99 River Street

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

99 River Street
Directed by Phil Karlson
Produced by Edward Small
Written by Phil Karlson (uncredited)
John Payne (uncredited)
Robert Smith
George Zuckerman (story)
Starring John Payne
Evelyn Keyes
Brad Dexter
Frank Faylen
Peggie Castle
Music by Arthur Lange
Emil Newman
Cinematography Franz Planer
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) October 2, 1953 (U.S. release)
Running time 83 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

99 River Street is a 1953 black and white film. The film, directed by Phil Karlson, takes place one night in New York city. 99 River Street, considered film noir, was produced by Edward Small with cinematography by Franz Planer.

Contents

[edit] Plot

John Payne plays Ernie Driscoll a former boxer who had to give up fighting after substaining an injury in the ring. He's now a New York taxi driver. His wife, Pauline, unhappy living a poor life, is having an affair with a richer man who happens to be a criminal. The criminal, after being unable to sell some stolen diamonds, kills Pauline and then attempts to frame her husband with the crime.

[edit] Critical reaction

The film receives mostly positive reviews. Dave Kehr from the Chicago Reader calls 99 River Street "an example of the kind of humble brilliance that often emerged from the American genre cinema." [1]

[edit] Featured cast

Actor Role
John Payne Ernie Driscoll
Evelyn Keyes Linda James
Brad Dexter Victor Rawlins
Frank Faylen Stan Hogan
Peggie Castle Pauline Driscoll
Jay Adler Christopher
Jack Lambert Mickey

[edit] References