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Fallen Angel is a 1945 American film noir directed by Otto Preminger, with cinematography by Joseph LaShelle, who had also worked with Preminger on Laura a year before. The film features Alice Faye , Dana Andrews , Linda Darnell and Charles Bickford .
The film The File on Thelma Jordon (1950) was adapted by Ketti Frings from an unpublished story by Holland, directed by Robert Siodmak, and starred Barbara Stanwyck and Wendell Corey. [ 8 ] Two of Holland's novels were published as part of the French Série Noire : Fallen Angel was n° 270, published in 1955 as Le Resquilleur , and The Glass ...
They became good friends and got along well during filming. The film received generally lackluster reviews as the Ruritanian romance genre had become outdated, and it failed to earn back its cost of production. [citation needed] Fallen Angel (1945) was exactly what Preminger had been anticipating.
This is a list of American films that were released in 1945. In that year, the film The Lost Weekend won Best Picture at ... Fallen Angel: Otto Preminger: Alice Faye ...
[1]: 84 The film became a great success, and with Darnell's triumph assured, she was allowed to abandon her upcoming film, Don Juan Quilligan (1945), which would have been another low point in her career. [1]: 84 In January 1945, she was added to the cast of the film noir Fallen Angel (1945), which also included Dana Andrews and Alice Faye.
Fallen Angel (1945 film) Follow That Woman; J. Jealousy (1945 film) M. Mildred Pierce (film) S. Scarlet Street; The Spider (1945 film) The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry
Johnny Angel is a 1945 American film noir directed by Edwin L. Marin and written by Steve Fisher (adapted by Frank Gruber) from the 1944 novel Mr. Angel Comes Aboard by Charles Gordon Booth. The movie stars George Raft, Claire Trevor and Signe Hasso, and features Hoagy Carmichael. [3]
The year 1945 in film involved some significant events. With 1945 being the last year of World War II , the many films released this year had themes of patriotism, sacrifices, and peace. [ 1 ] In the United States, there were more than eighteen thousand movie theatres operating in 1945, a figure that grew by a third from a decade earlier.