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Where the Sidewalk Ends

 
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Where the Sidewalk Ends

  • Director: Otto Preminger
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Movie Type: Crime Drama, Film Noir
  • Themes: Police Corruption, Crisis of Conscience, Miscarriage of Justice
  • Main Cast: Dana Andrews, Gene Tierney, Gary Merrill, Bert Freed, Karl Malden, Tom Tully
  • Release Year: 1950
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 95 minutes

Plot

Dana Andrews is brutal metropolitan police detective Dixon, who despises all criminals because his father had been one. When the cops pick up two-bit gambler Ken Paine (Craig Stevens) as a murder suspect, Dixon subjects Paine to the third degree -- and accidentally kills him. In disposing of the body, Dixon inadvertently places the blame for the killing on cab driver Jiggs Taylor (Tom Tully). Having fallen in love with Jigg's daughter, Morgan (Gene Tierney), Dixon tries to clear the cabbie without implicating himself, but ultimately he becomes trapped in a web of his own making; luckily Morgan promises to stand by him. Where the Sidewalk Ends was adapted from a novel by William L. Stuart; its director was Otto Preminger, who'd previously put Andrews and Tierney through their paces in Laura (1944). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Where the Sidewalk Ends, while hardly obscure, is also not as well known as it deserves to be. This film noir entry is decidedly flawed, which keeps it from being of the absolute top rank, but it's awfully good -- especially for aficionados of crime thrillers. Sidewalk's main flaw is that the setup of its basic story doesn't quite seem believable; it seems a stretch that Dixon would go to such extraordinary lengths to cover up the murder he accidentally commits. Certainly, there are people who would do this, but it doesn't quite ring true with what we know of the character. Worse, it's incredible that Jiggs would be charged with the murder; there's no blood in his taxi, yet the murdered man would surely have left traces there if the deed had been done in the manner the police suggest. However, if one can accept some of the stretches of the plot, Sidewalk is a taut, totally gripping yarn that also manages to do some good old existential exploration of the good and bad that coexist in all of us. (Not that all of the characters are good and bad in Sidewalk -- but the mixture in our leading man is more than enough to prove screenwriter Ben Hecht's point.) Hecht has also provided some great dialogue and some juicy roles for his actors -- the exception being Gene Tierney's character, which is surprisingly bland. Fortunately, Tierney's stellar looks make the character's dullness secondary. As Dixon, Dana Andrews turns in one of his finest performances. Andrews' range of characters was fairly limited, but he proved here and in several other entries that he was a perfect noir hero -- conflicted, tortured, and torn, but always with a veneer of toughness. The rest of the cast is also strong, with even Gary Merrill turning in a praiseworthy performance. Otto Preminger's direction is excellent, full of his gliding, inquisitive camera that won't leave the characters alone and with an expert sense of pacing that keeps the film buzzing along at a nice, tense pace. Brutish and brooding, Sidewalk is a small gem. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide

Cast

Ruth Donnelly - Martha; Craig Stevens - Ken Paine; Robert Simon - Inspector Nicholas Foley; Harry Von Zell - Ted Morrison; Don Appell - Willie Bender; Neville Brand - Steve; Grace Mills - Mrs. Tribaum; Lou Krugman - Mike Williams; David McMahon - Harrington; David Wolfe - Sid Kramer; Steve Roberts - Gilruth; Phil Tully - Ted Benson; Ian MacDonald - Casey; John Close - Hanson; John McGuire - Gertessen; Lou Nova - Ernie; Oleg Cassini - Mayer; Louise Lorimer - Mrs. Jackson; Lester Sharpe - Friedman; Chili Williams - Teddy; Robert Foulk - Fenney; Mack Williams - Jerry Morris; Duke Watson - Cab Driver; Clancy Cooper - Lt. Arnaldo; Joseph Granby - Fat Man; Charles Flynn - Schwartz; Larry Thompson - Riley; Tony Barr - Hoodlum; Barry Brooks - Thug; John Day; Bob Evans - Sweatshirt; Anthony George - Thug; Fred Graham - Attendant; Kathleen Hughes - Secretary; Louis Lane; Lee MacGregor - Man; John Marshall; Eda Reiss Merin - Shirley Klein; Peggy O'Connor - Model; Robert Patten - Medical Examiner; Ralph Peters - Counterman; Clarence Straight - Detective; John Trebach - Bartender; Herbert Lytton - Joe; Shirley Tegge

Credit

Russell J. Spencer - Art Director, Lyle Wheeler - Art Director, Frank P. Rosenberg - Associate Producer, Oleg Cassini - Costume Designer, Charles LeMaire - Costume Designer, Otto Preminger - Director, Louis Loeffler - Editor, Cyril Mockridge - Composer (Music Score), Lionel Newman - Musical Direction/Supervision, Ben Nye, Sr. - Makeup, Joseph La Shelle - Cinematographer, Otto Preminger - Producer, Thomas K. Little - Set Designer, Walter Scott - Set Designer, Fred Sersen - Special Effects, Alfred Bruzlin - Sound/Sound Designer, Harry M. Leonard - Sound/Sound Designer, Ben Hecht - Screenwriter, Victor Trivas - Screenwriter, Frank P. Rosenberg - Screenwriter, Robert Kent - Screenwriter, Frank P. Rosenberg - Book Author, William L. Stuart - Book Author

