Midnight
One woman was to die at midnight!...another woman was to kill at the same hour...why?
Jury foreman Edward Weldon's questioning leads to the death sentence for Ethel Saxon. His daughter Stella claims to have killed her lover, the gangster Garboni, just as Saxon was to sit in the electric chair.
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Trailers & Videos
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Midnight (Call It Murder) (1934) | Starring Humphrey Bogart - Clip [HD]
Cast

Humphrey Bogart
Gar Boni

Sidney Fox
Stella Weldon

O. P. Heggie
Edward Weldon

Henry Hull
Nolan

Margaret Wycherly
Mrs. Weldon

Lynne Overman
Joe Biggers

Cora Witherspoon
Elizabeth McGrath

Richard Whorf
Arthur Weldon

Granville Bates
Richard McGrath

Henry O'Neill
Edgar V. Ingersoll

Helen Flint
Ethel Saxton
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Every expense has been spared with this truly mediocre crime drama. A woman is accused and convicted for murder, but as the evening before her comeuppance draws near, the foreman of the jury "Weldon" (OP Heggie) is being solicited to try and stop the execution. Quite what he was supposed to do is anyones guess, and so justice takes it's course. The plot, somewhat glacially, now moves on to a woman "Stella" (Sidney Fox) finding herself in a very similar situation - pleading a defence of crime passionnel. Guess what, though... she is the daughter of the aforementioned jury foreman. She has been charged with killing the rather unsavoury "Gar Boni" (Humphrey Bogart). Can she escape the same fate? The dialogue is delivered as if each were being individually cued, and despite his billing Bogart features hardly at all in what is otherwise a rather weakly directed and presented sob story in which I had no investment. Early talkie maybe, but all in all it's pretty unremarkable stuff.
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