I just love this film. Well acted all around with a stellar cast, lead by Victor Mature, Stephen McNally, Richard Egan, Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine, to name five. Also, J. Carroll Naish did a good job as one of the robbers. Margaret "Maggie" Hayes did her usual troubled woman portrayal as a promiscuous wife who sees other men, and meets her end in the bank robbery. Virginia Leith (A Kiss Before Dying, The Brain That Wouldn't Die) shined as a nurse who romances the alcoholic Egan character. Thanks for presenting this movie.
The cars in this movie! I can actually name just about all of them, including the years they were made! That's when each had its own personality and style... Now they all look alike... An era gone by....... sad.....
I also watched this for the period cars. I felt a pang of regret when they set light to the 54' blue Mercury. Rare to see so many exterior shots in a film of this period (usually sound stages). IMCDb is an excellent source for identifying film and TV cars.
Stephanie DePrima: I totally agree with you. Love looking at the wonderful cars and fashion and interior design. Back when we had style and personality. You should check out "Under the Yum Yum Tree" where Jack Lemmon drives a 1962 Ford Cougar 406 "concept car". It has doors that go up like a Delorean.
@Gabriel Ortiz Thanks for uploading this film. It's not only one film, though, but numerous ones, it seems to me. The open pits reminded me of the respective scenes shot on location in A KISS BEFORE DYING, the bank robbers coming to a small town reminded me of ODDS AGAINST TOMORROW, the window gazer reminded me of IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT, the alienated couple in part reminded me of WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLFE and CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF, and, finally, the way the violence averse Amish man Ernest Borgnine ultimately discards his creed and, as a kind of personified wrath of God, kills the bad one (with a fork, of all instruments!) brought to mind how pacifist Quaker woman Grace Kelly ultimately saves her husband, Gary Cooper, by killing the ambush killer in HIGH NOON.
By the way you analysed this movie I'm going to presume you have excellent taste. I've only seen two of the above mentioned movies, now I'll watch the other one's you mentioned before I die. Thank you.
I've seen this twice now. The movie, itself, is quite good, but even if it was not, the wonderful scenery of Bisbee, Arizona makes it worthwhile. Thanks for the upload.
I worked underground way back when. They would blast of course and when they did the air would separate into layers of dust like a parfait dessert. You could feel the blast in your head. It was really something.
This has become one of my favorite films of the fifties. Richard Fleischer knew how to direct for realism. The stereo sound on this post is terrific! Thanks.
I've seen this several times over the years and I never get tired of it. I agree with one of the posters below, Richard Fleischer was an underrated director. This was tightly crafted in the way it wove together several plot lines. Kudos also for the gorgeous technicolor and cinematography. It's fun to see Victor Mature, Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine all in a film together, each at very different stages in their careers.
A superb plot, gripping study of American morals, exquisite cast many of the co-stars became stars in their own right like Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine.
Morals? In the first 20 minutes we have people 'casing' a bank in preparation to rob it, Lee Marvin stomping on a kid's hand before shoving him, a librarian who can't make her interest payments so she steals a purse, two 'best friend' kids fighting for no apparent reason and a sleazeball making moves on another man's wife.
cruising through the old movies and bingo; I've been looking for this to see again for 50 years. Never knew the title although the location and cast looked highly likely. Thanks for making this possible, Oscar
This was a good watch :) It was really interesting how little some things have changed in sixty+ years and then how much other things have; like near the beginning when the hotel desk manager happily gives out the woman's name and room number to someone who was, at least to her, a complete stranger!
"I don't really know how it happened as I didn't get to go to the movies that often, yet Victor Mature became my favorite super star on/off he screen!"
He was scared of horses. COMPLETELY scared, not just a little. I can see why a person could be. This is just quoting something I read, or heard said on TCM, something like that, I did not of course know him, LOL. Everything he's in, I love him right away, and his choices of movies were always great, but strictly as a set of facial features, Victor Mature is one of the funniest-looking people that ever was. I said this once to a Facebook friend and I think she wanted to kill me but first she had to come unfainted and finish struggling with her disbelief that anyone could think that of Victor Mature. I was amazed. I thought it had to be kinda obvious! No? Ok, den, whole rest of the world...
Lee Marvin always playing the mad guy. He was so good, a very talented actor. Thanks for this movie with the spanish subtitles. I´d wish you have some others to upload.
