The best Keith Richards’s mystery movies

Keith Richards

Keith Richards

If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Keith Richards’s movies, although you may have ordered them differently. In any case, we hope you love it and with a little luck discovering a movie that you still don’t know about Keith Richards.

Street of Chance

Street of Chance
6.4/10
  • Genre: Mystery
  • Release: 03/10/1942
  • Character: Intern
In this Cornell Woolrich thriller, a man's memory is recovered after being injured by falling construction material. Discovering a year-long lapse, he returns to his old life and discovers a lot of mysterious happenings.

Pacific Blackout

Pacific Blackout
7.2/10
Falsely convicted of murder, young Robert Draper (Robert Preston) escapes custody during a practice blackout drill. Under cover of darkness, Draper hopes to find the real killer, who turns out to be a member of a Nazi sabotage ring. Completed shortly before America entered WW2.

Night in New Orleans

Night in New Orleans
5.9/10
  • Genre: CrimeDramaMystery
  • Release: 01/07/1942
  • Character: Newspaper Photographer (Uncredited)
A policeman's family helps to exonerate him of murder charges in the death of a man he had under interrogation.

Meet the Wildcat

Meet the Wildcat
6.2/10
  • Genre: Mystery
  • Release: 22/10/1940
  • Character: Gallery Assistant
Ralph Bellamy and Margaret Lindsay, stars of Columbia's "Ellery Queen" series, let their hair down and went "screwball" in the Universal comedy-mystery Meet the Wildcat. Bellamy plays a New York gumshoe on the trail of an art thief. His investigation is confounded by the presence of snoopy girl reporter Lindsay.

The Case Of The Baby-Sitter

The Case Of The Baby-Sitter
4.9/10
The baby sitter is none other than veteran Hollywood tough guy Tom Neal. A private detective, Neal is hired to keep an eye on the child of married couple George Meeker and Rebel Randall. Actually, Meeker and Randall are jewel thieves, and their "baby" is their stolen loot. Neal eventually catches on when he realizes that this is the quietest child on earth. Running a scant 41 minutes, Case of the Baby Sitter was designed to be shown in tandem with another Screen Guild Productions "briefie," The Hat Box Mystery: the films were shot back to back, with Tom Neal and Pamela Blake starring in both.

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