Border Incident | |
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Belgian theatrical release poster |
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Directed by | Anthony Mann |
Produced by | Nicholas Nayfack |
Written by | John C. Higgins Story: George Zuckerman |
Starring | Ricardo Montalban George Murphy Howard Da Silva James Mitchell |
Music by | André Previn |
Cinematography | John Alton |
Editing by | Conrad A. Nervig |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date(s) | October 28, 1949 |
Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Border Incident (1949) is a film noir directed by Anthony Mann. The MGM film was written by John C. Higgins and George Zuckerman. The film was shot by cinematographer John Alton who used shadows and lighting effects to involve an audience despite the fact that the film was shot on a low budget. The drama features Ricardo Montalban, George Murphy, Howard Da Silva, among others.[1]
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"Here is the All-American Canal. It runs through the desert for miles along the California-Mexico border... Farming in Imperial Valley... [requires] a vast army of farm workers... and this army of farm workers comes from our neighbor to the south, from Mexico. ... It is this problem of human suffering and injustice about which you should know. The following composite case is based upon factual information supplied by the Immigration and Naturalization Service..."
The story concerns two agents, one Mexican (PJF) and one American, who are tasked to stop the smuggling of Mexican migrant workers across the border to California. The two agents go undercover, one as a poor migrant.
Some of the film's most memorable include the death of an American by a mechanized harrow and a climactic shootout in a quicksand swamp.
Roger Westcombe compared the film to classic Westerns: "Yet far from a typical Western's sense of freedom, Border Incident shares with [director Mann's previous film noir] T-Men that film's inky, submerged visual quality. These are 'wide' but not 'open' spaces, as Alton's beautifully registered grey-toned but grim visuals make the distant horizons as closed as the American border. The constant presence of vulnerable, innocent peasants adds a piquancy to Border Incident, raising the stakes from the destiny of a mere two police agents to that of an entire underclass."[2]
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