The great sad-eyed Sylvia Sidney as the librarian. Quite a hit in the late-20s and 1930s replacing Clara Bow as a movie star. Most people today would recognize her as Juno, Hell's raspy-voiced secretary. (Sadly, Ms. Sidney died of throat cancer in 1999.)
This was the last movie Victor Mature made for 20th Century-Fox after many years at the studio. Ironic that his last scene in a Fox movie was in a wheelchair. Probably his best Fox movie was 1947's "Kiss of Death." In that movie, Richard Widmark pushed chair-bound Mildred Dunnock down a flight of steps. Wonder if it was the same chair?
Good Film! I know this town well! I was raised not too far away at Tucson during the 50s so it looked pretty much like it did in the movie! It was really unique to see it just as it was back then! There were no "Amish" in that part of the Country, THAT I REMEMBER! One thing about the Nail he used to take the tape off his eyes....The Amish Always build their own barns, use hand hewn beams (those were not) & use only wooden pegs instead of nails! But then I've always been a stickler for Accurate Details in Movies! Just a little Hobby my husband & I have is pointing out the inaccuracies in Movies! But usually we wait until we've already watched it so we're not distracted during a good part! We also try to guess the model & make of cars, in the movies from that era, too! Some great cars in this one!! Loved the Red T-Bird, she was driving! 🏎️👀
No Amish, but there are their Mennonite cousins throughout Sonora and Coahila, along with the Copper Canyon area, in Northern Mexico. There are, or used to be, some in Southern Arizona. They are Anabaptists with a fairly strict lifestyle very similar to the Amish but they dress more modernly and use some machines. They also live in Pennsylvania near the Amish, though the two groups aren't particularly friendly. The Amish who abandon their traditional ways often transition to be Mennonites, who are far more conservative in lifestyle with odd religious beliefs to most, even religiously observant, Americans. If I remember correctly the real life hero who inspired the film "Hacksaw Ridge" about Okinawa was a Mennonite conscientious objector who volunteered to serve as a combat medic. Lots of the familiar Northern Mexican cheeses are made by Mennonites, who are the major component of the dairy industry there. More people know who the Amish are than Mennonites so this might have been rewritten to avoid long and unnecessary plot exposition.
Probably the best movie showcasing Bisbee that I've seen, especially being able to view it back close to 70 years ago. Funny, the massive house on top of the hill looking up Brewery Gulch 9:33. Wonder when that disappeared?
this movie was way, way, way ahead of its time. pity they dont make them like this anymore. i am sure they could if they wanted to but .......... would they?
It was filmed in front of a real bank in Bisbee, Arizona. In fact, the original building's facade seen in the film is still there, and it's still a bank.
a rarity. a non-urban noir in color.... very good film, fleischer was underrated, some even called him a hack, but the man sure knew where to put the camera. many lesser ''talents'' today get praise for lesser work in pseudo noirs than fleischer ever did making the real stuff back in the 40s/50s. if you like this one try armored truck robbery -1950 and the narrow margin -1952, true noir from a master.
The characters portrayed those human conditions. Their lives collided and good prevailed over bad. I could have been that little boy. America in the 1950's was a great time and place to grow up. Nostalgia to the max for me in this film.
Weekends in Cleveland were not complete without a crappy pan and scan version of this flick running on the afternoon movie. I'd watch it for the cars, Lee, and Ernie. Strange to finally see it in 'Scope.
I was a baby when this film was made, and I witnessed this American era and lifestyle. I can say that yes, once upon a time people were very decent and good hearted. Thay really was how people lived.
*He's the kind of guy I dreamed about owning all my life* Wow... you immediately know who Lee Marvin is when he puts his foot on that kid's hand. *She looked awful...like she had never been alive* "Everything you ever thought or planned is just left hanging in mid air" Great line, "You're rich, eligible and you like yourself" Victor Mature was very touching in his scene with his son, "Every dad wants to be a hero to his son" "Linda" looks a lot like Betsey Drake. Beautiful couch Richard Egan is sleeping on. "Not that you aren't free... I mean that in the freest sense of the word". "I was remembering all the things I'm ashamed to remember in the light of day"
Just saw it last night at work, lol. I was only half paying attention and thought to myself, that it looked familiar. Then he walks to the bank and I said out loud, "that's bisbee!" I'm a Douglas native. Lol.
that said, it would have been even better if they had worn masks, but then we would have missed that lovely bit with Nash and the kid and candy some wonderful stuff throughout this. I was in Bisbee once just to visit it because of this film. Strange town, built of hills that are kind of layered. Never been in one like it since.
