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The Whistler (1944 film)

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Director
  
Film series
  
The Whistler Film Series

Country
  
United States

6.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Mystery, Thriller

Duration
  

Language
  
English

The Whistler (1944 film) movie poster

Release date
  
March 30, 1944 (1944-03-30) (United States)

Based on
  
The Whistler1942-55 radio series by J. Donald Wilson

Writer
  
Eric Taylor, J. Donald Wilson (story)

Music director
  
Lucien Moraweck, Rene Garriguenc

Cast
  
Richard Dix
(Earl C. Conrad), (Alice Walker),
J. Carrol Naish
(The killer), (Gorman)

Similar movies
  
, ,
The Third Man
,
The Asphalt Jungle
,
Out of the Past
,
The Big Sleep

Return of the whistler 1948


The Whistler is a 1944 American mystery film noir based on the radio drama The Whistler. Directed by William Castle, the production features Richard Dix, Gloria Stuart and J. Carrol Naish. It was the first of Columbia Pictures' eight "Whistler" films starring Richard Dix produced in the 1940s.

Contents

The Whistler (1944 film) movie scenes

Plot

The Whistler (1944 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters7995p7995p

Industrialist Earl C. Conrad, who failed to rescue his wife at sea and now suffers from grief and guilt, arranges to have a hit man end his life. He does not know how the killing will be done, but knows that it will happen within days. Suddenly Conrad learns that his wife is still alive, and he tries to call off the hit. Unfortunately, the underworld go-between who made the deal with him has been killed in the meantime, leaving Conrad unable to learn the identity of the actual hit man.

The pathological hired killer, obsessed with carrying out his mission, stalks Conrad as the frightened industrialist stays on the move. Always looking over his shoulder and trying to think of a way to survive, Conrad keeps running into other dangers, including the vengeance of the dead man's wife.

Cast

  • Richard Dix as Earl C. Conrad
  • Gloria Stuart as Alice Walker
  • J. Carrol Naish as The Killer
  • Alan Dinehart as Gorman
  • Otto Forrest as the voice of The Whistler (uncredited)
  • Joan Woodbury as Antoinette 'Toni' Vigran (uncredited)
  • Robert Emmett Keane as Charles 'Charlie' McNear (uncredited)
  • Don Costello as Lefty Vigran aka Gorss (uncredited)
  • Critical response

    When the film was released, film critic Bosley Crowther panned it, writing, "Such is the miserable expedient to which Richard Dix is reduced in this weary, illogical imitation of an Alfred Hitchcock (plus an early Fritz Lang) film. For an hour or thereabouts he starts and stumbles just out of reach of a relentless J. Carrol Naish, who first has the original intention of frightening Mr. Dix to death. Along that line, the producers might have made a likely serio-comic film, but they change Mr. Naish's mind too quickly and send him—and the picture—in for a real kill. And so we get the routine spectacle of a dragged-out killer-and-victim chase, all very serious and phony—and, consequently, very dull."

    More recently, film critic Dennis Schwartz gave the film a more favorable review, writing, "This action-packed one-hour mystery story was the first film in a series spun off from the successful radio program of the '30s and '40s. It starts off with some whistling and a monologue by the unseen Whistler, just as it was done on radio: 'I am the Whistler...and I know many things, for I walk by night.' ... This well-done suspense story continues with the panicky Earl trying to track down the killer to cancel the contract, while the killer thinks he can scare his target to death by just tailing him. The film's theme is that man cannot change his destiny, and if his destiny is to die by murder...that's what it will be. The Whistler states at the end: 'I know because I am the Whistler.' The result is an entertaining B film."

    Film critic Leonard Maltin gave it three our of four stars, writing: "[This] tense and moody tale of fate sets the ironic tone for the rest [of the Whistler series]. Naish shines as the principal hit man."

    Sequels

    The film was a popular box office attraction and seven sequels were produced over the ensuing four years.

  • The Whistler - 1944, directed by William Castle
  • The Mark of the Whistler - 1944, directed by William Castle
  • The Power of the Whistler – 1945, directed by Lew Landers
  • Voice of the Whistler – 1945, directed by William Castle
  • Mysterious Intruder – 1946, directed by William Castle
  • The Secret of the Whistler – 1946, directed by George Sherman
  • The Thirteenth Hour – 1947, directed by William Clemens
  • The Return of the Whistler – 1948, directed by D. Ross Lederman
  • References

    The Whistler (1944 film) Wikipedia
    The Whistler (1944 film) IMDb The Whistler (1944 film) themoviedb.org