Similar Movies

I Wake Up Screaming; Laura; Under Suspicion; The Man Who Cheated Himself; Out of Time; Kansas City Confidential
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Where the Sidewalk Ends

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Otto Preminger
Produced by Otto Preminger
Written by Screenplay:
Ben Hecht
Robert E. Kent
Frank P. Rosenberg
Victor Trivas
Story:
William L. Stuart
Starring Dana Andrews,
Gene Tierney
Music by Cyril J. Mockridge
Cinematography Joseph LaShelle
Editing by Louis R. Loeffler
Distributed by Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp.
Release date(s) June 26, 1950
(United States)
Running time 95 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Where the Sidewalk Ends (1950) is an American film noir directed and produced by Otto Preminger. The screenplay for the film was written by Ben Hecht, and adapted by Robert E. Kent, Frank P. Rosenberg, and Victor Trivas. The screenplay and adaptations were based on the novel Night Cry by William L. Stuart.[1] The drama features Dana Andrews, Gene Tierney and Gary Merrill.[2]

The film narrative concerns ruthless and cynical Mark Dixon (Dana Andrews), a metropolitan police detective, who despises all criminals because his father had been one.

Considered a classic of the film noir genre, the brand of violence shown in the film, "lurking below urban society", is an important noir motif.[3]

Contents

Plot

Detective Sgt. Mark Dixon accidentally kills Ken Paine.

New York City 16th Precinct Police Detective Dixon, who's in trouble with his superiors for his heavy-handed tactics, subjects murder suspect and gambler Ken Paine (Craig Stevens) to the third degree - he strikes the drunken Paine in self-defense and accidentally kills him. Paine, however, had a silver plate in his head, a fine war record, and newspaper friends. Dixon then dumps Paine's body in the river, and is later assigned to find his killer.

Dixon tries to place the blame on an old gangster enemy, Tommy Scalise (Gary Merrill), yet, he inadvertently places the blame for the killing on cab driver Jiggs Taylor (Tom Tully). Having fallen in love with Jigg's daughter, Morgan Taylor-Paine (Gene Tierney), Dixon tries to clear the cabbie without implicating himself, but ultimately he becomes trapped in a web created by himself.

The 16th Precinct commander, Detective Lt. Thomas (Karl Malden), Dixon's boss, is convinced that Morgan's father is the killer.

Dixon continues to find a way to stop Jiggs from being found guilty of murdering Paine, and also tries to redeem himself. In an attempt to move the evidence away from Morgan's father and blame Scalise, Dixon comes face to face with the gangster and his cronies. A shoot-out leaves Scalise dead and Jiggs is finally cleared of the charges.

At the end Dixon reassesses his life and decides to confess. He's arrested and goes to jail. He's satisfied that Morgan will wait for him until his release.

Cast

Background

This is the last film that Otto Preminger would make as a director-for-hire for Twentieth Century Fox in the 1940s. The series includes Laura, which also stars Gene Tierney and Dana Andrews, Whirlpool, and Fallen Angel.[4]

Filming locations
The film was entirely shot in New York: New York City and Washington Heights, Manhattan.

Critical reception

Most critics compare the film unfavorably to Preminger's earlier film Laura which used much of the same talent as this film. According to film writers, this film, a grittier noir, does succeed in showing a darker side of police similar to the film noirs that follow it.

The New York Times film Critic, Bosley Crowther, while thinking the script was too far fetched, liked the way the dialogue was written, and the acting as well. He wrote, "...the plausibility of the script by Ben Hecht, an old hand with station houses and sleazy underworldlings, is open to question on several counts. Not so, however, his pungent dialogue and unfolding of the plot, which Otto Preminger, who guided the same stars through Laura several seasons back, has taken to like a duck to water and kept clipping along crisply till the fadeout."[5]

The staff at Variety magazine praised the direction of the film. They wrote, "Otto Preminger, director, does an excellent job of pacing the story and of building sympathy for Andrews."[6]

Noir analysis

According to Boris Trbic, scriptwriter and media instructor, Where the Sidewalk Ends reflects a specific phase in the development of the film noir style. The large film production companies in the early 1950s backed away from the social-problem drama, and instead made "low-budget and low-risk thrillers" such as: Panic in the Streets, No Way Out, this film, and others. As such, they avoided the "wrath of conservative critics and social watchdogs."[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ This story was remade in 1961 as an episode of the tv series Hong Kong (Season 1, Episode 17) with the title "Night Cry." The Welsh actor Michael David played Inspector John Bartley, the equivalent of the Dana Andrews role.
  2. ^ Where the Sidewalk Ends at the Internet Movie Database.
  3. ^ Silver, Alain, and Elizabeth Ward, eds. Film Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style, film noir analysis by Carl Mecek, page 310, 3rd edition, 1992. Woodstock, New York: The Overlook Press. ISBN 0-87951-479-5.
  4. ^ Otto Preminger at the Internet Movie Database.
  5. ^ Crowther, Bosley. The New York Times, film review, July 8, 1950. Last accessed: February 1, 2008.
  6. ^ Variety. Staff film review, January 1, 1950.
  7. ^ Trbic, Boris. Senses of Cinema, 2000.

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