Richard Egan was really underrated as an actor just could not reach leading man status ! Very strong cast Proves that there is a Killer in All of Us ESPECIALLY when pushed to either live or Die ! Victor Mature when denied membership in a snobby Country Club because he was actor replied that he "was no Actor had made over a hundred movies that proved It!"
That's what I'm saying criminals have a social environment they learn these skills off each other so the hoods in reality would have known. However the Hollywood script writers probably weren't aware of such things.
I just love this film. Well acted all around with a stellar cast, lead by Victor Mature, Stephen McNally, Richard Egan, Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine, to name five. Also, J. Carroll Naish did a good job as one of the robbers. Margaret "Maggie" Hayes did her usual troubled woman portrayal as a promiscuous wife who sees other men, and meets her end in the bank robbery. Virginia Leith (A Kiss Before Dying, The Brain That Wouldn't Die) shined as a nurse who romances the alcoholic Egan character. Thanks for presenting this movie.
Shone
Well stated.
@@bootstrapperwilson7687 Depends on geography!
The cars in this movie! I can actually name just about all of them, including the years they were made! That's when each had its own personality and style... Now they all look alike... An era gone by....... sad.....
Geostrategic1 So right, bucket seats are not comfy.
I also watched this for the period cars. I felt a pang of regret when they set light to the 54' blue Mercury. Rare to see so many exterior shots in a film of this period (usually sound stages). IMCDb is an excellent source for identifying film and TV cars.
Me too, especially the Hair and the make up.
Stephanie DePrima: I totally agree with you. Love looking at the wonderful cars and fashion and interior design. Back when we had style and personality. You should check out "Under the Yum Yum Tree" where Jack Lemmon drives a 1962 Ford Cougar 406 "concept car". It has doors that go up like a Delorean.
@Gabriel Ortiz Thanks for uploading this film. It's not only one film, though, but numerous ones, it seems to me. The open pits reminded me of the respective scenes shot on location in A KISS BEFORE DYING, the bank robbers coming to a small town reminded me of ODDS AGAINST TOMORROW, the window gazer reminded me of IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT, the alienated couple in part reminded me of WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLFE and CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF, and, finally, the way the violence averse Amish man Ernest Borgnine ultimately discards his creed and, as a kind of personified wrath of God, kills the bad one (with a fork, of all instruments!) brought to mind how pacifist Quaker woman Grace Kelly ultimately saves her husband, Gary Cooper, by killing the ambush killer in HIGH NOON.
BRAVO!! WHAT A SUPREME, SEQUENTIAL CITATIONS OF FILMS WITH OSTENSIBLE SIMILARITIES FROM DIFFRENT PICTURES!!!!
By the way you analysed this movie I'm going to presume you have excellent taste. I've only seen two of the above mentioned movies, now I'll watch the other one's you mentioned before I die. Thank you.
Brilliant film.
Love the overall feel of human frailty, drama, sleaze.
Well done to all actors, writers. xx
This was one of the best movies I've seen from that time period. A very strong cast made it even more interesting. Thanks.
Thanks for this old movie. Very good and also actresses and actors. From Chile
I've seen this twice now. The movie, itself, is quite good, but even if it was not, the wonderful scenery of Bisbee, Arizona makes it worthwhile. Thanks for the upload.
Not to mention the very rare Atlantic Blue 1954 Mercury Monterey Special Custom 4-Door Sedan!
I suppose that there must be a lot of Amish in Bisbee. And not only that, Orthodox Jews. I don't know if there is a kitchen sink cult.
I worked underground way back when. They would blast of course and when they did the air would separate into layers of dust like a parfait dessert. You could feel the blast in your head. It was really something.
Yeah, okay, I just mention this because of the beginning. It reminded me.
Great movie, and a marvelous snapshot of what America was like during the Eisenhower years.
This has become one of my favorite films of the fifties. Richard Fleischer knew how to direct for realism. The stereo sound on this post is terrific! Thanks.
Had the pleasure of meeting and chatting with Richard Egan when he was doing Dinner Theater. We talked for about an hour....what a nice man he was.
Just how he strikes me he would be.
How cool. He was such a handsome man, such a great actor and he always had something warm and genuine about him. He is wonderful in this film.
I bet he had a lot of stories although perhaps he wouldn't have told them all.
I've seen this several times over the years and I never get tired of it. I agree with one of the posters below, Richard Fleischer was an underrated director. This was tightly crafted in the way it wove together several plot lines. Kudos also for the gorgeous technicolor and cinematography. It's fun to see Victor Mature, Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine all in a film together, each at very different stages in their careers.
