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Woman on the Run
Woman on the Run

Woman on the Run (1950)

68% User Rating
1h 17min
Thriller
Crime
Mystery

"As Startling as Your OWN Scream in the Night!"

Frank Johnson, a sole witness to a gangland murder, goes into hiding and is trailed by Police Inspector Ferris, on the theory that Frank is trying to escape from possible retaliation. Frank's wife, Eleanor, suspects he is actually running away from their unsuccessful marriage. Aided by a newspaperman, Danny Leggett, Eleanor sets out to locate her husband. The killer is also looking for him, and keeps close tabs on Eleanor.

Norman FosterDirector

Cast

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Ann Sheridan

Ann Sheridan

Eleanor Johnson

Dennis O'Keefe

Dennis O'Keefe

Dan Legget

Robert Keith

Robert Keith

Inspector Martin Ferris

John Qualen

John Qualen

Maibus

Frank Jenks

Frank Jenks

Detective Homer Shaw

Ross Elliott

Ross Elliott

Frank Johnson

Jane Liddell

Jane Liddell

Messenger Girl

Joan Shawlee

Joan Shawlee

Blonde

J. Farrell MacDonald

J. Farrell MacDonald

Cap, the Retired Ferryboat Captain

Steven Geray

Steven Geray

Dr. Arnold Hohler

Victor Sen Yung

Victor Sen Yung

Sammy Chung

Reiko Sato

Reiko Sato

Suzie

Syd Saylor

Syd Saylor

Sullivan

The Movie Database

Tom Dillon

Joe Gordon

Frank Baker

Frank Baker

Morgue Attendant (uncredited)

Steve Carruthers

Steve Carruthers

Optometrist (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Spencer Chan

Chinese Waiter (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Mike Donovan

Irish Cop (uncredited)

Franklyn Farnum

Franklyn Farnum

Coroner (uncredited)

Milton Kibbee

Milton Kibbee

Man Yelling from Apartment House (uncredited)

The Movie Database

William J. O'Brien

Waiter at Sullivan's Grotto (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Tom Quinn

Reporter (uncredited)

Lee Roberts

Lee Roberts

Cop (uncredited)

Jeffrey Sayre

Jeffrey Sayre

Police Detective (uncredited)

Sammee Tong

Sammee Tong

Witness to Suzie's Fall (uncredited)

Ray Walker

Ray Walker

Piano Player (uncredited)

Eddy Waller

Eddy Waller

Embarcadero Storekeeper (uncredited)

Reviews (3)

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S
Steve
Rating 80%

June 24, 2016

It's been a long time since Film Noir of the Week first discussed Woman on the Run. At the time the film was just put out on a public domain DVD label. Through the haze and scratchy audio it was clear that the film is just excellent. The highly enjoyable crime film and sometimes travelogue of 40s San Francisco is irresistible. True, most remember Ann Sheridan shedding her glamorous persona or the dogged cop stuck with the dog (Robert Keith). But what I've really grown to appreciate is Dennis O'Keefe. He plays a machine-gun talking reporter rat-tat-tatting his lines as he tails Sheridan. O'Keefe was from a show biz family. His parents were a duo in a vaudeville act that would frequently travel to Los Angeles. By the time O'Keefe was 16 the experienced vaudevillian himself was writing for the "Our Gang" series -- penning scripts or just coming up with gags. When not writing, he was an extra and even a sometimes stunt man in countless films -- including a bit part in The Marx Brothers Duck Soup at the age of 25. But he struggled to make a success of himself. Legend has it, Clark Gable noticed the young extra while making Saratoga and ordered a screen test. By 1938, the bit-part actor was now in credited roles and would enjoy a healthy career in film in front of the camera. But O'Keefe probably would have been just fine as a writer. The 1938 film The Kid Comes Back writer Don Miller in "B" Movies: An Informal Survey of the American Low-Budget Film 1933-1945 called the movie "fast, funny, studiously avoided the formula cliches peculiar to films around prize fights... the story, by the way, is by E.J. Flanagan, who at the time was a struggling bit player. Flanagan hit the jackpot later... when he became Dennis O'Keefe." Just as O'Keefe was making a name as an actor. According to his 1968 obituary in the NY Times, O'Keefe never stopped writing during his acting days. While playing the lead in the great T-Men, he worked on the script with John C. Higgins. It's not surprising that none of his writing for Our Gang, The Kid Comes Back and T-Men are noted on his IMDB page. He, like so many other jack-of-all-trades, did every job in the business but is only really remembered today for his work in front of the camera. His acting was worth remembering, though. His notable films in the film noir world include The Leopard Man, T-Men, Raw Deal, The Company She Keeps and Abandoned. But you'd be crazy to forget his comedic roles in Brewster's Millions, The Affairs of Jimmy Valentine and Topper Returns. I really enjoy him in Woman on the Run. Check out the way O'Keefe pronounces "Po-leece" during a chat in Chinatown, or his crack about a female cop tailing them "Say, did you get a load of that female impersonator following you?" I'm convinced that O'Keefe had a hand in polishing his lines in Woman on the Run. He may be second banana in the film, but he certainly holds his own.

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