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1946 film by George Sherman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Secret of the Whistler is a 1946 American mystery film noir based on the radio drama The Whistler. Directed by George Sherman, the production features Richard Dix, Leslie Brooks and Michael Duane.[1] It is the sixth of Columbia Pictures' eight "Whistler" films produced in the 1940s, all but the last starring Dix.
The Secret of the Whistler | |
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Directed by | George Sherman |
Screenplay by |
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Based on | The Whistler 1942-55 radio series by J. Donald Wilson |
Produced by | Rudolph C. Flothow |
Starring |
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Narrated by | Otto Forrest |
Cinematography | Allen G. Siegler |
Edited by | Dwight Caldwell |
Music by | Herschel Burke Gilbert |
Production company | Larry Darmour Productions |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 65 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Ralph Harrison (Richard Dix) is married to Edith (Mary Currier), a rich woman who has been suffering heart attacks. Upset by her condition, he finds consoling companionship with an artist's model, the unscrupulous gold-digger Kay (Leslie Brooks).
He falls in love with Kay. Edith's health then improves. Edith overhears Ralph professing his love for Kay. Edith threatens Ralph, saying she's going to take him out of her will. He decides to poison her, with her own medicine, before she can meet with her lawyers.
After Edith dies, Ralph marries Kay, who becomes suspicious of how Edith died and worried for her own fate. Finding incriminating diary pages and the medicine, she has the medicine analyzed, discovering that it was poisoned.
Ralph overhears Kay's phone conversation with the lab. Pretending to embrace her, he strangles her to death, just as the police arrive and arrest him for murder - but not for the murder of Edith, because she had not taken the poisoned medicine but died of a heart attack.
TV Guide rated it 3/5 stars and called it "engrossing as usual and well acted".[2]
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