Dial Red O
Dial Red O

Dial Red O (1955)

5.3 ? Mar 13, 1955 1h 3m

Overview

The first of the five films where Bill Elliott played a detective lieutenant in the L.A Sheriff's department, Dial Red "O" (the correct title with the number 0 (zero), as on a telephone dial, shown in ") opens with war-torn veteran Ralph Wyatt getting word that his wife is divorcing him, and he flees the psychiatric ward of the veteran's hospital, wanting to talk to her. His escape touches off an all-out manhunt, led by Lieutenant Andy Flynn of the sheriff's department.

Genres

Crime Drama Mystery

Release Date

March 13, 1955

Rating

5.3 /10

Runtime

1h 3m

Bill Elliott

Bill Elliott

Andy Flynn / Andy Doyle

Helene Stanley

Helene Stanley

Connie Wyatt

Keith Larsen

Keith Larsen

Ralph Wyatt

Paul Picerni

Paul Picerni

Norman Roper

Jack Kruschen

Jack Kruschen

Lloyd Lavalle

Elaine Riley

Elaine Riley

Policewoman Gloria

Robert Bice

Robert Bice

Sgt. Tony Columbo

Rick Vallin

Rick Vallin

Deputy Clark

George Eldredge

George Eldredge

Major Sutter

John Phillips

John Phillips

Deputy Morgan

Regina Gleason

Mrs. Roper

Rankin Mansfield

Coroner

Mort Mills

Mort Mills

Newspaper Photographer

William Tannen

William Tannen

Devon

Shorty Rogers

Bandleader

Gregg Barton

Gregg Barton

Attendant (uncredited)

Larry J. Blake

Larry J. Blake

Wayne - Waiter (uncredited)

Doyle Brooks

VA Patient (uncredited)

Cecil Combs

Sidewalk Passerby (uncredited)

Walter Conrad

Second Patrolman (uncredited)

CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

6.0/10

Jun 11, 2022

Bill Elliott ("Det. Flynn") works quite well in this quickly-paced, more cerebral, hour long detective mystery. He must investigate the murder of "Connie" (Helene Stanley) who was having an affair with "Roper" (Paul Picerni). The finger for the crime is initially pointed at her somewhat shell-shocked husband "Wyatt" (Keith Larsen) but we know the truth (we've known all along) and so now we get to follow as both "Flynn" and "Wyatt" try to fathom out the truth. At times the photography goes too obviously out of it's way not to show us anything of the violent themes here. The code? Sure, but also a distinct lack of imagination from director Daniel Ullman didn't help either. From a production perspective, there is nothing special about any of this - indeed, Stanley is pretty terrible - but the story has plenty of twists and turns before an ending that does this cheap and cheerful B-feature just enough justice to make it worth a gander.

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