FBI Code 98

1962 film by Leslie H. Martinson


title: "FBI Code 98" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1962-films", "1962-crime-drama-films", "american-black-and-white-films", "films-shot-in-washington,-d.c.", "american-police-detective-films", "television-films-as-pilots", "warner-bros.-films", "films-directed-by-leslie-h.-martinson", "american-crime-drama-films", "films-about-the-federal-bureau-of-investigation", "television-pilots-not-picked-up-as-a-series", "1960s-english-language-films", "1962-american-films", "english-language-crime-drama-films", "films-scored-by-max-steiner", "films-scored-by-howard-jackson-(composer)"] description: "1962 film by Leslie H. Martinson" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FBI_Code_98" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary 1962 film by Leslie H. Martinson ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox film"]

FieldValue
nameFBI Code 98
imageFBI Code 98 FilmPoster.jpeg
directorLeslie H. Martinson
writerStanley Niss
producerStanley Niss
starringJack Kelly
William Reynolds
Ray Danton
Merry Anders
Andrew Duggan
Philip Carey
Peggy McCay
narratorWilliam Woodson
cinematographyRobert Hoffman
editingLeo H. Shreve
musicMax Steiner
Howard Jackson
distributorWarner Bros.
released
runtime104 min.
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
::

| name = FBI Code 98 | image = FBI Code 98 FilmPoster.jpeg | caption = | director = Leslie H. Martinson | writer = Stanley Niss | producer = Stanley Niss | starring = Jack Kelly William Reynolds Ray Danton Merry Anders Andrew Duggan Philip Carey Peggy McCay | narrator = William Woodson | cinematography = Robert Hoffman | editing = Leo H. Shreve | music = Max Steiner Howard Jackson | distributor = Warner Bros. | released = | runtime = 104 min. | country = United States | language = English FBI Code 98 is a 1962 crime drama directed by Leslie H. Martinson and produced by Warner Bros. Originally intended as television pilot, the film was instead released theatrically in the United Kingdom in 1962, and in the United States in 1963. FBI Code 98 stars many Warner Bros. contract players such as Jack Kelly, Ray Danton, Andrew Duggan and William Reynolds who later costarred on the Warner Bros Television show The F.B.I.. The film was narrated by William Woodson, who had previously narrated the radio show The FBI in Peace and War.

Plot

The president of an electronics company, Alan Nichols (Andrew Duggan), and his two vice presidents, Robert Cannon (Jack Kelly) and Fred Vitale (Ray Danton), are required at Cape Canaveral to oversee the test launching of a missile which their company developed. But before they are able to board the plane to take them there one of their suitcases is switched for one containing a bomb. Cannon opens his luggage when the men are in mid air and discovers the bomb, and his colleague Vitale manages to disarm it. The FBI is called in to determine whether this is a case of attempting to murder Cannon, whose suitcase contained the bomb, or an attempt to sabotage the airplane.

The investigation soon proves that electronics project engineer Petersen made and planted the bomb in the suitcase. Petersen's motivation for doing this is that his son was fired by CEO Nichols, and when failing to blow up the plane he instead tries to blow up Nichols yacht, with the wife and her lover on it. The task for the FBI is to stop this endeavour.

Cast

Production

The Federal Bureau of Investigation cooperated in the filming of FBI Code 98, with sequences filmed in Washington, D.C., and Quantico, Virginia.

The working title of the film was Headquarters F.B.I. with screenwriter and producer Stanley Niss having a novelization of the screenplay published under that title. Niss, a former police reporter, had written episodes for the radio shows Gangbusters and Counterspy and episodes of several Warner Bros. Television shows. Niss also visited the set to smooth difficulties between Ray Danton and director Leslie H. Martinson.

The film reuses Max Steiner's score for The FBI Story arranged by Howard Jackson.

References

References

  1. "''FBI Code 98''". bfi.org.uk.
  2. "FBI Code 98".
  3. "The Private Life and Times of Pamela Austin". glamourgirlsofthesilverscreen.com.
  4. [http://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n78-58436 Stanley Niss at worldcat.com]
  5. (September 19, 1938). "Letters To the Editor". Time, Inc..
  6. Magers, Boyd & Fitzgerald, Michael G. ''Western Women: Interviews with 50 Leading Ladies of Movies and Television'' p.18, 2004, McFarland
  7. (1996). "The Max Steiner Collection". Special Collections and Manuscripts, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University.

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1962-films1962-crime-drama-filmsamerican-black-and-white-filmsfilms-shot-in-washington,-d.c.american-police-detective-filmstelevision-films-as-pilotswarner-bros.-filmsfilms-directed-by-leslie-h.-martinsonamerican-crime-drama-filmsfilms-about-the-federal-bureau-of-investigationtelevision-pilots-not-picked-up-as-a-series1960s-english-language-films1962-american-filmsenglish-language-crime-drama-filmsfilms-scored-by-max-steinerfilms-scored-by-howard-jackson-(composer)