WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Crime >

Criminal Lawyer

Watch Criminal Lawyer For Free

Criminal Lawyer

A drunken attorney tries to sober up in order to defend a friend in murder case.

... more
Release : 1951
Rating : 6.3
Studio : Columbia Pictures, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Director of Photography, 
Cast : Pat O’Brien Jane Wyatt Carl Benton Reid Mary Castle Robert Shayne
Genre : Crime

Cast List

Related Movies

The Advocate
The Advocate

The Advocate   2013

Release Date: 
2013

Rating: 4.9

genres: 
Thriller  /  Crime  /  Mystery
Dillinger
Dillinger

Dillinger   1945

Release Date: 
1945

Rating: 6.5

genres: 
Drama  /  Action  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Lawrence Tierney  /  Edmund Lowe  /  Anne Jeffreys
Million Dollar Pursuit
Million Dollar Pursuit

Million Dollar Pursuit   1951

Release Date: 
1951

Rating: 6

genres: 
Crime
Stars: 
Penny Edwards  /  Grant Withers  /  Norman Budd
High Tide
High Tide

High Tide   1947

Release Date: 
1947

Rating: 6.4

genres: 
Crime  /  Mystery
Stars: 
Lee Tracy  /  Don Castle  /  Julie Bishop
Man in the Vault
Man in the Vault

Man in the Vault   1956

Release Date: 
1956

Rating: 6

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
William Campbell  /  Karen Sharpe  /  Anita Ekberg
The Man Who Died Twice
The Man Who Died Twice

The Man Who Died Twice   1958

Release Date: 
1958

Rating: 5.9

genres: 
Crime
Stars: 
Rod Cameron  /  Vera Ralston  /  Mike Mazurki
Highway West
Highway West

Highway West   1941

Release Date: 
1941

Rating: 6.2

genres: 
Drama  /  Crime
The Thirteenth Hour
The Thirteenth Hour

The Thirteenth Hour   1947

Release Date: 
1947

Rating: 6.4

genres: 
Crime  /  Mystery
Stars: 
Richard Dix  /  Karen Morley  /  John Kellogg
The Return of the Whistler
The Return of the Whistler

The Return of the Whistler   1948

Release Date: 
1948

Rating: 6.3

genres: 
Crime  /  Mystery
Stars: 
Michael Duane  /  Lenore Aubert  /  Richard Lane
The Gambler and the Lady
The Gambler and the Lady

The Gambler and the Lady   1952

Release Date: 
1952

Rating: 5.9

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Dane Clark  /  Kathleen Byron  /  Naomi Chance
Incident
Incident

Incident   1948

Release Date: 
1948

Rating: 6.6

genres: 
Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Warren Douglas  /  Jane Frazee  /  Robert Osterloh
Within the Law
Within the Law

Within the Law   1939

Release Date: 
1939

Rating: 6.4

genres: 
Drama  /  Crime  /  Romance
Stars: 
Ruth Hussey  /  Tom Neal  /  Paul Kelly

Reviews

AniInterview
2018/08/30

Sorry, this movie sucks

More
NekoHomey
2018/08/30

Purely Joyful Movie!

More
AshUnow
2018/08/30

This is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.

More
Frances Chung
2018/08/30

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

More
bsmith5552
2017/06/23

"Criminal Lawyer" is a "B" list programmer that is saved by the performance of Pat O'Brien in the lead role. O'Brien plays criminal lawyer James Reagan who wins his cases in dramatic fashion by employing unethical but legal tricks. He also has a penchant for the bottle.After getting Vincent Cheney (Mickey Knox), the brother of gangster Harry Cheney (Douglas Fowley) off, Reagan announces that he is giving up his practice with the expectation of becoming a judge. He turns over the firm to his associate Clark Sommers (Robert Shayne) who has been doing all of the preparatory work leading up to Reagan's dramatic entrances at the end of their trials.Reagan is denied the judgeship by high end lawyers led by Tucker Bourne (Carl Benton Reid) and D.A. Walter Medford (Jerome Cowan) on the grounds that he uses unethical means to win his cases. Disappointed, Reagan turns to the bottle. However, Bourne is forced to come hat in hand to plead with Reagan to defend his nephew Bill Webber (Daryl Hickman) of a manslaughter charge involving a traffic fatality.Reagan reluctantly takes the case and gets the young man off. While preparing to celebrate, Reagan is confronted at his front door by the widow of the man killed in the Webber case, Mrs. Johnson (Mary Alan Hokanson) who shows him the effects of having freed her husband's killer. Reagan devastated, disappears into the bottle and cannot be found.Reagan's man Moose Hendricks (Mike Mazurki) fearing the worst goes to confront mobster Harry Cheney. Cheney however turns up murdered and Moose is charged with the crime. Loyal secretary Maggie Pewel (Jane Wyatt), gofer Sam Kutler (Marvin Caplan) and receptionist Gloria Lydendecker (Mary Castle) try to locate Reagan while Sommers begins to try the case. Suddenly a disheveled Reagan turns up and..............................................Pat O'Brien had a long and varied career. He played mostly priests and cops in his Warner Bros. films of the 30s and 40s but goes in a different direction this time around. He portrayal of the boozy lawyer is one of his best. Jane Wyatt has little to do but be ever faithful to her boss. There appears to be a one way attraction going on, however Reagan does not seem interested. His relationship with Moose is something else again and since this was 1951, we can only speculate. The identity of the real murderer is not to hard to figure out which detracts from the film's dramatic finish.Jane Wyatt would soon go on to appear in the long running TV series "Father Knows Best". Another TV veteran, Amanda Blake appears briefly as a receptionist. Louis Jean Heydt appears as a court reporter.

