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  1. 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.

  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.

  3. A boy who always lies witnesses a murder but can't get anyone but the killer to believe him.

  4. 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...

  5. At the age of 9, Tommy Woodry has a reputation for telling tall tales -- the latest one being that his family is moving from Manhattan to a ranch out west. When the landlord interrupts the Woodrys at dinner to show their about-to-be-vacated apartment, the Woodrys tell Tommy enough is enough.

  6. The Window (1949) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  7. P ossibly the only noir in which a child is silenced by a knockout punch to the head, Ted Tetzlaffs The Window is a “boy who cried wolftale in which his latest wolf, which goes ignored, is the murder of a sailor by his upstairs neighbors.

  8. The Window is a 1949 American black-and-white film noir, based on the short story "The Boy Cried Murder" (reprinted as "Fire Escape") by Cornell Woolrich, about a lying boy who witnesses a killing but is not believed.

  9. The Window is a 1949 American black-and-white suspense film noir, based on the short story "The Boy Cried Murder" (reprinted as "Fire Escape") by Cornell Woolrich about a lying boy who suspects that his neighbors are killers.

  10. May 30, 2020 · Besides reviving the career of its ten-year-old hero, Bobby Driscoll, The Window was the sleeper hit of 1949 and remains one of the lesser known great film noirs of the 1940s.

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