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Two newspapers are pitted against each other. One owned by gangster Charles Gillette (Lloyd Nolan), the other by Ralph Houston (Fred MacMurray).

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Ralph Houston
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Vina Swain
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Tod Swain
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Charles Gillette
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Mrs. Swain
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Horace Mitchell
Edward H. Robins ...
Col. Bogardus
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Springer
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Mr. Franklin
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Beak McArdle
William Mansell ...
Formby
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Elliott
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Garner
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Dr. Boomgarten
Frank Bruno ...
Lollipop
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Mr. Walton
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Radio Announcer
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Mariska Aldrich ...
Policewoman (uncredited)
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Subscriber (uncredited)
Richard Allen ...
Policeman (uncredited)
William Arnold ...
Reporter (uncredited)
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Elevator-Starter (uncredited)
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Boy (uncredited)
Jack Chapin ...
Reed (uncredited)
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Rioter (uncredited)
Edward Churchill ...
Advertising Manager (uncredited)
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Matron (uncredited)
Joe Cunningham ...
Editor (uncredited)
Jack Daley ...
Policeman (uncredited)
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Tailor (uncredited)
Joe De Stefani ...
Foreman (uncredited)
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Rioter (uncredited)
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Rioter (uncredited)
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Mrs. Mitchell (uncredited)
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News Vendor (uncredited)
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Secretary (uncredited)
Frank Hammond ...
Switchman (uncredited)
Harry Hayden ...
City Editor (uncredited)
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Policeman (uncredited)
Oscar 'Dutch' Hendrian ...
Janitor (uncredited)
Tex Higginson ...
Rioter (uncredited)
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Rioter (uncredited)
Erskine Johnson ...
Reporter (uncredited)
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Cab Driver (uncredited)
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Beak's Child (uncredited)
Ann Marsters ...
Reporter (uncredited)
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Gangster (uncredited)
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Beak's Wife (uncredited)
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Phone Boy (uncredited)
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Johnny (uncredited)
James Quinn ...
Rioter (uncredited)
Dick Rush ...
Policeman (uncredited)
Lou Salter ...
Rioter (uncredited)
Allan Sears ...
Rioter (uncredited)
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Messenger Boy (uncredited)
Gertrude Simpson ...
Subscriber (uncredited)
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Maid (uncredited)
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Bellboy (uncredited)
Pat West ...
Santa Claus (uncredited)
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Reporter (uncredited)
Gloria Williams ...
Subscriber (uncredited)
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Girl in Elevator (uncredited)

Directed by

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Alexander Hall

Written by

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Jack Moffitt ... (screenplay) (as John C. Moffitt) &
Sidney Salkow ... (screenplay) and
Rian James ... (screenplay)
 
Jack Moffitt ... (play "The Roaring Girl") (as John C. Moffitt)

Produced by

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Benjamin Glazer ... producer

Music by

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John Leipold ... (uncredited)
Milan Roder ... (uncredited)

Cinematography by

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William C. Mellor ... (photographed by)

Editing by

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Paul Weatherwax

Art Direction by

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Hans Dreier
Ernst Fegté

Set Decoration by

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A.E. Freudeman ... (interior decorations)

Costume Design by

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Edith Head

Sound Department

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Louis Mesenkop ... sound recordist
Walter Oberst ... sound recordist

Stunts

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Tex Higginson ... stunts (uncredited)

Costume and Wardrobe Department

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Eugene Joseff ... costume jeweller (uncredited)

Music Department

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Friedrich Hollaender ... composer: stock music (uncredited)
Gordon Jenkins ... composer: title music (uncredited)
Boris Morros ... musical director (uncredited)

Additional Crew

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Adolph Zukor ... presenter

Production Companies

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Distributors

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Special Effects

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Other Companies

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Storyline

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Plot Summary

The story of a big-city crusading newspaper editor, Tod Swain (Charles Ruggles),who placed principle and honest journalism ahead of life itself, only to have his own daughter, Vina Swain (Frances Farmer), undo his work. Charles Gillette (Lloyd Nolan, a corrupt politician, sets out to wreak vengeance on Swain's reformist newspaper, by establishing his own scandal-sheet, yellow journalism tabloid which he uses for muck-raking and blackmail purposes. He tries to lure Swain and his best reporter, Ralph Houston (Fred MacMurray) by offering them highly-tempting salaries, but they both remain loyal to the large circulation paper they had help build. When Vina, sweetheart of Houston, hears of this she is furious. Unable to understand the principles of her father and sweetheart, she accepts the position of investigative reporter on Gillette's paper. She soon becomes the newspaper sensation of the town. Gillette uses her ability to dig up, of the past, a story of one of the town's most-respected merchants. causing him to commit suicide. Swain's publisher forces him to write the story of the suicide. Sticking to his principle of clean and accurate journalism, he begins the story with the dramatic sentence: Tonight, my daughter killed a man. When Vina's usefulness becomes outlived by Gillette, he decides to have her "put out of the way", fearful that she will reveal the extent of his corruption. Written by -Les Adams

Plot Keywords
Taglines SHE BLASTED A TOWN WIDE OPEN...to prove she could take love on her own terms! (original print ad) See more »
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Also Known As
  • Sensationernes Slagskygge (Denmark)
  • Reportagem de Sangue (Brazil)
  • Exklusiv (West Germany)
  • 報道戦 (Japan, Japanese title)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 85 min
Country
Language
Color
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Did You Know?

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Trivia Frances Farmer replaced Carole Lombard, who refused to do the part. See more »
Movie Connections Featured in Exclusive. See more »

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