Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Budget. $210,000 [2] or $500,000 [3] The Window is a 1949 American black-and-white film noir, based on the short story "The Boy Cried Murder" (reprinted as "Fire Escape") [4] by Cornell Woolrich, about a lying boy who witnesses a killing but is not believed. The film, a critical success that was shot on location in New York City, was produced ...

  2. The Window: Directed by Ted Tetzlaff. With Barbara Hale, Arthur Kennedy, Paul Stewart, Ruth Roman. To avoid the heat of a sweltering summer night a 9-year-old Manhattan boy decides to sleep on the fire escape and witnesses a murder, but no one will believe him.

    • (4.9K)
    • Drama, Film-Noir, Thriller
    • Ted Tetzlaff
    • 1949-05-21
  3. Mar 3, 2022 · The Window is a 1949 American black-and-white suspense FILM NOlR based on the short story The Boy Cried Murder (reprinted as Fire Escape) by Cornell...

    • 73 min
    • 5.9K
    • Mo Chou
  4. www.thewin-dow.laThe Window

    The Win-Dow, open 7 days a week, is a destination for classic smash-burgers, fried chicken sandwiches and $8 grain bowls. We’re available for pick-up and delivery, but best enjoyed by pulling up a stool outside and hanging out with our neighbors.

    • The Window1
    • The Window2
    • The Window3
    • The Window4
    • The Window5
  5. In a working-class neighborhood in New York, the boy Tommy makes up stories to his mother Mary Woodry and father Ed Woodry. One summer night, Tommy sleeps on the fire escape to soften the heat, and he witness the murder of a man through the window by his neighbors Joe Kellerson and his wife Jean Kellerson. Tommy runs back home and tells his ...

  6. When young Tommy (Bobby Driscoll) sneaks out of his bedroom and onto the fire escape of his tenement building, he sees two neighbors, Joe (Paul Stewart) and Jean Kellerson (Ruth Roman), murder a ...

    • (9)
    • Mystery & Thriller
  7. The Window was producer Frederic Ullman, Jr.'s last film; he died on December 29, 1948, before its release. Prior to making The Window, Ullman was president of RKO-Pathé in New York and was in charge of RKO's This Is America series of documentary shorts. RKO borrowed Bobby Driscoll from Walt Disney's company for the production.

  8. People also ask

  1. People also search for