More
bkoganbing
2015/12/24

Pat O'Brien stars in this B film programmer as a most successful criminal attorney well aware that he's called shyster behind his back and occasionally to his face. As we see in the film this man has a lot of tricks up his sleeve to get clients off. But he'd really like to become a judge and leave it all behind. His skills are way to valuable and the best scenes in the film are those with the extralegal methods he uses to gain acquittals. He's got a nice team of associates including secretary Jane Wyatt, office boy Marvin Kaplan, and general factotum Mike Mazurki. He also has an ambitious and treacherous associate in Robert Shayne who wants to take over.O'Brien's unsavory reputation has also kept him from the bench as the Bar Assocation and the white shoe lawyers that run it like Carl Benton Reid keep O'Brien from the judgeship. Then when Reid has need of O'Brien he has a miraculous conversion in his thinking.Mazurki stands out in this film one of his best performances and he too needs O'Brien in the end. His best scene is with Wyatt when he tells her why he's just become O'Brien's factotum. In the supporting cast the unbilled Mary Alan Hokanson has one great scene with O'Brien as the widow of a man who was killed in a motor vehicle incident that O'Brien gets the driver off.By the way, the way O'Brien does it is one for the books.Criminal Lawyer, almost criminal not to watch it.

More
mark.waltz
2014/09/26

Pat O'Brien gives one of his greatest later day performances. While not quite past his prime, he's a bit paunchy, yet filled with passion, playing a defense attorney with quite a few tricks left up his sleeve. He's not above being a little crafty in getting his clients off, proving that key witness Charles Lane isn't as sound-sighted as he suggests. In fact, the moment you see Lane, remembering all those bespeckled characters he's played, you know he's an easy target. Then, in another case (where he's not the attorney of record, just an adviser), he uses a variety of different types to prove that anybody can be guilty of hitting a pedestrian, no matter drunk or sober. When a cute old lady lies injured on the ground, her eyes open with a twinkle, and there's a sly laugh from the writers to the audience.The major storyline shows his decline into a drunken depression when his sly ways prevent him from getting a judgeship he so desperately wants. When his right hand man (giant Mike Mazurki in his best performance) is accused of murdering one of O'Brien's rivals, he must pull himself together to defend him, even though the cards are stacked against him. Mazurki is almost wife-like to O'Brien, loyal to a fault, and at one point, even wearing a woman's kitchen apron while preparing for a dinner party. This gentle giant (the Brad Garrett of his day) is obviously not all there, yet his devotion to his employer is very touching.Future "Father Knows Best" wife Jane Wyatt (already a veteran movie star) is very good as his loyal secretary, with outstanding character performances by T.V. veteran Marvin Kaplan, Jerome Cowan and Douglas Fowley. This is a neat little "B" courtroom drama with a few film noir elements (included on a five film DVD of forgotten Columbia Film Noir) that is well written, very well acted, and filled with those little details that make this type of cinema great for a look back at what made the golden age so great and why not all the cinematic gems are those whose images are usually seen in Academy Award edits or AFI tributes to the various genres of the best years of cinema.

More
vandino1
2006/09/03

This Columbia 1951 programmer has no connection to the RKO film of 1937. But then again it does have a connection to the vast multitude of legal films that trot out the shady-but-ultimately-noble defense lawyer character. This time that character is played by Pat O'Brien. At least O'Brien modulates his performance, keeping away from his usual brassy, fast-talking, finger-jut-to-the-lapel style. In fact, he's rather subdued, chiefly because he goes on a binge-drinking tailspin every time he feels guilty about the consequences of his shady tactics. Oddly, nobody else amongst his staff seems to mind his shenanigans one bit, including Jane Wyatt's seemingly upright citizen character who is curiously written as unquestioning and ever-faithful. It's just a b-movie of modest ambitions, but there's little action, little humor, and little threat to the main characters. The worst thing O'Brien faces is a guilty conscience and the loss of a judgeship. The best thing in the movie is Mike Mazurki. Not that he was ever a great actor, but his usually small appearances as nothing more than a thuggish prop in so many films makes his work in this film notable. He actually gets to play a thinking, normal, even smiling, human being. Sure, he's playing an ex-wrestler bodyguard named Moose, but he also shows a caring side by keeping watch over O'Brien, and is even wearing an apron and cooking in one scene! I believe he also gets more lines to speak in this film than any other he ever appeared in. And there's also a small part of a witness played by the ubiquitous Charles Lane. Of Lane, there's probably no other more famous "face" in Hollywood who appeared in so many movies without being credited.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now