Good movie for a rainy afternoon or lazy Sunday. Lots of good character actors showing how it's done.
A superb plot, gripping study of American morals, exquisite cast many of the co-stars became stars in their own right like Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine.
Morals?
In the first 20 minutes we have people 'casing' a bank in preparation to rob it, Lee Marvin stomping on a kid's hand before shoving him, a librarian who can't make her interest payments so she steals a purse, two 'best friend' kids fighting for no apparent reason and a sleazeball making moves on another man's wife.
Amazing ! Stephen Mac Nally & Victor Mature are 2 great actors ! thanks for posting
Thank you for uploading this suspenseful film, I really loved it.
cruising through the old movies and bingo; I've been looking for this to see again for 50 years. Never knew the title although the location and cast looked highly likely. Thanks for making this possible, Oscar
I SAW THIS FILM WHEN I WAS 9 YEARS OLD AND, WHAT A DELIGHT TO WZTCH IT AGAIN AS A 75-YEAR OLD MOVIE MINION!!!
Fantastic movie :) Thanks very much for the upload :)
Ditto! I never heard of this one before. Very much enjoyed it. Thank you for the upload!
Thank you for an entertaining movie.
This was a good watch :) It was really interesting how little some things have changed in sixty+ years and then how much other things have; like near the beginning when the hotel desk manager happily gives out the woman's name and room number to someone who was, at least to her, a complete stranger!
Excellent movie. Good acting by everyone. Very interesting nuances in the characters and real life situations. I enjoyed every minute of this movie.
That's some great cinematography. The 50's "Cinemascope" is a treasure.
I've always loved this movie, but have been unable to find it on DVD. Thanks for sharing it.
Several on Ebay- just got one.
...here we have an excellent 16x9 print. TCM doesn't have this in their shop, Amazon here and abroad only have 4x3. So THANK YOU. 20TH IS LAZY...
Never heard of this movie and I was surprised by the excellent cast.thanks for the upload
Victor Mature...........LOVED HIM AS AN ACTOR!!!!!
I love these old movies, this is a good film.
Well written, not a whole lot of time wasted in telling the story. Interesting picture of American society, circa 1955.
Steven Torrey ..The editing was superb.
@@wcstevens7 YO MOTHER WAZZ SUPERB
TYRONE POWER what a maroon
Gee great movie so sad they do not make them like this no more.Thx you poster.
"I don't really know how it happened as I didn't get to go to the movies that often, yet Victor Mature became my favorite super star on/off he screen!"
He was scared of horses. COMPLETELY scared, not just a little. I can see why a person could be. This is just quoting something I read, or heard said on TCM, something like that, I did not of course know him, LOL. Everything he's in, I love him right away, and his choices of movies were always great, but strictly as a set of facial features, Victor Mature is one of the funniest-looking people that ever was. I said this once to a Facebook friend and I think she wanted to kill me but first she had to come unfainted and finish struggling with her disbelief that anyone could think that of Victor Mature. I was amazed. I thought it had to be kinda obvious! No? Ok, den, whole rest of the world...
I'm always glad when Victor Mature isn't type cast. He was an excellent actor when given the chance.
"Hereafter I'll pull down the shade"....Nice finish all in all interesting watch. Thanks for sharing
A decades-old favorite. Impeccable Charles G. Clarke compositions for CinemaSCOPE.
great story,great cast,great film.
nice to see vic mature,real person,on screen and off,!!
cheers all
robert
Great film. Thanks for the upload.
great original story,great acting,cast, great film,!
Interesting to see the old Lavender pit in it's infancy. Might have even driven past the Amish family's "farm" growing up.
Lee Marvin always playing the mad guy. He was so good, a very talented actor. Thanks for this movie with the spanish subtitles. I´d wish you have some others to upload.
He's snorting bennies in this movie. Probably snorted bennies in real life.
Great picture. Thanks
I saw this years ago, when I was about 10. I enjoyed it then and it's even better now
Steve20127
Isn't it?!
The great sad-eyed Sylvia Sidney as the librarian. Quite a hit in the late-20s and 1930s replacing Clara Bow as a movie star. Most people today would recognize her as Juno, Hell's raspy-voiced secretary. (Sadly, Ms. Sidney died of throat cancer in 1999.)
This was the last movie Victor Mature made for 20th Century-Fox after many years at the studio. Ironic that his last scene in a Fox movie was in a wheelchair. Probably his best Fox movie was 1947's "Kiss of Death." In that movie, Richard Widmark pushed chair-bound Mildred Dunnock down a flight of steps. Wonder if it was the same chair?
