A Man Betrayed | |
Director: | John H. Auer |
Producer: | Armand Schaefer |
Screenplay: | Isabel Dawn |
Story: | Tom Kilpatrick |
Starring: | John Wayne Frances Dee Edward Ellis |
Music: | Mort Glickman Paul Sawtell |
Cinematography: | Jack A. Marta |
Editing: | Charles Craft |
Studio: | Republic Pictures |
Distributor: | Republic Pictures |
Runtime: | 82 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
A Man Betrayed is a 1941 American dramatic comedy film directed by John H. Auer and starring John Wayne, Frances Dee and Edward Ellis.[1] It was produced and distributed by Republic Pictures. In the United Kingdom, the film was released as Citadel of Crime.
Bucolic lawyer Lynn Hollister fights big-city corruption when he tries to prove that politician Tom Cameron is a crook. Hollister is in love with the politician's daughter Sabra.[2]
In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Thomas M. Pryor wrote: "With more action and less talk, 'A Man Betrayed' might have amounted to something better than just a torpid expose of a political boss. For the new film... reveals nothing new about the workings of machine politics, nor does it afford any suspense as to what will ultimately happen... The plot is talked away in the first fifteen minutes and, except for a lively election-day skirmish between rival mobsters and graveyard voters, there just isn't anything to arrest one's attention."[3]
The Los Angeles Times reviewer wrote: "As though embossed, a character occasionally stands out on the screen from among the welter of rubber-stamp types. John Wayne manages such a characterization in 'A Man Betrayed.'... The story is engrossing particularly from this characterization... Otherwise the yarn is one of those murder things with crooks in high and low places, and the hero bent on a whodunit mission to the big city."[4]