The best Ted Stanhope’s crime movies

Ted Stanhope

Ted Stanhope

30/01/1902- 10/07/1977
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Ted Stanhope’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 Ted Stanhope.

The Big Heat

The Big Heat
7.9/10
Tough cop Dave Bannion takes on a politically powerful crime syndicate.

Mysterious Doctor Satan

Mysterious Doctor Satan
7.3/10
A mad scientist named Dr. Satan plots to steal key pieces of technology to enable him to build an army of robots based on his prototype to conquer America. The only one standing in his way is Bob Wayne, who fights Satan as the enigmatic Copperhead. Mysterious Doctor Satan is a 1940 film serial named after its chief villain. Doctor Satan's main opponent is the masked mystery man, "The Copperhead", whose secret identity is Bob Wayne, a man searching for justice and revenge on Satan for the death of his step-father. The serial charts the conflict between the two as Bob Wayne pursues Doctor Satan, while the latter completes his plans for world domination.

She Loves Me Not

She Loves Me Not
5.8/10
  • Genre: ComedyCrime
  • Release: 31/08/1934
  • Character: Ticket Clerk
A cabaret dancer witnesses a murder and is forced to hide from gangsters by disguising herself as a male Princeton student.

The Glass Alibi

The Glass Alibi
6.1/10
Eying a large inheritance, a reporter marries a rich woman with failing health. When she begins feeling healthy after the wedding, the reporter takes drastic measures to make sure his wife dies.

The Burning Cross

The Burning Cross
5.6/10
  • Genre: Crime
  • Release: 01/09/1947
  • Character: Bill Elkins
Recently returned from WWII combat, unable to find a job, finding his sweetheart engaged to another man, and generally aware of the changes which have occurred in his hometown while he was away, a young man becomes easily talked into joining the Ku Klux Klan. Banned by the Virginia Board of Censors, and financed independently because no bank would loan money for it.

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