| Outcast | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Directed by | Robert Florey | 
| Written by | Doris Malloy Dore Schary  | 
| Story by | Frank R. Adams | 
| Produced by | Emanuel Cohen | 
| Cinematography | Rudolph Maté | 
| Edited by | Ray Curtiss | 
| Music by | Ernst Toch | 
| Distributed by | Paramount Pictures | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 73 minutes | 
| Country | United States | 
| Language | English | 
Outcast is a 1937 American drama film directed by Robert Florey.[1] Unusually for Florey, this was an independent production (Emanuel Cohen Productions, billed as "Major Pictures Corporation") released through Paramount Pictures.
Plot
Warren William plays a Baltimore doctor accused of murder. Although acquitted, he becomes a pariah and his practice is ruined, so he transplants himself to a small Wisconsin town. Confiding with a sympathetic retired lawyer (Lewis Stone), the doctor just begins to build back his practice, his self-respect, and a relationship with a local girl (Karen Morley) when his past follow him in the form of the avenging sister of the murder victim.
Cast
- Warren William as Dr. Wendell Phillips / Phil Jones
 - Karen Morley as Margaret Stevens
 - Lewis Stone as Anthony Abbott
 - Jackie Moran as Freddie Simmerson
 - John Wray as Hank Simmerson
 - Esther Dale as Hattie Simmerson
 - Christian Rub as Olaf, the Valet
 - Virginia Sale as Jessica Tuite
 - Ruth Robinson as Mrs. Scutter
 - Murray Kinnell as Anthony 'Tony' Stevens
 - Harry Woods as Grant, the Head Lyncher
 - Richard Carle as Mooney
 - Matthew Betz as Don, a Townsman
 
References
External links
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