, Robert Ryan, Gloria Grahame. A man is murdered, apparently by one of a group of demobilized soldiers he met in a bar.

  3. Feb 20, 2021 · Crossfire (1947) #WarnerArchive #WarnerBros #CrossfireYears of police work have taught Detective Finlay that where there’s crime, there’s motive. But he find...

  4. Crossfire (1947) -- (Movie Clip) Open, Murder Dark and dramatic opening to Edward Dmytryk's Crossfire, 1947, starring Robert Young, Robert Mitchum, Robert Ryan and Gloria Grahame, from a novel by Richard Brooks.

  5. Crossfire (1947) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  6. A fifth demobilized military man, Peter Keeley - Mitch's roommate - confirms Mitch's tenuous mental state over his uncertain future, especially with his wife back in Chicago, but knows sensitive Mitch is not the type of person who could be a murderer.

  7. Crossfire is a 1947 American film noir drama film starring Robert Young, Robert Mitchum and Robert Ryan which deals with the theme of anti-Semitism, as did that year's Academy Award for Best Picture winner, Gentleman's Agreement.

  8. A man is murdered, apparently by one of a group of soldiers just out of the army. But which one? And why? Edward Dmytryk. Richard Brooks.

  9. Purchase Crossfire on digital and stream instantly or download offline. Robert Young, Robert Mitchum and Robert Ryan star in this noir classic, the first Hollywood film to confront anti-Semitism. When a police detective and an army sergeant investigate the murder of a Jewish man, their search leads to a soldier whose strong feelings of anti ...

  10. Dark, anonymous city streets and drab interiors reinforce the psychic distance that separates the characters — and human beings, generally — in Edward Dmytryk’s Crossfire, a postwar meditation on the hate that sat at the heart of World War II. That hate is gloriously embodied in the form of Robert Ryan, who plays the slowly tightening ...

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