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The theme of doubles is "the key element in the film's structure," [47] and Hitchcock starts right off in his title sequence making this point: there are two taxicabs, two redcaps, two pairs of feet, two sets of train rails that cross twice. Once on the train, Bruno orders a pair of double drinks—"The only kind of doubles I play", he says ...
This is the twentieth "Treehouse of Horror" installment, containing three self-contained stories: In "Dial 'M' for Murder or Press '#' to Return to Main Menu", Lisa is forced into a Hitchcock-esque murder scheme by Bart; in "Don't Have a Cow, Mankind", Springfield is once again overrun by zombies thanks to Krusty Burger's latest sandwich; and ...
Criss Cross: Robert Siodmak: Burt Lancaster, Yvonne De Carlo, Dan Duryea: United States [59] Kind Hearts and Coronets: Robert Hamer: Dennis Price, Alec Guinness, Valerie Hobson: United Kingdom [60] The Devil's Henchman: Seymour Friedman: Warner Baxter, Al Bridge, Ken Christy: United States [61] Entre onze heures et minuit: Henri Decoin
Criss Cross is a 1949 American film noir crime tragedy film starring Burt Lancaster, Yvonne De Carlo and Dan Duryea, directed by Robert Siodmak and written by Daniel Fuchs based on Don Tracy's 1934 novel of the same name. [2] This black-and-white film was shot partly on location in the Bunker Hill section of Los Angeles.
Alfred Hitchcock directed the British original and the German-language remake. The Music Man (1962) The Music Man (2003) The remake is a television film. My Bloody Valentine (1981) My Bloody Valentine 3D (2009) As the remake's title indicates, it was released in 3D, as well as 2D. My Father's Dragon (1997) My Father's Dragon (2022) My Father ...
Criss Cross (1948) The Great Sinner (1949) The File on Thelma Jordon (1949) Deported (1950) The Whistle at Eaton Falls (1951) The Crimson Pirate (1952) Flesh and the Woman (1954) Die Ratten (1955) My Father, the Actor (1956) The Devil Strikes at Night (1957) O.S.S. (1957–1958, TV series, 4 episodes) Dorothea Angermann (1959) The Rough and the ...
As the 1940s progressed, he found his niche as the "sniveling, deliberately taunting" antagonist in a number of films noir (Scarlet Street, The Woman in the Window, The Great Flamarion, Criss Cross, Too Late for Tears, Johnny Stool Pigeon), and Westerns such as Along Came Jones and Black Bart, although he was sometimes cast in more sympathetic ...
Curtis's uncredited screen debut came in the crime drama Criss Cross (1949) playing a rumba dancer, dancing with Yvonne de Carlo. The male star was Burt Lancaster who would make a number of films with Curtis. In his second film, City Across the River (also in 1949), he was credited as "Anthony Curtis" [11] [user-generated source?