Dangerous Waters
While a ship captain is at sea dealing with a mutiny among his crew, his wife is at home having an affair with his best friend.
Lambert Hillyer
Casts & Crew
Jack Holt
Robert Armstrong
Grace Bradley
Diana Gibson
Charles Murray
Willard Robertson
Guy Usher
Dewey Robinson
Edward Gargan
Edwin Maxwell
Richard Alexander
Walter Miller
Donald Briggs
John 'Dusty' King
Sugar Adair
Stanley Andrews
Henry A. Barrows
Sven Hugo Borg
Betty Brown
Helen Brown
Howard Christie
Leslie Cooper
Grace Cunard
Edward Earle
Earl Eby
Al Ferguson
Charles K. French
Billy Gilbert
Robert Hale
Howard Hickman
Matty Kemp
Priscilla Lawson
Jack Low
Leila McIntyre
Lafe McKee
Charles Murphy
Paddy O'Flynn
Charles Sullivan
Joe Torillo
Morgan Wallace
E. Alyn Warren
Andy White
Lloyd Whitlock
Joan Woodbury
Clara Kimball Young
Also Directed by Lambert Hillyer
Gang Bullets was one of a myriad of late-1930s Monogram crime pictures, bearing such interchangable titles as I Am a Criminal, Convict's Code and Federal Bullets. Morgan Wallace plays a Capone-like racketeer named Anderson, who after being chased out of one town by the authorities immediately sets up shop in another. Unable to get any tangible evidence against Anderson, DA Wayne (Charles Trowbridge) orders his assistant Carter (Robert Kent) to dig up some dirt on the gangster boss. To do this, Carter pretends to turned crooked, joining Anderson's gang in order to accumulate evidence. Alas, Carter's girl friend Patricia (Anne Nagel) knows nothing of her boyfriend's subterfuge, and she suspects the worst. With such formidable henchmen as John Merton and Carleton Young at his beck and call, it's something of a surprise when Anderson comes a-cropper in the last reel.
A newsman helps a Brazilian singer get her brother out of trouble in New York.
The superintendent of a women's prison is pressured to pardon a member of a criminal gang. When she refuses, her daughter is framed on a manslaughter charge and sent to prison.
An agent (Tim Holt) goes undercover as an outlaw and almost gets lynched.
Former crook 'Square' Kelly serves in the First World War. When he returns from the war, one of his comrades-in-arms convinces him to join the police force. But Kelly finds himself confronting the very criminals who made up his old gang.
Wild Bill Hickock (Bill Elliott) and Cannonball (Dub Taylor) help two young people in love (Mary Daily and Stanley Brown) and bring the murderer (Kenneth MacDonald) of Cannonball's father to justice.
The Durango Kid is a sort of Robin Hood of the West who helps the lovely Walters (who replaced Starrett's usual love-interest, Iris Meredith), the daughter of a homesteader, defeat the evil MacDonald who has been terrorizing the decent citizens with his gang of rustlers.
Norman Foster plays a millionaire who takes a job as a reporter after he's wiped out in the Stock Market. Foster's managing editor Samuel S. Hinds considers the young upstart to be a pain in the neck. But all is forgiven-at least until next time-when Foster solves a series of puzzling robberies..
The Hollywood Post's sports writer, Jimmy Jones (Charles Quigley), yearns to be a crime reporter, and thus looks for foul play on even the most routine assignments. In writing a piece about a girl's softball team, Jimmy discovers that their sponsor, Foy Harris (John Gallaudet), is a notorious racketeer who has supposedly gone straight. Jimmy suspects Foy is still up to no good. He begins hanging around the team to do a bit of snooping, and also to be near the cute new pitcher, Ann Casey (Jacqueline Wells).
Robert must avenge his son who was killed in a workplace accident.