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I Died a Thousand Times (1955) | Directed by Stuart Heisler

Violent Saturday (1955) | Directed by Richard Fleischer

Gilda (1946) | Directed by Charles Vidor

The City That Never Sleeps (1953) | Directed by John H. Auer

Dark Passage (1947) | Directed by Delmer Daves

I Love Trouble (1948) | Directed by S. Sylvan Simon

The Killers (1946) | Directed by Robert Siodmak

Mysterious Intruder (1946) | Directed by William Castle

Flaxy Martin (1949) | Directed by Richard L. Bare

Cornered (1945) | Directed by Edward Dmytryk

A Life at Stake (1954) | Directed by Paul Guilfoyle

Nora Prentiss (1947) | Directed by Vincent Sherman

Out of the Fog (1941) | Directed by Anatole Litvak

Ace in the Hole (1951) | Directed by Billy Wilder

Crossfire (1947) | Directed by Edward Dmytryk

Naked Alibi (1954) | Directed by Jerry Hopper

Sorry, Wrong Number (1948)| Directed by Anatole Litvak

T-Men (1947) | Directed by Anthony Mann

The Blue Gardenia (1953) | Directed by Fritz Lang

Private Hell 36 (1954) | Directed by Don Siegel

The Enforcer (1951) | Directed by Bretaigne Windust

Moonrise (1948) | Directed by Frank Borzage

Woman on the Run (1950) | Directed by Norman Foster

D.O.A. (1950) | Directed by Rudolph Maté

Dancing with Crime (1947) | Directed by John Paddy Carstairs

The Dark Mirror (1946) | Directed by Robert Siodmak

A Double Life (1947) | Directed by George Cukor

711 Ocean Drive (1950) | Directed by Joseph M. Newman

Drive a Crooked Road (1954) | Directed by Richard Quine

Johnny O'Clock (1947) | Directed by Robert Rossen

Hell's Half Acre (1954) | Directed by John H. Auer

The Shanghai Story (1954) | Directed by Frank Lloyd

Cry Vengeance (1954) | Directed by Mark Stevens

The Clouded Yellow (1950) | British film noir thriller directed by Ralph Thomas

The House by the River (1950) | Film Noir directed by Fritz Lang

Outside the Wall (1950) | directed by Crane Wilbur

Diplomatic Courier (1952) | American film noir directed by Henry Hathaway

One Way Street (1950) | Film noir crime drama directed by Hugo Fregonese

Pickup (1951) | Film noir directed by Hugo Haas

Quicksand (1950) | Film noir directed by Irving Pichel

Moontide (1942) | Film noir drama directed by Archie Mayo

House of Strangers (1949) | Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz

Rope of Sand (1949) | A classic film noir directed by William Dieterle

The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) | A classic film noir directed by Lewis Milestone

Johnny Allegro (1949) | A film noir crime thriller directed by Ted Tetzlaff

Somewhere in the Night (1946) | film noir directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz

Framed (1947) | A film noir directed by Richard Wallace

Key Witness (1947) | A film noir directed by D. Ross Lederman

Whirlpool (1950) | Film noir directed by Otto Preminger

Stranger on the Third Floor (1940) | Directed by Boris Ingster

Mr. District Attorney (1947) | Directed by Robert B. Sinclair

Man Bait (1952) | Directed by Terence Fisher

The Arnelo Affair (1947) | Directed by Arch Oboler

The Woman in Question (1950) | Directed by Anthony Asquith

The Stranger (1946) | American film noir directed by Orson Welles

Between Midnight and Dawn (1950) | American crime drama film noir directed by Gordon Douglas

The House on Telegraph Hill (1951) | American film noir directed by Robert Wise

The Mob (1951) | A film noir directed by Robert Parrish

The Ring (1952) | American film noir directed by Kurt Neumann

Vicki (1953) | American film noir directed by Harry Horner

Undertow (1949) | Directed by William Castle

Bait (1954) Directed by Hugo Haas

Shield for Murder (1954) | Directed by Edmond O'Brien and Howard W. Koch

Whiplash (1948) | Directed by Lewis Seiler

Island of Doomed Men (1940) | American film noir crime thriller directed by Charles Barton

The Raging Tide (1951) | A film noir crime drama directed by George Sherman.

