Thursday, February 19th TV listings for Movies! (KDFI2) Dallas-Forth Worth, TX
Cornered (1945)
An ex-Canadian airman (Dick Powell) goes to Buenos Aires to find the Nazi war criminal who killed his French wife.
Murder, My Sweet (1944)
The search for a missing person plunges detective Philip Marlowe into a deadly web of blackmail and murder.
He Walked by Night (1948)
Los Angeles police officers (Scott Brady, Roy Roberts) hunt a devious killer thief (Richard Basehart) who monitors their frequency.
The House on Telegraph Hill (1951)
A Polish survivor (Valentina Cortesa) of a Nazi death camp assumes another woman's identity and son in San Francisco.
No Way Out (1950)
A hoodlum (Richard Widmark) sparks a race riot after his brother dies under a doctor's (Sidney Poitier) care.
Dangerous Crossing (1953)
The ship's doctor (Michael Rennie) helps a bride (Jeanne Crain) solve the case of her missing husband (Carl Betz) on a honeymoon cruise.
Tension (1949)
A drugstore manager (Richard Basehart) creates an alter ego to perform the perfect murder of his wife's (Audrey Totter) lover.
Leave Her to Heaven (1945)
While on a train, a writer strikes up a relationship with an attractive woman. She becomes obsessed and abandons her fiancé to be with the writer. Only after their marriage does he realize that she is psychotically jealous and highly unstable.
Born to Kill (1947)
A private eye (Walter Slezak) hunts a killer (Lawrence Tierney) who marries a divorcee's (Claire Trevor) rich sister.
Don't Bother to Knock (1952)
An airline pilot (Richard Widmark) flirts with a hotel baby-sitter (Marilyn Monroe) before realizing she is deranged.
Niagara (1953)
A blonde (Marilyn Monroe) and her lover plot to kill her edgy husband (Joseph Cotten) at Niagara Falls.
The Undead (1957)
A therapist (Richard Garland) visits the Dark Ages with a prostitute (Pamela Duncan) reincarnated from a witch.
Willard (1971)
Nagged by his mother (Elsa Lanchester), bullied by his boss (Ernest Borgnine), a young man (Bruce Davison) trains mansion rats to kill for him.
