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Decoy

She Treats Men the Way They've Been Treating Women for Years!
1946 | 76m | English

(2362 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Director: Jack Bernhard
Writer: Nedrick Young
Staring:
Details

A fatally shot female gangleader recounts her sordid life of crime to a police officer just before she dies.
Release Date: Sep 14, 1946
Director: Jack Bernhard
Writer: Nedrick Young
Genres: Crime, Thriller
Keywords prison, gas chamber, gangster, femme fatale, film noir, treasure map, doctor, execution, double cross, buried loot, deathbed confession
Production Companies Bernhard-Brandt Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Jean Gillie Margot Shelby
Edward Norris Jim Vincent
Robert Armstrong Frank Olins
Herbert Rudley Dr. Craig
Sheldon Leonard Sergeant Joe Portugal
Marjorie Woodworth Nurse
Philip Van Zandt Tommy
Carole Donne Waitress
John Shay Al
Bert Roach Bartender
Rosemary Bertrand Ruth
Ray Teal Policeman (uncredited)
Name Job
Nedrick Young Screenplay
Milburn Morante Makeup Artist
Jack Bernhard Director
L. William O'Connell Director of Photography
Jason H. Bernie Editor
Lorraine MacLean Costume Designer
Glenn Cook Production Manager
William A. Calihan Jr. Assistant Director
Dave Milton Set Designer
Name Title
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 16 33 6
2024 5 29 40 20
2024 6 16 34 5
2024 7 6 9 3
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2025 10 1 1 1

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

Can you come down to my level? Decoy is directed by Jack Bernhard and adapted to screenplay by Nedrick Young from a story written by Stanley Rubin. It stars Jean Gillie, Robert Armstrong, Herbert Rudley, Sheldon Leonard and Edward Norris. Music is by Edward J. Kay and cinematography by L. Willia ... m O’Connell. Margot Shelby (Gillie) is dying on the sofa, a “victim” of a gunshot wound. Sgt. Jo Portugal (Leonard) leans in to hear the story of how she came to be in this situation… Manic, delirious, bonkers, nasty, Decoy is all of those things, and more, wonderfully so. Running at under 80 minutes, this “B” noir out of Monogram spins a cruel tale of greed, fatalism and cold blooded homicide, all propelled by one of the coldest and wickedest femme fatales to have ever worn a pair of stilettos. Plot involves money of course, there’s a pot load of it buried somewhere and Margot Shelby wants it. The trouble is is that her criminal boyfriend, Frank Olins (Armstrong), is going to the gas chamber and he isn’t telling anyone where the loot is. No problem for Margot, she uses her cunning feminine wiles to ensnare a couple of male dupes into her web, and then the three of them resurrect Frank from the dead and put into action a plan that will reveal where the cash is. Easy Peasy! As the brilliant beginning has shown us, we know the fate of Margot, what you can’t be ready for is what she is prepared to do to achieve her aims, and her means and motives sock you right between the eyes. Even as death approaches she still has to have the last cruel laugh. The beautifully sensuous Gillie gives a thoroughly memorable performance, it’s a tragedy that she would die three years later of pneumonia, aged just 33. Elsewhere. Bernhard (who was married to Gillie at the time) is only competent in direction, but along with the performance he gets out of Gillie (which was a veer from the norm for her), he also gets a cracker turn out of Leonard. Kay’s music is inconsistent, even too breezy in the wrong areas, and O’Connell’s photography is standard stuff that doesn’t strive for any mood accentuation. Yes you have to kind of unscrew your brain and black out some of the more dafter elements here, and there’s some unintentionally cheese laden moments, but what an experience it is all told. 7.5/10

May 16, 2024