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  1. In The Naked City, a blonde ex-model is murdered in her bathtub and detectives Muldoon (Barry Fitzgerald) and Halloran (Don Taylor) are assigned to the case. Their investigation leads them all over New York City, from Park Avenue to the Lower East Side, reaching its thrilling climax atop the Williamsburg Bridge.

  2. Een mooie jonge vrouw wordt dood in haar bad aangetroffen. Zelfmoord, lijkt het, maar al snel blijkt er meer aan de hand te zijn, ontdekken rechercheurs Muldoon (Fitzgerald) en Halloran (Taylor). Sterke film noir, volledig op locatie in New York geschoten, wat destijds nogal gewaagd was, filmmakers bleven liever in de veilige studio. Regisseur Dassin maakte later meer baanbrekend werk, maar ...

  3. 7 de sept. de 2020 · Extras 7/10. Criterion presents a small number of features for their edition, starting things off with audio commentary featuring The Naked City ’s screenwriter, Malvin Wald. Wald does talk about how he, Dassin, and producer Mark Hellinger were intent on making a realistic police procedural, which called for focusing on the more mundane ...

  4. Critics reviews. After a former model is drowned in her bathtub, Detective Halloran and Lieutenant Muldoon investigate her murder. As Muldoon and Halloran start to fill in the details of the victim’s past, they find that she had a lively social life, filled with many suitors, and the mystery becomes more complex.

  5. 5 de mar. de 2020 · Det. Flint is ordered to witness the execution of a murderer he helped capture. Featuring Gene Hackman.

    • 51 min
    • 7.5K
    • FilmRise Television
  6. Naked City, The (1948) -- (Movie Clip) The Kid Has Nerve Darn near unvarnished police procedure, as Donahue (Frank Conroy) and Halloran (Don Taylor) canvass for a suspect, director Jules Dassin working New York locations, until producer Mark Hellinger's narration resumes the policeman's lament in The Naked City, 1948.

  7. 19 de mar. de 2007 · The Naked City: New York Plays Itself. I n 1945 Arthur Fellig, known as Weegee, a canny and gifted tabloid newspaper photographer, did something unprecedented: he assembled some of his best shots, of corpses and fires and arrests and crowds and spectacles, and made them into a book, published in hardcover—this at a time when photography books ...