Sin Town (1942 film) explained

Sin Town
Director:Ray Enright
Producer:George Waggner
Starring:Constance Bennett
Broderick Crawford
Patric Knowles
Anne Gwynne
Music:Hans J. Salter
Cinematography:George Robinson
Editing:Edward Curtiss
Studio:Universal Pictures
Distributor:Universal Pictures
Runtime:73 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Sin Town is a 1942 American Western film directed by Ray Enright and starring Constance Bennett, Broderick Crawford and Patric Knowles.[1] It is set during the Texas Oil Boom of the early 20th century. The trio of Director Enright, Crawford, and Gwynne collaborated on another film the same year, "Men of Texas," which also revolves, to some extent, around the newspaper industry.[2]

Plot

In 1910, Laura Kirby is the editor of a local newspaper in a frontier town. She finds herself at odds with the devious Dude McNair and his accomplice, Kye Allen. The duo quickly embeds themselves in the town's sole gambling hub after forcibly ousting its owner, Rock Delaney. Nonetheless, Delaney, backed by his crew, makes a comeback, prompting McNair and Allen to seek opportunities elsewhere.

Cast

Production

According to the New York Times on July 31, 1942, Universal has signed Constance Bennett to play the feminine lead in Sin Town, a story of an oil-boom community, and the movie originally was planned for Marlene Dietrich. The cast included Broderick Crawford, Andy Devine and Leo Carrillo.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Kellow p.250
  2. Langman, Larry (2009). The Media in the Movies. p. 832.