The Narrow Margin (1952)
This is why I'm hesitant to rewatch movies...I seen The Narrow Margin almost 20 years ago and considered it one of the great noirs. I watched it last night and Marie Windsor was even better than I remembered, but I didn't remember that the story itself had so many gaping plot holes that it almost seemed a comedy. I suppose when a film has an emotional punch, surprise twist ending and you rewatch it, that first time emotion isn't there as you already know what's going to happen. Still it's worth watching for Marie Windsor, but damn if most films produced under the control of Howard Hughes aren't silly as all get out.
RKO was the best and most prolific of the noir studios, but Howard Hughes (who fascinates me) was pretty much responsible for the studio's demise, due to his goofy ideas, long delays, re-shoots, and firing or causing the retirement of 75% of the employees. By the time he sold the joint after 7 years in 1955 at a big profit, it had degenerated so badly that it couldn't recover, leading to its folding in 1960.