Home > Thriller >

Crime Doctor's Man Hunt

AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

Crime Doctor's Man Hunt (1946)

October. 24,1946
|
6.2
|
NR
| Thriller Crime
AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

A criminal psychologist investigates the murder of a veteran with amnesia.

...

Watch Trailer

Free Trial Channels

AD
Show More

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

ManiakJiggy
1946/10/24

This is How Movies Should Be Made

More
Ploydsge
1946/10/25

just watch it!

More
BoardChiri
1946/10/26

Bad Acting and worse Bad Screenplay

More
Brennan Camacho
1946/10/27

Mostly, the movie is committed to the value of a good time.

More
calvinnme
1946/10/28

... because they usually have nothing to do with the actual subject of the film. You also have to make sure you don't blink during these short fast-paced films or else you'll miss something important. Here the film opens on a young man stumbling around an amusement park in a fog of amnesia. He's had several of these spells lately and goes to Dr. Robert Ordway (Warner Baxter in the title role) for help. Ordway goes to the place where the young man says he found himself stumbling about. After walking around awhile what does he see but a couple of men coming out of a boarding house carrying the body of the young amnesiac man who came to see him that day, a bullet wound to his head. The bad guys spot Ordway so he has to feign drunkenness and pretend that he thinks the dead body they are carrying is actually another drunk or he's afraid that he'll share the young man's fate. The henchmen buy the act and let Ordway go. Ordway goes straight to the police and together they raid the boarding house. Nobody has ever seen the men Ordway saw, nobody every heard a shot, and no sign of violence is to be found anywhere in the boarding house. Police Inspector Harry B. Manning (William Frawley) obviously respects Ordway from his past help in solving crimes, but this time thinks maybe the good doctor is imagining things.Ordway knows that he saw what he thought he saw, so he first has to prove there was a crime then find the criminals. In the process Ordway runs across the young man's fiancée, a mousy and wealthy girl who's so meek she's almost invisible, a boarded up old mansion that for some reason has a master bedroom that is still completely furnished, and the dead bodies of the two henchmen Ordway saw carrying the young man's body. They've been asphyxiated in their sleep by gas, only they're not in their own apartment at the time of their deaths. Who is going about causing all of this mayhem? Watch and find out.William Castle directed several Crime Doctor films, and they always have that touch of the macabre. Thus this film has not only the well constructed mystery typical of the Crime Doctor films, it has lots of atmosphere as well. Highly recommended.

More
whpratt1
1946/10/29

This film was a very short low budget film running only sixty-one minutes and Dr. Robert Ordway once again gets involved with a case dealing with a dual personality. Irene Cotter, (Ellen Drew) plays the role as a very pretty but timid person who was devoted to her sister Natalie who left her family and went away three years ago. There are two men who visit the home of Irene and talk to their landscaper and ask about Natalie because they wanted to speak to her, these two guys were hoods and were looking for money from Natalie. After this incident, a murder is committed and Police Inspector, (William Frawley) gets involved and gives a great supporting role. This is a great film with an unusual story line of mystery.

More
MartinHafer
1946/10/30

While this isn't the best B-detective film ever made, it is different enough from the usual style that it's well worth watching. Warner Baxter's detective is a psychiatrist and instead of following the usual formula employed by Boston Blackie, The Falcon and MANY other film detectives, his films are a little more cerebral as well as more believable. There is also a real plus because the usual cop investigating the case isn't a total idiot, so I am very thankful for the role William Frawley played. The film itself is well-paced (being only 61 minutes long), interesting and offers a fun twist ending (though psychologically speaking, it was VERY far-fetched). Not a great film, but a welcome film since it is different enough that it doesn't just blend in with the crowd.

More
Jim Tritten
1946/10/31

Fair entry in the Crime Doctor series with some interesting plot twists by screenwriter Leigh Brackett and direction by future horror master William Castle. Plot involves Dr. Robert Ordway (Warner Baxter) taking on a walk-in patient with amnesia-type symptoms and the dread of an occultist's prediction of a violent death. There is a creaky abandoned house, a dysfunctional family with a meek sister that was engaged to the victim, and William Frawley as a credible police inspector.Although sometimes billed as the best of the series, I found the acting somewhat dull and the short 61-minute film did not capture my imagination. I thought the Crime Doctor's Courage better. Menacing characters are presented and not developed – perhaps left on the cutting room floor. Interesting ending that is unlikely to be anticipated but explains all. Sixth in the series. Recommended.

More