Am I Guilty? is a 1940 American film directed by Samuel Neufeld for the Supreme Pictures Corporation. The film's producer A. W. Hackel,[1] who had founded Supreme Pictures, planned a series of films featuring black casts, but Am I Guilty? was the only one to be released.[2] The screenplay was cowritten by Earle Snell and George Wallace Sayre based on a story by Sherman Lowe.
Toddy Pictures rereleased the film as Racket Doctor in 1945.[3][4] Advertisements for the film, including a lobby card, remain in existence,[5] and a poster was appraised on an episode of the PBS show Antiques Roadshow.
^Chappell, Helen F. (June 22, 1940). "CHATTER And Some NEWS". The Chicago Defender. p. 10. ProQuest492536345. Tuesday night we ran out to one of the Hollywood process laboratories to see a preview of Ralph Cooper's 'Am I Guilty?' [...] The cast and members of the press sat in on the preview, and perhaps Jess Lee Brooks, who has a brief but creditable role, sums it up best in: 'The photography is the best I've seen in this type of picture.'