The Crooked Way (1949) | A film noir directed by Robert Florey

The Strange Woman (1946) | Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer

Larceny (1948) | A film noir directed by George Sherman

Impact (1949) | Directed by Arthur Lubin

Dangerous Passage (1944) | A suspenseful film noir directed by William Berke

The Hitch-Hiker (1953) | Directed by Ida Lupino

The Dark Corner (1946) | Directed by Henry Hathaway

Walk a Crooked Mile (1948) | A film noir directed by Gordon Douglas

Pickup on South Street (1953) | Directed by Samuel Fuller

Fallen Angel (1945) | Directed by Otto Preminger

Borderline (1950) | Directed by William A. Seiter

The Chase (1946) | Directed by Arthur Ripley

He Walked by Night (1948) | A gripping film noir directed by Alfred L. Werker

Temptation (1946) | Directed by Irving Pichel

One Girl's Confession (1953) | Directed by Hugo Haas

Hollywood Story (1951) | Directed by William Castle

Black Angel (1946) | A film noir directed by Roy William Neill

Strange Impersonation (1945) | Directed by Anthony Mann

The Flame (1947) | Directed by John H. Auer

Strange Bargain (1949) | A film noir directed by Will Price

Mr. Soft Touch (1949) | Directed by Gordon Douglas and Henry Levin

Leave Her to Heaven (1945) | Directed by John M. Stahl

Deported (1950) | Directed by Robert Siodmak

Where the Sidewalk Ends (1950) | Directed by Otto Preminger

Born to Kill (1947) | Directed by Robert Wise

Double Indemnity (1944) | Directed by Billy Wilder

The Suspect (1944) | Directed by Robert Siodmak

The Reckless Moment (1949) | Directed by Max Ophüls

Kansas City Confidential (1952) | Directed by Phil Karlson

Behind Locked Doors (1948) | Directed by Oscar Boetticher Jr.

