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  1. The film was based on the 1933 novel of the same title by Rearden Conner, the son of a Royal Irish Constabulary policeman. Shake Hands with the Devil is a 1959 British-Irish film produced and directed by Michael Anderson and starring James Cagney, Don Murray, Dana Wynter, Glynis Johns and Michael Redgrave.

  2. Shake Hands With The Devil -- (Movie Clip) Bird Watching First appearance of Sean Lenihan (James Cagney), lecturer at a Dublin medical school, focusing on American student O'Shea (Don Murray), in director Michael Anderson's Irish rebellion drama Shake Hands With The Devil, 1959.

  3. 4 de may. de 2023 · In 1920s Ireland, I.R.A. members are being led by the war mongering Dr. Sean Lenihan (James Cagney), as they fight oppressive British forces.

  4. 28 de sept. de 2007 · Shake Hands with the Devil: Directed by Jennifer Capraru, Roger Spottiswoode. With Roy Dupuis, Owen Sejake, James Gallanders, Michel Ange Nzojibwami. The story of General Romeo Dallaire's frustrated efforts to stop the madness of the Rwandan Genocide, despite the complete indifference of his superiors.

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  5. Filmed on location, Shake Hands With the Devil is set in Ireland during the "troubles" of 1921. James Cagney plays a brilliant medical professor who doubles as head of the Irish Republican Army. Cagney convinces one of his more pacifistic students, Don Murray, to join the underground struggle against British rule.

  6. In 1921 Dublin, the IRA battles the "Black & Tans," special British forces given to harsh measures. Irish-American medical student Kerry O'Shea hopes to stay aloof, but saving a wounded friend gets him outlawed, and inexorably drawn into the rebel organization...under his former professor Sean Lenihan, who has "shaken hands with the devil" and begun to think of fighting as an end in itself.

  7. Shake Hands with the Devil is a 1959 British-Irish film produced and directed by Michael Anderson and starring James Cagney, Don Murray, Dana Wynter, Glynis Johns and Michael Redgrave. [3] The film was based on the 1933 novel of the same title by Rearden Conner, the son of a Royal Irish Constabulary policeman.