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Outside the Wall

Outside the Wall (1950)

1h 20m | PG-13

⭐ 6 / 10

Larry Nelson, paroled from prison after serving nearly half of his thirty-year sentence, is determined to not fall into the clutches of the law again, and takes a quiet job at a country sanitarium. Thete, he meets and falls for a nurse, Charlotte Maynard, and he knows the only way to enter her web is to have a lot of money, for Miss Maynard is somewhat of a gold-digger.

Director: Crane Wilbur

Studio: Universal International Pictures

Genre: Crime, Drama, Romance, Thriller

Video: 720p

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Cast

Richard Basehart

Richard Basehart

as Larry Nelson

Marilyn Maxwell

Marilyn Maxwell

as Charlotte Maynard

Signe Hasso

Signe Hasso

as Celia Bentner

Dorothy Hart

Dorothy Hart

as Ann Taylor

Joseph Pevney

Joseph Pevney

as Gus Wormser

Lloyd Gough

Lloyd Gough

as Red Chaney

Reviews

By CinemaSerf

Nelson" (Richard Basehart" is half way through a thirty year prison stretch when he is released on parole. Determined never to go back behind bars, he capitalises on his time at the prison hospital and finds a job at a sanatorium. His eye wanders to the rather venal nurse "Ann" (Dorothy Hart) but there's not really any way he can afford to indulge her. Until, that is, he discovers a patient in the place that he knows of old. 'Jack" (John Hoyt) is another criminal, suffering from TB, who was reputedly mixed up in a million dollar security heist a long time ago. In return for a bit of help with his estranged wife, he is prepared to pay "Nelson" handsomely. That wife "Celia" (Signe Hasso) has grand designs on this cash, and with a gang of unsavoury types led by "Garth" (Henry Morgan) decides to get the loot at all costs. Suddenly, "Nelson" finds his life in danger and he has to think nimbly on his feet if he is to stay alive, at liberty - and hopefully find the cash too. Basehart never was the most charismatic of actors but he does enough here to keep this thriller on it's toes as we build to a quirky denouement that raises the dead for a double-cross (or, maybe not). Standard afternoon fayre, this, but watchable.