City of Missing Girls explained

City of Missing Girls
Director:Elmer Clifton
Starring:H. B. Warner
Astrid Allwyn
John Archer
Music:Marvin Hatley
Cinematography:Edward Linden
Editing:Charles Henkel Jr.
Studio:Merrick-Alexander Productions
Distributor:Select Attractions
Runtime:74 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

City of Missing Girls is a 1941 American crime drama film directed by Elmer Clifton and starring H. B. Warner, Astrid Allwyn and John Archer.[1] [2] It was produced as an independent second feature.

Plot

The police led by Captain McVeigh and the Assistant District Attorney James J. Horton are baffled by the disappearances of several young girls with some being found dead. Intrepid female newspaper reporter Nora Page's investigations reveal a link between the girls and the Crescent School of Fine Arts owned by gangster King Peterson, who is using the school as a front for a recruiting center for his nightclub "entertainers". Things become more complex when Nora's father is connected with Peterson and her boyfriend James Horton is photographed in embarrassing circumstances with a woman found murdered after the photo was taken.Peterson shoots Nora's father to death in front of witnesses, and we conclude with she and Horton reading a newspaper article about Peterson's execution.

Cast

Critical reception

TV Guide called it "An awkward murder mystery."[3]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: City of Missing Girls (1941). https://web.archive.org/web/20190904105840/https://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2b70193939. dead. 4 September 2019. BFI.
  2. Web site: City of Missing Girls (1941) - Elmer Clifton | Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related. AllMovie.
  3. Web site: City of Missing Girls. TV Guide.