Quiet Please, Murder
Quiet Please, Murder is a 1942 drama directed by John Larkin, starring George Sanders, Gail Patrick and Richard Denning. Based on the short story Death Walks in Marble Halls by Lawrence G. Blochman that appeared in American Magazine (Sep 1942).[1] The film is also known under the title Death from the Sanskrit.
Quiet Please, Murder | |
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Film still with Richard Denning and Gail Patrick | |
Directed by | John Larkin |
Produced by | Ralph Dietrich |
Written by | Lawrence G. Blochman (story) John Larkin |
Starring | George Sanders Gail Patrick Richard Denning |
Music by | Emil Newman |
Cinematography | Joseph MacDonald |
Edited by | Louis R. Loeffler |
Distributed by | Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation |
Release date |
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Running time | 70 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Premise
Jim Fleg, a book thief/forger, sells a fake book to a Nazi through Myra Blandy, a female agent.
Cast
- George Sanders as Jim Fleg
- Gail Patrick as Myra Blandy
- Richard Denning as Hal McByrne
- Lynne Roberts as Kay Ryan
- Sidney Blackmer as Martin Cleaver
- Kurt Katch as Eric Pahsen
- Byron Foulger as Edmund Walpole
- George Walcott as Benson
- Paul Porcasi as Rebescu
- Margaret Brayton as Miss Oval
- Mae Marsh as Miss Hartwig
- Lon McCallister as Freddie, the Stack Boy (as Bud McCallister)
- Charles Tannen as Hollis, phoney detective in dark coat
- Arthur Space as Vance
- Charles Cane as Inspector Henderson
References
- Quiet Please, Murder, Turner Classic Movies
External links
- Quiet Please Murder at the American Film Institute Catalog
- Quiet Please, Murder at IMDb
- Quiet Please, Murder at AllMovie
- Quiet Please, Murder at the TCM Movie Database
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