The Sun Sets at Dawn
A reporter investigates the story of a young man who may have been wrongly convicted and sentenced to be executed.
The Sun Sets at Dawn is a 1950 American film noir crime film directed by Paul Sloane and starring Sally Parr, Patrick Waltz and Philip Shawn.
Plot
A young man sits in prison on the night before his execution, while his girlfriend waits for the inevitable in the prison governor’s house. The warden and his wife sympathize with both of them. It is the first use of the electric chair in the state, and there are teething problems with its installation. Meanwhile, a group of reporters discussing the case, realize that the M.O. of the crime bears a similar style to that of a criminal, “Parrot” Farucco, who was supposed to have died three years previously. As the execution takes place off camera, a prison orderly collecting mail in the cafe identifies a customer as Farucco. He confronts him and is shot by the criminal, who is subdued and tied by other customers who happen to be prison officers waiting to begin work.
At the same time the reporters rush in, back from the prison to use the Post Office telephones. It turns out that the execution has had to be postponed owing to electrical problems with the chair. Farucco is brought into custody into the prison governor’s office, and moved by the distraught girlfriend’s grief, admits to the crime just in time to prevent the second execution attempt.
Cast
Sally Parr as The Girl
Philip Shawn as The Boy
Walter Reed as The Chaplain
Lee Fredericks as Blackie
Houseley Stevenson as Pops
Howard St. John as The Warden
Louise Lorimer as The Warden’s Wife
Raymond Bramley as The Deputy Warden
Charles Meredith as Reporter, AP
King Donovan as Reporter, National News Service
Charles Arnt as Reporter, Globe Express
Sam Edwards as Reporter, Herald
Percy Helton as Reporter, Feature Syndicate
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