Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. I Was a Communist for the FBI. I Was a Communist for the FBI is a 1951 American crime film noir produced by Bryan Foy, directed by Gordon Douglas and starring Frank Lovejoy. [3] The film is based on a series of stories written by Matt Cvetic that appeared in The Saturday Evening Post. [4] The stories were later adapted into a bestselling book ...

  2. The screenplay for I Was a Communist for the F.B.I. is credited to Crane Wilbur, who not only coauthored He Walked by Night (1948) with John C. Higgins and The Phenix City Story (1955) with Daniel Mainwaring but scripted and directed such “prison” noirs as Canon City (1948) and The Story of Molly X (1949) in addition to the “jailbird” noir Outside the Wall (1950).

    • Robert William Miklitsch
    • 2013
  3. May 9, 2012 · The response from the FBI was always the same, “The FBI does not have any ties with Matt Cvetic and will not take any stance on the film.” (that can be read in the FBI vault here) The whole story of Matt Cvetic and I Was a Communist for the FBI shows the public fascination with FBI covert actions and the counter-communist initiatives of the U.S. government.

  4. A mini-collab with comrade Nick Langdon (Nick is marvelous at contextualising movies within the sociopolitical sphere, please give him a follow if you don't already) . I Was a Communist for the FBI should really be titled I Was a Soviet Spy for the FBI, but in the days of the Second Red Scare post-WWII, the pushed presumption was that a communist was automatically a Soviet comrade, ready to ...

    • (364)
    • Warner Bros. Pictures
    • Gordon Douglas
  5. 1951 American film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. I Was a Communist for the FBI is a 1951 American crime film noir produced by Bryan Foy, directed by Gordon Douglas and starring Frank Lovejoy. [3] Quick Facts Directed by, Screenplay by ... The film is based on a series of stories written by Matt Cvetic that appeared in The Saturday ...

  6. Jun 1, 2002 · A tireless self-promoter, Cvetic retailed increasingly fictionalized versions of his story to the Saturday Evening Post, which ran a three-part, ghost-written series entitled “I Was a Communist for the FBI,” to Warner Brothers, which made a film by the same title, and to the Ziv Company, which produced a radio series starring Dana Andrews.

  7. The response from the FBI was always the same, “The FBI does not have any ties with Matt Cvetic and will not take any stance on the film.” (that can be read in the FBI vault here) The whole story of Matt Cvetic and I Was a Communist for the FBI shows the public fascination with FBI covert actions and the counter-communist initiatives of the U.S. government.

  1. People also search for