Pier 23

GANGLAND GALAHAD! He's a cop's pet peeve... and a gal's pet passion!

5.2
195158m

Pier 23 was one of three hour-long mysteries produced by Lippert Productions for both TV and theatrical release. Each of the three films was evenly divided into two half-hour "episodes," and each starred Hugh Beaumont as San Francisco-based amateur sleuth Dennis O'Brien. In Pier 23, O'Brien first tackles the case of a wrestler who has died of a suspicious heart attack after refusing to lose a match. He then agrees to help a priest talk an escaped criminal into returning to prison.

Cast

Photo of Hugh Beaumont

Hugh Beaumont

Dennis O'Brien

Photo of Ann Savage

Ann Savage

Ann Harmon

Photo of Edward Brophy

Edward Brophy

Prof. Shicker

Photo of Richard Travis

Richard Travis

Police Inspector Lt. Bruger

Photo of Margia Dean

Margia Dean

Flo Klingle

Photo of Mike Mazurki

Mike Mazurki

Ape Danowski

Photo of David Bruce

David Bruce

Charles Giffen

Photo of Raymond Greenleaf

Raymond Greenleaf

Father Donovan

Photo of Eve Miller

Eve Miller

Norma Harmon

Photo of Harry Hayden

Harry Hayden

Dr. Earl J. Tomkins

Photo of Joi Lansing

Joi Lansing

The Cocktail Waitress

Photo of Peter Mamakos

Peter Mamakos

Nick Garrison

Photo of Chris Drake

Chris Drake

Mike Greeley

Photo of Billy Varga

Billy Varga

Willie Klingle

Photo of Charles Wagenheim

Charles Wagenheim

Lefty - Policy Man

Photo of Jack Chefe

Jack Chefe

Waiter (uncredited)

Photo of Heinie Conklin

Heinie Conklin

Counter Man (uncredited)

Photo of Kit Guard

Kit Guard

Drunk at Wrestling Match (uncredited)

Photo of Barry Norton

Barry Norton

Waiter (uncredited)

Photo of Cosmo Sardo

Cosmo Sardo

Club patron (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

Hugh Beaumont is adequate here as private investigator "O'Brien" in this really rather procedural crime drama. Indeed, it comes across as two separate episodes rather clunky joined together. What does link the themes though, is that he always seems to find himself in the wrong place at the wrong time and usually ends up trying to convince folks that he isn't the criminal that all fingers seem to want to point to. This rather dry feature sees him embroiled in a wrestling cover-up for a murder which is completely devoid of jeopardy because that story concludes with half an hour to go! The next sequence sees him trying to persuade a convicted felon not to try to escape from Alcatraz, only to - yet again - get all caught up in some shenanigans that could see him in the "chair". What really doesn't help is the annoying narration - peppered with what they must have hoped were witticisms - that describe what he is about to do before he does it. It is almost as if it were made by a production team with a radio background less used to the audience being able to see what action (activity may be better) is actually going on. Kills an hour, but then so does the hoovering.

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