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Four Hours to Kill!

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Wikipedia article




'Four Hours to Kill!' is a 1935 American drama film directed by Mitchell Leisen and starring Richard Barthelmess.Four Hours to Kill

Monthly Film Bulletin; London Vol. 2, Iss. 13, (January 1, 1935): 86.


Plot



Taft, a policeman, has fugitive murderer Tony Mako in custody and in handcuffs, two thousand miles from the prison from which Mako escaped. With four hours to kill, Taft takes his prisoner to a theater where the cop's wife, Mae, is a hostess.

Mae is an unfaithful schemer. She is trying to extort $200 from coat-check kid Eddie, insinuating she is pregnant. Eddie doesn't want his fiancee Helen to hear this, true or otherwise, so he tries to raise the money to pay Mae's blackmail. Eddie is also suspected of stealing an expensive piece of jewelry.

Mako made the journey this far in the hope of gaining revenge against Anderson, a man who informed on him. After telling Taft he would prefer a quick death to a painful execution, Mako breaks free and shoots Anderson before being shot by Taft, dying the kind of death he wanted. Eddie is cleared and now free to marry Helen, while Mae is taken away to jail.

Cast



* Richard Barthelmess as Tony Mako

* Joe Morrison as Eddie

* Gertrude Michael as Mrs. Sylvia Temple

* Helen Mack as Helen

* Dorothy Tree as Mae Danish

* Roscoe Karns as Johnson

* Ray Milland as Carl Barrett

* Charles C. Wilson as Taft

* Henry Travers as Mac Mason

* Noel Madison as Anderson

* Paul Harvey as Capt. Seaver

* Olive Tell as Mrs. Madison

* Lee Kohlmar as Pa Herman

Production



Paramount bought the film rights to the stage play in December 1934.Paramount Acquires New York Stage Hit

The Washington Post December 9, 1934: ST2.


Reception



The 'New York Times' called it "a gripping, although extremely theatrical, melodrama with a neatly dovetailed plot, a uniformly excellent cast and well paceed direction".At the Paramount.

F.S.N. New York Times April 11, 1935: 27.


Proposed remake



In 1944 Paramount Pictures announced it would create a new film adaptation of 'Small Miracle', the play that was the basis of 'Four Hours to Kill'. Leisen was to direct the new version; Alan Ladd in the lead. The project was not realized.

In 1947 Jack LaRue presented a stage version.EQUITY STAGE UNIT TO CUT PRODUCTION: New York Times (Oct 25, 1947: 13.

References




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