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  1. The Man With the Golden Arm

    The Man With the Golden Arm

    1956 · Drama · 1h 59m

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  2. The Man with the Golden Arm is a 1955 American independent drama film noir directed by Otto Preminger, based on the novel of the same name by Nelson Algren. Starring Frank Sinatra , Eleanor Parker , Kim Novak , Arnold Stang and Darren McGavin , it recounts the story of a drug addict who gets clean while in prison, but struggles to stay that way ...

    • Otto Preminger
  3. The Man with the Golden Arm: Directed by Otto Preminger. With Frank Sinatra, Eleanor Parker, Kim Novak, Arnold Stang. A junkie must face his true self to kick his drug addiction.

    • (12K)
    • Crime, Drama, Romance
    • Otto Preminger
    • 1956-01-16
  4. The Man with the Golden Arm is a novel by Nelson Algren, published by Doubleday in November 1949. One of the seminal novels of post-World War II American letters, The Man with the Golden Arm is widely considered Algren's greatest and most enduring work. It won the National Book Award in 1950.

    • Nelson Algren
    • United States
    • 1949
    • 343 pp
  5. Synopsis. In the late 1940s, Frankie Majcinek (Frank Sinatra), who is known as Frankie Machine, returns to Chicago's South Side, which is mostly inhabited by Polish Americans, after serving a six-month sentence at a federal narcotics hospital.

  6. Apr 16, 2024 · Lee Pfeiffer. The Man with the Golden Arm, American film drama, released in 1955, that broke new ground with its realistic look at the life of a heroin addict. The film was based on the novel of the same name by Nelson Algren and starred Frank Sinatra as Frankie Machine, a struggling addict who gets clean while.

    • Lee Pfeiffer
  7. Dec 23, 2020. When illegal card dealer and recovering heroin addict Frankie Machine (Frank Sinatra) gets out of prison, he decides to straighten up. Armed with nothing but an old drum set, Frankie...

    • (59)
    • Drama
  8. Hero Frankie Machine is a shrewd poker dealer whose “golden arm” shakes as he relies on morphine to overcome the pain of a war injury and to numb the guilt he feels for a drunken spree that put his wife, Sophie, in a wheelchair. Much of the psychological action centres on Sophie’s attempts to manipulate him.

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