Good Film!
I know this town well! I was raised not too far away at Tucson during the 50s so it looked pretty much like it did in the movie! It was really unique to see it just as it was back then!
There were no "Amish" in that part of the Country, THAT I REMEMBER! One thing about the Nail he used to take the tape off his eyes....The Amish Always build their own barns, use hand hewn beams (those were not) & use only wooden pegs instead of nails! But then I've always been a stickler for Accurate Details in Movies! Just a little Hobby my husband & I
have is pointing out the inaccuracies in Movies! But usually we wait until we've already watched it so we're not distracted during a good part! We also try to guess the model & make of cars, in the movies from that era, too! Some great cars in this one!! Loved the Red T-Bird, she was driving! 🏎️👀
No Amish, but there are their Mennonite cousins throughout Sonora and Coahila, along with the Copper Canyon area, in Northern Mexico. There are, or used to be, some in Southern Arizona. They are Anabaptists with a fairly strict lifestyle very similar to the Amish but they dress more modernly and use some machines. They also live in Pennsylvania near the Amish, though the two groups aren't particularly friendly. The Amish who abandon their traditional ways often transition to be Mennonites, who are far more conservative in lifestyle with odd religious beliefs to most, even religiously observant, Americans. If I remember correctly the real life hero who inspired the film "Hacksaw Ridge" about Okinawa was a Mennonite conscientious objector who volunteered to serve as a combat medic. Lots of the familiar Northern Mexican cheeses are made by Mennonites, who are the major component of the dairy industry there. More people know who the Amish are than Mennonites so this might have been rewritten to avoid long and unnecessary plot exposition.
The Violent Saturday - 1955 - Victor Mature - Richard Egan - Lee Marvin - Ernest Borgnine E Grande Elenco .
Super Produção,Ícones Da Sétima Arte .
no "The" :)
Na Minha Opinião,É .
Sebastião Veríssimo Da Silva you mean shut the fuck up?
Strange. I ne flew into Arizona en-route to a place near Brisbee. I walked by a man on a public phone and did a double-take. It was Lee Marvin.
Wow.
Probably the best movie showcasing Bisbee that I've seen, especially being able to view it back close to 70 years ago. Funny, the massive house on top of the hill looking up Brewery Gulch 9:33. Wonder when that disappeared?
Awesome...thank you so much
The best part of this movie is when Lee Marvin kept stepping on the kids hand. Nice touch.
Hey crazey YO MOTHER
Thanks for posting! Great cast!
Great movie! Thanks for sharing.
Lee Marvin-Marine corps!
Ernest Borgnine-Navy
Richard Egan-Army! Judo and Knife fighting instructor! Badass!
this movie was way, way, way ahead of its time.
pity they dont make them like this anymore.
i am sure they could if they wanted to but .......... would they?
Imagine owning that blue mercury today. That motor sound was mean...
It was filmed in front of a real bank in Bisbee, Arizona. In fact, the original building's facade seen in the film is still there, and it's still a bank.
a rarity. a non-urban noir in color.... very good film, fleischer was underrated, some even called him a hack, but the man sure knew where to put the camera. many lesser ''talents'' today get praise for lesser work in pseudo noirs than fleischer ever did making the real stuff back in the 40s/50s.
if you like this one try armored truck robbery -1950 and the narrow margin -1952,
true noir from a master.
Armored Truck Robbery was great.
CortoArmitage: You are right, this was a beautiful movie to watch. Lovely shots.
Thanks for the recommendations.
Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine are proverbial tough guys. You cannot find actors like these in today's movie screens
Yes, none that are convincing anyway.
Bruce Willis. Fred Ward. I could keep going.
A good few stories of honesty, dishonesty, infidelity, intuition, bravery & murder, all told within 90 mins. Nice one
The characters portrayed those human conditions. Their lives collided and good prevailed over bad. I could have been that little boy. America in the 1950's was a great time and place to grow up. Nostalgia to the max for me in this film.
Superb film with a great moral to the story......
Weekends in Cleveland were not complete without a crappy pan and scan version of this flick running on the afternoon movie. I'd watch it for the cars, Lee, and Ernie. Strange to finally see it in 'Scope.
Always liked Victor Mature. Very good movie Violent Saturday.
Good film....Mature was very underrated and also love Egan.
