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  1. A gang of career criminals, modeled on the real life Tri-State Gang, are terrorizing and robbing banks and payrolls in North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland. George, the gang's leader, is a cold killer who does not distinguish between armed guards and any of the group's molls that cross him.

  2. Highway 301: Directed by Andrew L. Stone. With William P. Lane Jr., John S. Battle, W. Kerr Scott, Steve Cochran. Led by a psychopathic killer, a vicious gang of armed robbers terrorizes Virginia, Maryland and North Carolina, robbing banks and payrolls and murdering anyone who might identify them.

  3. Mar 21, 2020 · Highway 301 is an American 1950 Film Noir written and directed by Andrew L. Stone, and starring Steve Cochran, Virginia Grey, Gaby André and Edmon Ryan.

  4. Highway 301 (1950) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  5. Film Details. Articles & Reviews. Notes. Brief Synopsis. A brutal bank robber fights internal divisions within his gang. Cast & Crew. Read More. Andrew Stone. Director. Steve Cochran. George Legenza. Virginia Grey. Mary Simms. Gaby Andre. Lee Fontaine. Edmon Ryan. Truscott. Robert Webber. William B. Phillips. Film Details. Also Known As.

  6. A gang of well-dressed armed robbers, unimaginatively dubbed the Tri-State Outfit by police, go on a crime spree across three states. The opening bit with the real governors of Virginia, Maryland, and North Carolina giving speeches about law & order will have you rolling your eyes.

  7. The "Tri-State" gang goes on a successful bank robbing streak causing local authorities to turn up the heat on the daring career criminals. Andrew L. Stone. Director, Screenplay. Full Cast & Crew.

  8. Highway 301 is an American 1950 crime drama film noir written and directed by Andrew L. Stone, and starring Steve Cochran, Virginia Grey, Gaby André and Edmon Ryan.

  9. With the support of Warner’s high production values, Steve Cochran shines as the beastly, psychopathic ringleader George Legenza, who makes Cochrane’s Eddie Roman in The Chase (1946) look like a pussycat, and who, from time to time, gets bored of killing innocents and turns his gun on his own women. The most suspenseful sequences, in fact ...

  10. A network of armed robbers successfully gets away with several million dollars before the law can stop them.

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