Wall Street (1929 film) explained

Wall Street
Director:Roy William Neill
Producer:Harry Cohn
Starring:Ralph Ince
Aileen Pringle
Distributor:Columbia Pictures
Runtime:68 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Wall Street is an American pre-Code drama film directed by Roy William Neill and starring Ralph Ince, Aileen Pringle, Sam De Grasse, Philip Strange, and Freddie Burke Frederick. Released on December 1, 1929, it was produced by Harry Cohn.

Premise

Ralph Ince is Roller McCray, a steelworker turned ruthless tycoon whose tough business methods leads a rival (Philip Strange) to commit suicide. The widow (Aileen Pringle), believing she can ruin Ince by using his own methods, conspires with her husband's former partner (Sam De Grasse), but a strong friendship between Ince and Pringle's young son (Freddie Burke Frederick) changes things dramatically.

Cast

See also