Crime Wave (1954)

reviewed by
Dennis Schwartz


CRIME WAVE (director: André de Toth; screenwriters: from a story by John & Ward Hawkins/Crane Wilbur/Bernard Gordon/Richard E. Wormser; cinematographer: Bert Glennon; editor: Thomas Reilly; cast: Sterling Hayden (Lt. Sims), Gene Nelson (Steve Lacey), Phyllis Kirk (Ellen), Ted de Corsia (Doc Penny), Charles Bronson (Ben Hastings), Jay Novello (Dr. Otto Hessler), James Bell (O'Keefe), Dub Taylor (Snider), Timothy Carey (Johnny), Ned Young (Morgan); Runtime: 73; Warner Bros.; 1954)

Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz

A solid but routine film noir, shot on location in Los Angeles. It is noteworthy for its great B&W location shots of the busy L.A. streets and of capturing a noir look of alienation. The plot revolves around the familiar noir tale of an innocent man trapped in circumstances beyond his control. André de Toth only directed one other noir film, Pitfall (48).

Three escaped felons from San Quentin rob a gas station and kill a motorcycle cop, with one of the men, Morgan (Young), getting severely wounded. The men split and Morgan flees to the apartment of an ex-con gone straight, Steve Lacey (Gene Nelson), who is reluctant to help because he has a good job as an airplane mechanic and has married a good wife, Ellen (Kirk). Morgan pulls a gun on him and has an expelled medical doctor who is now a veterinarian, ex-con Dr. Otto Hessler (Novello), come over to treat his wounds, but dies in Lacey's apartment before he can be treated. Hessler flees with Morgan's share of the robbery money, and upon Ellen's urgings Lacey calls his understanding probation officer (James Bell), just as the cops arrive at his place.

Lacey is taken to the police station and grilled by Lt. Sims (Sterling Hayden), a hard-nosed detective, who doesn't believe criminals can reform. Sims lets him go with a severe warning that he will send him back to prison if he's involved with the escapees, or if he doesn't cooperate with him. When Lacey comes back home, the two vicious thugs, Doc Penny (de Corsia) and Ben Hastings (Bronson), are waiting for him, and force him to go along with a bank robbery scheme and then to fly them to Mexico, or else they threaten to kill his wife.

Lacey has no choice but to pretend to cooperate with the escapees, but figures out a way to foil the robbery and get Sims to be there. Sims chews toothpicks as a substitute for cigarettes, as he tries to kick the habit. One of the film's pleasures is in the offhand gestures it makes to Sim's quirks. When the case is solved, Sims lightens up for the first time and brings out a cigarette from the pocket of his rumpled suit and takes one drag from it before throwing it away and putting the toothpick back in his mouth.

This low-budget B-flick was very entertaining. It has a fast-pace, a good eye for detail, and some vivid camera shots around Los Angeles, which made for a tough looking film.

REVIEWED ON 1/20/2001     GRADE: C+

Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"

http://www.sover.net/~ozus
ozus@sover.net

© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ


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