Writer By 1937, Hellinger was a syndicated columnist featured in 174 newspapers. That same year he was hired as a writer/producer by
Jack L. Warner. He worked on the story for
Racket Busters (1938) starring
Humphrey Bogart and
Comet Over Broadway (1938) and provided the story for the 1939
Raoul Walsh gangster film
The Roaring Twenties starring
James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart, basing it on his own experiences during that
decade. In his onscreen foreword to the film, he wrote:
Producer Hellinger began worked as a producer on B pictures such as
The Adventures of Jane Arden (1939),
Women in the Wind (1939), ''
Hell's Kitchen (1939) and The Cowboy Quarterback'' (1939). Hellinger also helped produce
The Roaring Twenties (1939) starring James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart, his first "A" film. He produced Bs for a little bit longer:
Kid Nightingale (1939), and
British Intelligence (1940). Then Hellinger established himself as a top level producer with
It All Came True (1940) starring
Ann Sheridan and featuring Bogart. He followed it with
Torrid Zone (1940) starring Cagney and Sheridan, and
Brother Orchid (1940) with
Edward G. Robinson, Bogart and Sheridan. Hellinger made four classics directed by
Raoul Walsh:
The Roaring Twenties (1939) with Cagney and Bogart;
They Drive by Night (1940) with
George Raft, Sheridan, Bogart, and
Ida Lupino;
High Sierra (1941) with Lupino and Bogart; and
Manpower (1941) with Robinson,
Marlene Dietrich and Raft. He made a comedy titled
Affectionately Yours (1941) with
Merle Oberon and
Rita Hayworth. Hellinger went over to
20th Century Fox to make two films:
Rise and Shine (1942), a musical, and
Moontide (1942) with
Jean Gabin, Lupino,
Thomas Mitchell and
Claude Rains. Due to a congenital heart condition, Hellinger repeatedly was rejected for active service during
World War II. Instead, he briefly worked as a
war correspondent, writing human interest stories about the troops. Back at Warners, he produced the all-star musical revue
Thank Your Lucky Stars (1943) and made
Between Two Worlds (1944),
The Doughgirls (1944), and
The Horn Blows at Midnight (1945).
Universal Hellinger set up at Universal, where he had his own producing unit. He had a big hit with
The Killers (1946) which made stars of both
Burt Lancaster and
Ava Gardner. He followed it with
Swell Guy (1946) with
Sonny Tufts,
The Two Mrs. Carrolls (1947) with Bogart back at Warners,
Brute Force, and
The Naked City, which he also narrated. The last film was released several weeks after Hellinger's death, and in his review for the
New York Times,
Bosley Crowther called it "a virtual Hellinger column on film" and "his appropriate valedictory" and observed, "The late Mark Hellinger's personal romance with the City of New York was one of the most ecstatic love affairs of the modern day — at least, to his host of friends and readers who are skeptics regarding l'amour. Before he became a film producer and was still just a newspaper scribe, Mr. Hellinger went for Manhattan in a blissfully uninhibited way — for its sights and sounds and restless movements, its bizarre people and its equally bizarre smells. And he made quite a local reputation framing his fancies in flowery billets doux which stirred the hearts and the humors of readers of the tabloid press." Hellinger won the 1947
Edgar Award for Best Motion Picture for
The Killers. ==Personal life and death==