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  1. Deadline at Dawn

    Deadline at Dawn

    1946 · Mystery · 1h 23m

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  1. English. Deadline at Dawn is a 1946 American film noir, the only film directed by stage director Harold Clurman. It was written by Clifford Odets and based on a novel of the same name by Cornell Woolrich (as William Irish). The RKO Pictures film release was the only cinematic collaboration between Clurman and his former Group Theatre associate ...

    • Adrian Scott
  2. Deadline at Dawn: Directed by Harold Clurman, William Cameron Menzies. With Susan Hayward, Paul Lukas, Bill Williams, Joseph Calleia. After a woman he meets is murdered, a soon-to-ship-out sailor has until dawn to find the killer, aided by a weary dance hall girl.

    • (2.1K)
    • Crime, Film-Noir, Mystery
    • Harold Clurman, William Cameron Menzies
    • 1946-03-18
  3. Deadline At Dawn (1946) -- (Movie Clip) Let's Melt Some Ice Together Sailor Alex (Bill Williams), secretly afraid he’s committed a murder while drunk, is reluctant to part with kindly cabbie Gus (Paul Lukas), but meets taxi-dancer June (Susan Hayward) back at the scene, both discovering they still haven’t found evidence clearing him, in ...

    • Harold Clurman, William Dorfman
    • Susan Hayward
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  5. Deadline at Dawn (1946) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. Movies. Release Calendar Top 250 Movies Most Popular ...

  6. Val Bartelli. Osa Massen. Helen Robinson. Aug 11, 2010. Rated: B • Nov 10, 2004. In Theaters At Home TV Shows. Advertise With Us. A cabby (Paul Lukas) helps a New York dance-hall girl (Susan ...

    • (19)
    • Susan Hayward
    • Harold Clurman
  7. Deadline at Dawn is directed by Harold Clurman and adapted to screenplay by Clifford Odets from the novel written by Cornell Woolrich. It stars Susan Hayward, Paul Lukas, Bill Williams, Joseph Calleia, Osa Masson and Lola Lane. Music is by Hans Eisler and cinematography by Nicholas Musuraca.

  8. If there’s such thing as a quaint film noir, Harold Clurman’s Deadline at Dawn just might be it. Based on a novel by Cornell Woolrich and taking place over the course of a few nocturnal (and surreal) hours in the Big Apple, the film combines an unmistakable fatalism (the first line of dialogue is “Aren’t you dead yet?”) with an endearing innocence best symbolized in the character of ...

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