Crime Doctor (film)

Crime Doctor

theatrical poster
Directed by Michael Gordon
Produced by Ralph Cohn
Written by C. Graham Baker
Louis Lantz
Jerome Odlum (adaptation)
Based on Crime Doctor
1940-7 radio series
by Max Marcin
Starring Warner Baxter
Margaret Lindsay
John Litel
Music by Lee Zahler
Mischa Bakaleinikoff (uncredited)
Cinematography James S. Brown Jr.
Edited by Dwight Caldwell
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
  • June 22, 1943 (1943-06-22)
Running time
66 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Crime Doctor (1943) is a crime film adapted from the radio series of the same name. The film stars Warner Baxter as a man with amnesia determined to remember his past. The film was released by Columbia Pictures.

Nine sequels followed, all starring Baxter.[1] These later movies were somewhat more conventional mysteries than the original film. Baxter finished his career with the series, which was relatively easy work for him after a nervous breakdown he had suffered. He died two years after the final "Crime Doctor" movie.[2]

Plot

During the Great Depression, a man (Warner Baxter) is thrown out of a speeding car. When he regains consciousness in a hospital, he has amnesia. He is visited by a man who accuses him of faking his condition. The stranger calls the patient Phil and demands to know what happened to a valise, then runs away when Phil summons a nurse for help. When the man recovers, he takes the name Robert Ordway, after a hospital benefactor.

Ordway's doctor, John Carey (Ray Collins), wants to continue treating him and offers lodging in his house. All attempts to discover his identity fail, so Ordway decides to learn all he can about his condition. After ten years, he has become a successful psychiatrist, in partnership with Carey. Ordway begins treating prison inmates. He is so successful, he is named head of the state parole board.

While on a date in a nightclub with social worker Grace Fielding (Margaret Lindsay), he is recognized by two men from his past: Joe Dylan (Harold Huber) and Nick Ferris (Don Costello). They and a third man, Emilio Caspari (John Litel), are unsure if he is their partner in crime. They convince convict Pearl Adams (an uncredited Dorothy Tree), their associate's ex-girlfriend, to apply for parole. At her hearing, she calls Ordway "Dr. Morgan". Ordway badgers her until she reveals that he is Phil Morgan, the mastermind of a $200,000 payroll robbery from which the money was never recovered.

To trigger his memory, he contacts the three men and reenacts the events of the day he lost his memory. Tempers flare and the men fight. During the struggle, Ordway is struck on the head and remembers his past. He also acquires the gun. He calls the police and has the gang arrested.

Insisting on being tried for the robbery, Morgan admits his wrongdoing, but takes pride in his accomplishments since. The jury finds him guilty, but recommends clemency. The judge sentences him to the minimum term of ten years, then suspends the sentence, saying, "We need men like you."

Cast

References

External links

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