The Man Who Lived Twice
The Man Who Lived Twice is a 1936 American crime film directed by Harry Lachman and starring Ralph Bellamy, Marian Marsh and Thurston Hall. It was remade as Man in the Dark in 1953.[1]
The Man Who Lived Twice | |
---|---|
Directed by | Harry Lachman |
Produced by | Ben Pivar Irving Briskin |
Written by | Henry Altimus Fred Niblo Jr. Arthur Strawn Tom Van Dycke |
Starring | Ralph Bellamy Marian Marsh Thurston Hall |
Cinematography | James Van Trees |
Edited by | Byron Robinson |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date | September 25, 1936 |
Running time | 73 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Cast
- Ralph Bellamy as Dr. James Blake / 'Slick' Rawley
- Marian Marsh as Janet Haydon
- Thurston Hall as Dr. Clifford L. Schuyler
- Isabel Jewell as Peggy Russell
- Nana Bryant as Margaret Schuyler
- Ward Bond as John 'Gloves' Baker
- Henry Kolker as Judge Henry Treacher
- Willard Robertson as Police Insp. Logan
- Ann Doran as Nurse Cameron
- Kathrin Clare Ward as Aggie
- Beatrice Curtis as Prisoner
- Mary Lou Dix as Prisoner
- Franklyn Farnum as Juror
- Betty Farrington as Head Matron
- Jascha Heifetz as Himself - Violinist (archive footage)
- Edward Keane as Police Commissioner
- Edward LeSaint as Judge
- Eric Mayne as Man in Montage
- Bruce Mitchell as Cleary
- Bert Moorhouse as Carney
- G. Raymond Nye as Stoney - Fingerprint Man
- Frank O'Connor as Frank - Policeman
- Cyril Ring as Heifetz Concert Attendee
- Nell Roy as Prisoner
References
- Cardullo p.234
Bibliography
- Cardullo, Bert. European Directors and Their Films: Essays on Cinema. Scarecrow Press, 2012.
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