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List Price: $19.99Amazon.com's Price: $17.99 You Save: $2.00 (10%)Prices subject to change.
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9786305770329
Format: Black & White, DVD-Video, NTSC
ISBN: 6305770328
Label: Image Entertainment
Manufacturer: Image Entertainment
Number Of Items: 1
Picture Format: Academy Ratio
Publisher: Image Entertainment
Release Date: March 07, 2000
Running Time: 83 minutes
Sales Rank: 35847
Studio: Image Entertainment
Theatrical Release Date: April 30, 1950
Editorial Review:
Description: A businessman who has been given a lethal dose of radium by a hired assassin tracks down his killer in a chase through the streets of Los Angeles.
Amazon.com: A faceless figure marches down an endless hallway as dark, driving music underscores his doom. It's stocky, stalwart Edmond O'Brien, who plows through the police detective's office like he's got nothing to lose. 'I want to report a murder,' he demands, grim and sleepy-eyed. Who was killed? 'I was.' It's a brilliant opening to a memorable film noir classic. O'Brien is a CPA who flees his dull job and small California town for a wild weekend in San Francisco, only to be poisoned and doomed to certain death. With only days to live, his incredulity morphs into a searing drive to find his killers and stinging regrets for what might have been. O'Brien is a familiar noir face, but he usually plays figures of authority: a cop in White Heat; an investigator in The Killers. He's a little stiff here, but his blunt, unglamorous persona is perfect for the Everyman who is randomly visited by death. Rudolph Maté, a cinematographer turned director, moves from sun-bright day scenes to busy nighttime locations with few visual flourishes, but when he takes the camera into the streets of Los Angeles and San Francisco the film is energized with a gritty, restless vigor. It's one of the most relentlessly dark films noir ever made--taut, edgy, and low budget. Watch for the Bradbury building in the film's climax, made famous by its memorable use decades later in the sci-fi noir classic Blade Runner. --Sean Axmaker
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - D.O.A.
Small-town accountant Frank Bigelow goes to San Francisco for a week's fun prior to settling down with fiancée Paula. After a night on the town, he wakes up with more than just a hangover; doctors tell him he's been given a "luminous toxin" with no antidote and has, at most, a week to live! Not knowing who did it or why, Bigelow embarks on a frantic odyssey to find his own murderer. Written by Rod Crawford {puffinus@u.washington.edu}
Rating: - Powerful and intense noir movie
The opening scene of this movie is justly famous; Frank Bigelow (the excellent Edmond O'Brien)walks into a police station saying he wishes to report a murder -his own.The movie then goes into flashback mode and we witness the events that brought about his predicament and his tracing of the killer.It is a clever story and kudos should be bestowed upon the writers Clarence Greene and Russell Rouse for the ingenious plot .
Bigelow is murdered while in LA attending a convention and the modus operandi ... Read More
Rating: - What an ending, but I won't tell you
One of the reasons I give this 5 stars is the reason this guy was murdered, my jaw droped to the floor and bounced. If you have not seen this film you will SAY WHAT??? this is crazy. Good film all the way through, deffinitly a classic Noir (black) film in all its glory, Great acting all the way through. What starts out slow excellerates to Whoa, slow this down before I chew my fingernails off. Don't ever tell anyone the ending, it's way too bizare to give up.
Rating: - One of the greatest movies ever!
After some character development that is essential
and never boring, this movie is relentless.
The brilliant film noir imagery, the constant action,
excellent performances and over-the-top score
puts the so-called action genre films of today to shame.
It is obvious that technological advancement
does not great art make.
Why aren't there more films in black and white?
The plot is awesome.
As soon as the opening credits and Frank Bigelow's ... Read More
Rating: - The Difinitive Film Noir
This film is what Film Noir is all about. The plot is perfect; doomed
anti-hero faces fate, bad guys who are a step ahead of him at every turn, time running out and love just out of reach.
Everyman, Frank Bigelow, finds himself a "dead man walking", with two
days or about a week to live. The poisen that is killing him is as much a
mystery as the twist of fate that has made him worth murdering.
The opening makes this film a noir classic, Bigelow shows up at the
homicide ... Read More
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