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  1. The things she does to men can end only one way - in murder!When a man in mid-life crisis befriends a young woman, her venal fiancé persuades her to con him ...

    • 102 min
    • 6.2M
    • Cult Cinema Classics
  2. Jun 27, 2017 · Story – Scarlet Street (1945) The movie begins at night on a busy city street in 1934. Outside a fancy club, there is an organ grinder and his monkey. I believe this is metaphorical for Chris Cross (Edward G. Robinson). Inside the fancy club, they are having a black-tie celebration, Chris.

  3. Scarlet Street. 1945 · 1 hr 43 min. TV-PG. Thriller · Crime · Drama. In one of Fritz Lang's finest American films, Edward G. Robinson stars as as a meek cashier who plunges into a whirlpool of lust, larceny and revenge. Starring: Dan Duryea Edward G. Robinson Joan Bennett Margaret Lindsay Rosalind Ivan. Directed by: Fritz Lang. In one of ...

  4. Scarlet Street comes from a brand new HDR / Dolby Vision master – from a 16bit 4K scan of the 35mm nitrate composite fine grain. It is presented on disc in a 1.37:1 HEVC 2160p (4K UHD) Dolby Vision encodement. The overall picture quality is uneven due to its age and its source, with some frames looking overwhelmed by film softness and grain ...

  5. Synopsis by Linda Rasmussen. Masterfully directed by Fritz Lang, Scarlet Street is a bleak film in which an ordinary man succumbs first to vice and then to murder. Christopher Cross (Edward G. Robinson) is a lonely man married to a nagging wife. Painting is the only thing that brings him joy.

  6. Jan 30, 2024 · The film Scarlet Street (1945), based on a novel by Georges de La Fouchardière, was produced and directed by Fritz Lang (Dr. Mabuse: The Gambler, M, The Big Heat), and stars Edward G. Robinson (Little Caesar, Double Indemnity, Key Largo), Joan Bennett (The Man in the Iron Mask, The Woman in the Window), and Dan Duryea (Criss Cross, The Flight of the Phoenix).

  7. Sep 30, 2016 · What elevates Scarlet Street is the stellar direction by Fritz (Metropolis) Lang and a hard-boiled, cynical sex-centered script by Dudley (For Whom The Bell Tolls) Nichols. “Licentious, profane, obscure and contrary to the good order of the community” was how 1940s censors categorized Scarlet Street.