Panic In The Streets (1950) - (Movie Clip) You Can Take Me At My Word
Joining a scene in which uniformed Public Health Service doctor Reed (Richard Widmark) is trying to tell the New Orleans mayor (H. Waller Fowler Jr.), police commissioner (Val Winter) and detective Warren (Paul Douglas) how to deal with a murder victim who had pneumonic plauge, early in Elia Kazans Panic In The Streets, 1950.
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Panic in the Streets - (Original Trailer)
A killer evades the police not knowing he has a deadly plague in Panic in the Streets (1950).
Panic In The Streets (1950) -- (Movie Clip) It's Practically Pure Culture
Commanding work by Richard Widmark as New Orleans public health officer Reed, called in to inspect the body of a murder victim that suggests infectious disease, Elia Kazan directing, Paul Hostetler, Waldo Pitkin and George Ehmig his alert colleagues, early in Panic In The Streets, 1950.
Panic In The Streets (1950) -- (Movie Clip) In Case It Is Something
Remarkable intimate family scene though still expository, Elia Kazan directing from Daniel Fuchs screenplay, weve just met Richard Widmark whos a dad and public health officer in probably-New Orleans, and Barbara Bel Geddes his wife, when hes called in on a rare day off, after an unwell immigrant was shot and dumped in the opening scenes, early in Panic In The Streets, 1950.
Panic In The Streets (1950) -- (Movie Clip) You Can't Quit Now
The title but not this opening scene would suggest the topic, of a contagious disease outbreak in a port city, as clearly ill and probably-immigrant Kochak (Lewis Charles) tries to leave a poker game run by Blackie (Jack Palance), Fitch and Poldi (Zero Mostel, Guy Thomajan) his henchmen, in Elia Kazans Panic In The Streets, 1950.
Panic In The Streets (1950) -- (Movie Clip) Just To Be Important
Struggling to contain pneumonic plague in New Orleans, military public health official Reed (Richard Widmark) tries to find common cause with cop Warren (Paul Douglas) whos not convinced of the emergency and wants to use conventional police tactics, in Panic In The Streets, 1950, directed by Elia Kazan.