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Between Midnight and Dawn Poster

Between Midnight and Dawn

THE STORY OF PROWL CAR 13...BASED ON THE POLICE FILES OF A GREAT CITY!
1950 | 89m | English

(1423 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

Rocky and Dan, war buddies, are prowl car cops on night duty. Dan is a cynic who views all lawbreakers as scum; Rocky feels more lenient. Both are attracted to the radio voice of communicator Kate Mallory; but in person, Kate proves reluctant to get involved with men who just might stop a bullet. By lucky chance, Rocky and Dan cause big trouble for murderous racketeer Ritchie Garris; but when he swears vengeance, Kate's fears may prove justified.
Release Date: Oct 01, 1950
Director: Gordon Douglas
Writer: Leo Katcher, Eugene Ling, Gerald Drayson Adams
Genres: Crime
Keywords police brutality, police, woman between two men, escaped convict, film noir, mobster, organized crime, secretary, police officer, police stakeout, good cop bad cop, buddy cop, escaped prisoner, nightclub singer, patrol car, prowl car, police shootout, nightclub performer, racketeer, buddies, escaped killer, murdered cop, war buddies, gangland killing, night patrol, police procedural, police dragnet, patrol officer
Production Companies Columbia Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Mark Stevens Officer Rocky Barnes
Edmond O'Brien Officer Dan Purvis
Gale Storm Katharine 'Kate' Mallory
Donald Buka Ritchie Garris
Gale Robbins Terry Romaine
Anthony Ross Police Lt. Masterson
Roland Winters Leo Cusick
Tito Vuolo Romano
Grazia Narciso Mrs. Romano
Madge Blake Mrs. Mallory
Lora Lee Michel Kathy Blake
Jack Del Rio Louis Franissi
Philip Van Zandt Joe Quist
Cliff Bailey Police Sgt. Bailey
Tony Barr Harry Yost
Peter Mamakos 'Cootie' Adams
Ric Roman Rod Peters (as Earl Breitbard)
Wheaton Chambers Building Superintendent Blake
Frances Morris Mrs. Blake - Superintendent's Wife
James Brown Officer Haynes (uncredited)
Billy Gray Peter J. 'Petey' Conklin (uncredited)
Brick Sullivan Policeman (uncredited)
Tony Taylor Thurlow Conklin (uncredited)
Guy Way Reporter (uncredited)
Name Job
Leo Katcher Story
Gene Havlick Editor
Eugene Ling Screenplay
George E. Diskant Director of Photography
Gordon Douglas Director
Gerald Drayson Adams Story
George Duning Original Music Composer
Name Title
Hunt Stromberg Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 5 8 3
2024 5 5 9 2
2024 6 4 8 1
2024 7 6 12 2
2024 8 6 11 2
2024 9 3 4 2
2024 10 4 7 1
2024 11 4 10 1
2024 12 3 6 1
2025 1 5 8 2
2025 2 2 4 1
2025 3 2 3 1
2025 4 1 2 1
2025 5 2 3 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 1 0
2025 9 2 3 1

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Reviews

John Chard
7.0

Here, buy yourself a new head. One with a brain in it! Between Midnight and Dawn is directed by Gordon Douglas and adapted to screenplay by Eugene Ling from a story by Gerald Drayson Adams and Leo Katcher. It stars Edmond O'Brien, Mark Stevens, Gale Storm, Donald Buka and Gale Robbins. Music is ... by George Duning and cinematography by George E. Diskant. Stevens and O'Brien play two prowl car cops, long time friends who fall for the same woman (Storm), but that could never come between them. That's the job of rising crime boss Ritchie Garris (Buka)... On the page it looked as if it easily could have got bogged down by romantic threads and buddy buddy cop formula. Thankfully that isn't the case. Finding its way into a number of film noir publications, it's a pic that only just qualifies on account of certain narrative thematics and the night time photography of the always excellent Diskant. On its own terms anyway it's a damn good policer, one that is handled with knowing direction from Douglas and features the reassuring presences of Stevens and O'Brien, both of whom play cops with different attitudes to the job, but both believable and never played as trite good cop bad cop fodder. In the lady corner are Storm and Robbins, the former in the middle of our twin testosterone fuelled coppers, and the latter the gangster's moll. Both sultry and beautiful - even if Storm is sporting a hairstyle that equally is both distracting for the character and does her obvious sexiness no favours, but both the gals are written with thought and performed as such. Then there is Buka as scumbag Garris. This character clearly has ideas above his station, something which our coppers gleefully like to remind him of. But Garris is a nasty piece of work, which ultimately leads us to a thrilling and suspenseful finale. Buka (The Street with No Name) really should have had a bigger noir/crime film career. Sometimes funny and laced with choice dialogue, this still also manages to impact with dramatic, suspenseful and attention grabbing scenes. This a film that's easy to recommend to lovers of 40s/50s policer movies; it's also pretty bloody for the time. There's a great crew behind this and they don't let anyone down. 7/10

May 16, 2024