Showing posts with label small town. Show all posts
Showing posts with label small town. Show all posts

March 21, 2022

HOT SUMMER NIGHT (1957)

 

There is some intrigue at the beginning of this film as bank robbers coerce a bank executive from his home at night to open the vault. Overall it is a decent film helped enormously by veteran actors. The film stumbles during a slow-motion, dimly-lit getaway through a most obvious studio set with "studio dirt" heavily applied to a station wagon. There is zero realism in the scene that is sprinkled with extras as obvious as shadows on a sunny day. In his small, fading hometown, Robert Wilke has become somewhat of a local hero, giving his illegal gains to support the town where he sees fit. The townsfolk are very protective of him—out of fear.

The recently fired newspaper reporter, Leslie Nielson, sees the news article about a local robbery and he develops a planput his honeymoon on hold while he gets a scoop on Wilke's former girlfriend. Nielson's past article helped free her from his dominance but everyone in town is tight-lipped about her whereabouts. Never mind about his wife, Colleen Miller, for marrying a guy without a job or mindlessly accepting her husband's decision for this dangerous career booster. He is vague about his plan, only telling her that a honeymoon is forthcoming. Probably.

Wilke's ego is stroked with anticipation of a grand story about himself. He is eerily cordial to the reporter as his skeptical gang is not sure whether he might order Nielson shot from across the table. In a powerfully tense scene, before the interview starts, Wilke sets the table by verbally flattening his skittish partner, Paul Richards, like a placematinsulting his panic attack that ruined a previous robbery. Richards is seething with rage but has not yet decided how to retaliate. Their friendship has run its course. Nielson ultimately gets a story but not the one he intended.


Most will note the familiar television lead actors in this unknown crime film, a film suggesting it has noir roots. A volunteer gang member, James Best, opens the film with his usual good old country boy flavor. He praises Wilke for his morale boost to the town. Nielson is adequate as a one-dimensional character. He was much “bigger” on the small screen during his dramatic era. Miller's career was sparse as is her emotional range here. She is the weak link in the cast. The standout in the film, the aforementioned Richards, is the mentally unpredictable polar opposite of venerable film actor, Jay C. Flippen, the level-headed veteran of the gang. Filming never attempts to capture Richards' menacing, aloof stare that was somewhat of his trademark in sinister roles. But what he does in wide-eyed pleasure about halfway into the film gets everyone's attention. It is the only shocking moment in this dialogue-heavy film. The genuine article is Edward Andrews, inhabiting his character as a sweaty sheriff.

This probably is the only film with two actors of the opposite sex named Leslie. For her uncredited role, Leslie Parrish plays an undefined character sitting on the floor, oddly clinging to Richards' leg in total devotion. IMBD dot com, for one, incorrectly identifies Parrish, giving her two different actresses' names.

Note: Directed by David Friedkin, this eighty-six-minute film would appear to be a television production with its low budget, flat camera work by Harold J. Marzorati, and highly visible actors of the period. The music is by André Previn but the score remains, for the most part, anonymous. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer distributed the film but it did not turn a profit. Today, it might be considered a lost treasure by younger viewers, not realizing Nielson did anything else but Lt. Frank Drebin.

January 12, 2019

WHEN GANGLAND STRIKES (1956)



CARUSO STRIKES MAYBERRY

This is not two television episodes edited into a movie. Its premise, from a story and screenplay by John K. Butler and Frederick Louis Fox, centers around a big city mobster who wants his trial moved to a small community, Rosedale, where he will likely go free by a jury of no peers. The moviegoer knows he committed murder in an alley. The bowling type. The mobster plans to blackmail the town's elder prosecutor because he knows the secret he has kept hidden for years. The not-so-horrible secret is kept for a while, but out of fear, the prosecutor throws the trial in the mobster's favor. The Republic Pictures release is planted firmly on the mediocre side of town. Perhaps an explanation of the awkward and misleading title is in order. A gangland mobster shoots a key witness in a bowling alley right after the guy rolls another one of his strikes. You can believe that if you want.


Thanks to the ubiquitous criminal, Anthony “Duke” Caruso, the opening would suggest a hard-hitting crime drama. Script “bookends of excitement” are used at the beginning and end to keep the slow middle section from collapsing. Dramatic scene transition music sometimes would fit a sitcom of the era with a downtown studio set. It is as clean and stainless as the people who live there. Every automobile is newly washed and waxed. With its clichéd dialogue and characters, this film could have been made ten to fifteen years earlier. By golly, Andy Hardy would feel right at home here.

Directed by R.G. Springsteen, everyone rolls through the film competently, however. Playing the seasoned and genial pivotal character is Raymond “Pops” Greenleaf, the lovable and infamous prosecuting attorney. The Ben Matlock of Rosedale. The courtroom scenes are, thankfully, brief, but are not anchored in any reality. The cast is a “gang load” of B-movie or television performers. Caruso's ex-con airhead girl is played by Marian Carr. She thinks the world of him...calls him “Dukie.” He does not reciprocate her sentiments. Young John Hudson plays an up-and-coming prosecutor and fiancé to the cute and wholesome, Marjie Millar. She seems lifted straight from a Roy Rogers serial. More embarrassing is watching Slim Pickens do his one-dimensional, rural bumpkin character. He is so one-dimensional his character's name is actually “Slim Pickett.” His elementary-level humor hardly ever satisfies. Again playing a sheriff, is Paul Birch. Uncredited roles go to Mayberry alums from The Andy Griffith Show, James Best, and Dick Elliot.

Caruso is eventually subpoenaed by the court for a second murder. His memorized “attendance” at a piano concert is his alibi. But Greenleaf knows more about the pianist than Caruso and his detailed questions destroy him on the witness stand. Out of nowhere comes a startling solo piano score underlying the scene. Caruso loses his temper and attempts to shoot his chauffeur because he thinks he betrayed him on the shady conjecture from Greenleaf. How he got into the courthouse with a handgun, no one cares. It is the final bookend of excitement in the film. Ditsy Carr hopes that “Dukie” will not be put away long. Caruso's legal adviser sardonically replies it will be just a couple of days, then they will turn on the electricity. As expected, she does not get it.

Note: To accurately categorize this film is puzzling. A studio laugh track would not be out of place. The script is idealistic with abrupt scene changes and characters popping up without any permission to do so. In spite of these things, this forgotten, historical slice of Americana, is generally pleasing. At seventy minutes, it may be the perfect movie to watch on a smartphone, simply because one can.