Sam Goldwyn Samuel Goldwyn brought Cochran to Hollywood in 1945.
Warner Bros. In 1949, Cochran went over to Warner Bros., playing Big Ed Somers, a power-hungry henchman to James Cagney's psychotic mobster in
White Heat (1949) opposite Virginia Mayo. Warner Bros. eventually took over Cochran's and Mayo's contracts from Goldwyn. Cochran supported
Joan Crawford in ''
The Damned Don't Cry (1950), after which he was given his first lead role, in Highway 301'' (1950), playing a gangster. He was a villain to
Gary Cooper's hero in
Dallas (1950) and played a
Ku Klux Klan member in
Storm Warning (1951) with
Ginger Rogers and
Doris Day. Cochran was a villain in
Canyon Pass (1951), a western, and then was given the lead in
Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison (1951), which inspired
Johnny Cash to write his song "
Folsom Prison Blues". Warners gave him another lead in
Tomorrow Is Another Day (1951), a film noir with
Ruth Roman that was originally intended for
Burt Lancaster. He returned to supporting parts in
Jim Thorpe – All-American (1951) with Burt Lancaster. Warners starred him in
The Tanks Are Coming (1951) and in a rare sympathetic role in
The Lion and the Horse (1952). He co-starred with
Cornel Wilde in
Operation Secret (1952) and supported Virginia Mayo in ''
She's Back on Broadway (1953). In The Desert Song'' (1953), Cochran played
Gordon Macrae's rival for
Kathryn Grayson. He then left Warners.
Post-Warners Cochran starred in the low-budget action film
Shark River (1953) for United Artists and was a villain in ''
Back to God's Country'' (1953), which starred
Rock Hudson, at Universal. He returned to television, appearing in episodes of
Lux Video Theatre ("Three Just Men" (1953)), and
Studio One in Hollywood ("Letter of Love" (1953)). He reportedly made a film in Mexico called
Embarcardero, which he wrote and directed. He also starred in it, alongside
Edward Norri. Cochran then went to Germany to make
Carnival Story (1954) for the
King Brothers. It was his first film in Europe. Back in Hollywood, he co-starred in
Private Hell 36 (1954) as a crooked cop with
Ida Lupino and
Howard Duff for
Don Siegel. His TV roles included "Foreign Affair" (1954) for
Robert Montgomery Presents; "The Role of a Lover" (1954) and "The Most Contagious Game" (1955) for
Studio One; "Trip Around the Block" (1954) and "The Menace of Hasty Heights" (1956) for
The Ford Television Theatre; "The After House" (1954), "Fear is the Hunter" (1956), and "Bait for the Tiger" (1957) for
Climax!; and "The Seeds of Hate" (1955) for
General Electric Theatre.
Republic Pictures hired him to play
Ann Sheridan's love interest in
Come Next Spring (1956) that he also produced. Cochran then went to the UK to play the lead in
The Weapon (1956). Cochran supported
Van Johnson in MGM's
Slander (1957). He went to Italy to star in
Il Grido (1957) for
Michelangelo Antonioni alongside
Alida Valli and
Betsy Blair; filming took seven months. On television, he appeared in "Outlaw's Boots" (1957) for
Schlitz Playhouse, "Debt of Gratitude" (1958) for
Zane Grey Theater, "Strictly Personal" (1958) for
The Loretta Young Show, and an episode of
The Twilight Zone, “
What You Need”, in 1959. Cochran played the lead roles in ''
Quantrill's Raiders (1958), an Allied Artists western, and in I Mobster (1959), a Roger Corman gangster film. Albert Zugsmith used him for the lead roles in The Beat Generation (1959) and The Big Operator'' (1959). ==Later career==