Without even seeing it, and only at 3 minutes in I can tell this is a keeper. Into the Watch Later bin!
A very fine movie, well acted & some tension filled scenes :-)
Nice to see Virginia Leith's body - she's most familiar to me as a disembodied head in "The Brain That Wouldn't Die".
I was a baby when this film was made, and I witnessed this American era and lifestyle. I can say that yes, once upon a time people were very decent and good hearted. Thay really was how people lived.
WOW, ERNEST BORGNINE, 1955, MARTY, BAD DAY AT BLACK ROCK, AND THIS MOVIE, PRETTY GOOD YEAR
GREAT MOVIE THEY DONT MAKE THEM LIKE THIS ANYMORE
I live in this town!! Bisbee Arizona 😮
I spent a New Year's Eve there once. Damn bars closed at 1:00AM
Wow! Great movie!
I was just thinking what a wonderful place the USA - used to be. What an era. I wish I could go back.
Good movie Thanx :)
Mai um do Victor Mature e Richard Egan, dois do meus preferidos
Great movie superb actors
Great ensemble cast. A film ahead of its time....now considered Richard Fleischer's masterpiece and appears often in art film festivals....
Good movie, it was interesting to see Ernest Borgnine as the Amish father.
Lot of star talent in this movie.
*He's the kind of guy I dreamed about owning all my life* Wow... you immediately know who Lee Marvin is when he puts his foot on that kid's hand. *She looked awful...like she had never been alive* "Everything you ever thought or planned is just left hanging in mid air" Great line, "You're rich, eligible and you like yourself" Victor Mature was very touching in his scene with his son, "Every dad wants to be a hero to his son" "Linda" looks a lot like Betsey Drake. Beautiful couch Richard Egan is sleeping on. "Not that you aren't free... I mean that in the freest sense of the word". "I was remembering all the things I'm ashamed to remember in the light of day"
Same here...I sure miss it...
Bradenville used to be just a one horse town--------------- then the horse left.
Just saw it last night at work, lol. I was only half paying attention and thought to myself, that it looked familiar. Then he walks to the bank and I said out loud, "that's bisbee!" I'm a Douglas native. Lol.
just a excellent movie,fine cast,lee marvin,mean and moody,
Any thoughts that this film may have inspired the Amish twist in WITNESS? What other films have an Amish subplot?
💵💵💵💰💰💰VERY GOOD MOVIE GREAT STORY , WONDERFUL OUTDOOR SCENES N ACTORS ON TOP FORM
ENTERTAINING MOVIE , WE LOVED IT .. PATRICK N LIZ MARCH 2016 😊😁😁😊
I didn't know there were Amish in Arizona. There are many here in PA. I love them, they are very good people.
that said, it would have been even better if they had worn masks, but then we would have missed that lovely bit with Nash and the kid and candy
some wonderful stuff throughout this. I was in Bisbee once just to visit it because of
this film. Strange town, built of hills that are kind of layered. Never been in one like it since.
Now on Bluray
Ernest Borgnine: "Forgive me, neighbor, but I cannot resort to violence." Buhahahahahahahahaha!
Richard Egan was really underrated as an actor just could not reach leading man status ! Very strong cast Proves that there is a Killer in All of Us ESPECIALLY when pushed to either live or Die ! Victor Mature when denied membership in a snobby Country Club because he was actor replied that he "was no Actor had made over a hundred movies that proved It!"
4 minutes into...... the clerk voluntarily gives away a guest's room number ???
Big mistake for a hotel desk clerk, but it's a movie and not a bad movie at that.
@@justjake53welsh59 Never been in a small town??
funny cause Bisbee is exactly the same today, im looking out onto main street right now.
Can you see Doug Stanhope?
That's great.
Some great films from the 50s. 👍🏻
There's a lot going on here, highlighted by the robbery.
Nice..I really liked it.
Brilliant idea
1:20:15, When I first saw this on TV in the 60's, just as Ernest Borgnine raises the pitchfork, the scene dissolves to the next
I can't believe 3 hoods can't hot wire a truck an eleven year old in my home town of Sunderland would do it in a few seconds.
Because....they didn't have the internet.
Aaron Solomon neither did the eleven year olds who stole cars.
Well they must have some skillful parents/guardians.
That's what I'm saying criminals have a social environment they learn these skills off each other so the hoods in reality would have known. However the Hollywood script writers probably weren't aware of such things.
Well said, well said.
Was that Stephen Talbot in an uncredited role as the kid Georgie?
GREAT MOVIE !
great film
Great movie.