Double Exposure is a 1944 American crime comedy film directed by William Berke, and starring Chester Morris and Nancy Kelly.
In New York City, James R. Tarlock, a fitness fanatic and publisher of the picture magazine Flick, tells his editor, Larry Burke, to hire Pat Marvin, a small town Iowa photographer, based on a great photograph of a crashing airplane.
It turns out that Pat's boyfriend, Ben Scribner (Phillip Terry), faked her airplane picture.
Ben is less enthused about her leaving for the big city, but supports her decision to take the job.
In anger, he sends Ben on an assignment, one that (unbeknownst to him) puts him aboard a ship bound for Russia.
Meanwhile, Tarlock assigns Pat to take a series of photographs of a fake murder for the magazine's readers to try to solve.