Boomerang (1947) | Directed by Elia Kazan

The Lady from Shanghai (1947) | Directed by Orson Welles

Out of the Past (1947) | Directed by Jacques Tourneur

Mildred Pierce (1945) | Directed by Michael Curtiz

Behind Green Lights (1946) | Directed by Otto Brower

Suddenly (1954) | Directed by Lewis Allen

Human Desire (1954) | Directed by Fritz Lang

Pushover (1954) | Directed by Richard Quine

Tokyo Joe (1949) | Directed by Stuart Heisler

Without Warning (1952) | Directed by Arnold Laven

Brute Force (1947) | Directed by Jules Dassin

Wicked Woman (1953) | Directed by Russell Rouse

I Was a Shoplifter (1950) | A film noir crime drama directed by Charles Lamont

Blood on the Sun (1945) | A film noir and war drama directed by Frank Lloyd

The Long Memory (1953) | Directed by Robert Hamer

Thieves' Highway (1949) | Directed by Jules Dassin

Ruthless (1948) | Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer

Crack-Up (1946) | Directed by Irving Reis

Edge of Doom (1950) | Directed by Mark Robson

Roaring City (1951) | Directed by William Berke

The File on Thelma Jordan (1950) | Directed by Robert Siodmak

Criss Cross (1949) | Directed by Robert Siodmak

I Wake Up Screaming (1941) | Directed by H. Bruce Humberstone

Breakdown (1952) | Directed by Edmond Angelo

Detour (1945) | Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer

Vice Squad (1953) | Directed by Arnold Laven

Stage Fright (1950) | Directed by Alfred Hitchcock

I Became a Criminal (1947) | Directed by Alberto Cavalcanti

The Prowler (1951) | Directed by Joseph Losey

Danger Zone (1951) | Directed by William Berke

The Second Woman (1950) | Directed by James V. Kern

Kiss of Death (1947) | Directed by Henry Hathaway

The Thirteenth Hour (1947) | Directed by William Clemens

Pitfall (1948) | Directed by André de Toth

The Letter (1940) | Directed by William Wyler

Moss Rose (1947) | Directed by Gregory Ratoff

99 River Street (1953) | Directed by Phil Karlson

The Secret of the Whistler (1946) | Directed by George Sherman

The Man I Love (1946) | Directed by Raoul Walsh

Pursued (1947) | Directed by Raoul Walsh

Too Late for Tears (1949) | Directed by Byron Haskin

Scarlet Street (1945) | Directed by Fritz Lang

Blonde Ice (1948) | Directed by Jack Bernhard

Never Trust a Gambler (1951) | Directed by Ralph Murphy

Night Editor (1946) | Directed by Henry Levin

He Ran All the Way (1951) | Directed by John Berry

So Dark the Night (1946) | Directed by Joseph H. Lewis

Road House (1948) | Directed by Jean Negulesco

Treasure of Monte Cristo (1949) | Directed by William Berke

Port of New York (1949) | Directed by László Benedek

The Amazing Mr. X / The Spiritualist (1948) | Directed by Bernard Vorhaus

Sleep, My Love (1948) | Directed by Douglas Sirk

A Night of Adventure (1944) | Directed by Gordon Douglas

Bluebeard (1944) | Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer

The Whistler (1944) | Directed by William Castle

Cry of the City (1948) | Directed by Robert Siodmak

Two of a Kind (1951) | Directed by Henry Levin

Cover Up (1949) | Directed by Alfred E. Green

711 Ocean Drive (1950) | Directed by Joseph M. Newman
"711 Ocean Drive" is a 1950 American crime film noir directed by Joseph M. Newman. The narrative centers on Mal Granger, a telephone technician with a penchant for gambling, who becomes entangled in the world of organized crime. Utilizing his technical expertise, Mal enhances a bookmaking operation's communications, propelling him into a position of power within the syndicate. As he ascends the criminal hierarchy, Mal finds himself ensnared in a web of deceit, betrayal, and violence.
Genre: Crime / Film Noir
Director: Joseph M. Newman
Joseph M. Newman (1909–2006) was an American film director known for his work across various genres, including science fiction, westerns, and crime dramas. His notable films include "This Island Earth" (1955), a seminal work in 1950s science fiction cinema, and "Fort Massacre" (1958), a western exploring themes of leadership and survival. Newman's versatility and craftsmanship contributed to a diverse and enduring filmography.
Star Cast:
- Edmond O'Brien as Mal Granger
- Joanne Dru as Gail Mason
- Otto Kruger as Carl Stephans
- Barry Kelley as Vince Walters
- Dorothy Patrick as Trudy Maxwell
Upon its release, "711 Ocean Drive" received mixed reviews. The New York Times critic Bosley Crowther described it as "no more than an average crime picture with some colorful but vague details." Conversely, Variety praised the film, noting that "operations of the syndicates are given a realistic touch by the screenplay, and Joseph M. Newman's direction keeps the action at a fast pace." The film's box office performance was strong, grossing approximately $1,550,000 against a budget of $300,000.
Fun Facts:
1. The film's title, "711 Ocean Drive," refers to a real address in Santa Monica, California, known for its association with gambling operations during the era.
2. The production faced alleged pressures from organized crime figures displeased with the film's depiction of gambling syndicates, leading to increased security measures during filming.
3. The movie features extensive on-location shooting, including scenes at iconic sites such as the Hoover Dam and various Los Angeles locales, adding authenticity to its narrative.
4. Edmond O'Brien, known for his roles in film noir classics, delivers a compelling performance that anchors the film's tension and drama.
5. The film's climax at the Hoover Dam is notable for its suspenseful execution and serves as a highlight in the crime noir genre.
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