• Newly Released
  • Popular
  • Actors
MySite
  • Newly Released
  • Popular
  • Actors
My Favorites ❤️

Services
BrandingDesignMarketingAdvertisement
Company
About usContactJobsPress kit
Social
Movie 1

The Window

1949-05-10
73 minutes
ThrillerCrime
6.9

An imaginative boy who frequently makes things up witnesses a murder, but can't get his parents or the police to believe him. The only people taking him seriously are the killers - who live upstairs, know that he saw what they did, and are out to permanently silence him.

Country : United States of AmericaLanguage : en

Cast:

Movie 1

Bobby Driscoll

Tommy Woodry

Movie 1

Barbara Hale

Mary Woodry

Movie 1

Arthur Kennedy

Ed Woodry

Movie 1

Paul Stewart

Joe Kellerson

Movie 1

Similer Movies:

Movie 1
Thriller
Horror

Julia

Movie 1
Horror
Thriller

Pig

Movie 1
Action
Thriller

Die Hard: With a Vengeance

Movie 1
Thriller

Ruth Roman

Jean Kellerson

Movie 1

Richard Benedict

Murdered Seaman (Uncredited)

Movie 1

James Nolan

Stranger on Street (Uncredited)

Movie 1

Anthony Ross

Detective Ross (uncredited)

Movie 1

Tom Coleman

Cop Carrying Stretcher (Uncredited)

Movie 1

Lloyd Dawson

Police Officer (Uncredited)

Crime
Drama

Rope

Movie 1
Mystery
Thriller

Secret Window

Movie 1
Drama
Crime

A Bronx Tale

TMDP Top Reviews:

John Chard

Like the boy who cried wolf. A belter of a B noir out of RKO. Story plays as a variant to the boy who cried wolf legend and finds young Bobby Driscoll as Tommy, a boy prone to telling tall tales. So when one night he spies upstairs neighbours murdering a man, nobody believes him... The build up to the crime is considered, we are privy to Tommy's home life in a cramped New York tenement, his parents loyal and hard working and they have plenty of love for their fanciful son. Once the crime is committed, a shocking incident compounded by the fact it's perpetrated by a normal looking male and female couple, a destitute pairing prepared to do the unthinkable just for cash, then things get real tense and the thrills begin to roll. Tommy is now under threat from the killers and he needs to be silenced, so as the cramp confines of the hot and sweaty tenement area are vividly brought to life via noir visuals, Ted Tetzlaff (director) and his cinematographers (Robert De Grasse & William O. Steiner) excelling, the paranoia and tension builds to the point that the gripping finale acts as a merciful release. Very well performed by a cast that also includes Paul Stewart, Ruth Roman, Arthur Kennedy and Barabara Hale, this late 1940s noir is highly recommended. 8/10