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6 days ago
Manhattan psychiatrist Ann Hecker (Annabella Sciorra, The Hand That Rocks The Cradle, Jungle Fever) is haunted by secret fantasies - recurring erotic dreams inspired by the bondage-and-sex confessions of a lustful patient (Deborah Unger). Seeking help, Ann approaches her university mentor, Dr. Leo Green (Alan Alda). But real treatment comes when Ann meets Doug McDowell (Jamey Sheridan), a ruggedly handsome pilot whose attentions spark a love affair beyond Ann's wildest fantasies. Then one of Ann's patients turns up dead with clues pointing to Doug as the murderer. Can Ann trust this man she hardly knows? Is he after her love... or her life? With unrelenting, pulse-pounding suspense, Whispers In The Dark is an edge-of-your-seat thriller that will keep you guessing until its shocking, fever-pitched end. Co-starring Anthony LaPaglia (One Good Cop) and Jill Clayburgh.237 days ago
Opening title credits for Angels With Dirty Faces, 1938, starring James Cagney, Pat O'Brien and Ann Sheridan, directed by Michael Curtiz from an original story by Rowland Brown.237 days ago
Rocky (James Cagney) brings Laury (Ann Sheridan) to a fancy club owned by Frazier (Humphrey Bogart) and Keefer (George Bancroft) whereupon he hustles himself some ownership in Angels With Dirty Faces, 1938.237 days ago
The Lower East Side is introduced along with Frankie Burke ("Rocky"), William Tracey ("Jerry") and Marilyn Knowlden ("Laury") who'll grow up to be James Cagney, Pat O'Brien and Ann Sheridan in Angels With Dirty Faces, 1938.304 days ago
Ex-Golden Gloves fighter Danny Kenny has it all worked out. He'll turn pro to bankroll his brother's dream of writing a symphonic paean to the teeming city where they both live: New York. But life pulls the sidewalk out from under Danny when he's blinded during a brutal 15-round welterweight title bout. James Cagney plays Danny in this heart-tugging melodrama co-starring Ann Sheridan, Anthony Quinn, film-debuting Arthur Kennedy and in a rare acting turn before becoming a director, Elia Kazan. Among familiar studio players, there's an unbilled one: a vivid backlot and rear-screen Manhattan. "Sometimes we wonder," The New York Times' Bosley Crowther wrote, "whether it wasn't really the Warner brothers who got New York from the Indians, so diligent and devoted have they been in feeling the great city's pulse."


