Dial 1119
Dial 1119 | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Gerald Mayer |
Produced by | Richard Goldstone |
Screenplay by | John Monks Jr. |
Story by |
Hugh King Don McGuire |
Starring |
Marshall Thompson Virginia Field Andrea King Sam Levene |
Music by | André Previn |
Cinematography | Paul Vogel |
Editing by | Newell P. Kimlin |
Studio | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release dates |
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Running time | 75 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $473,000[1] |
Box office | $603,000[1] |
Dial 1119 is a 1950 film noir starring Marshall Thompson as a deranged escaped killer holding the customers of a bar hostage. It was directed by Gerald Mayer, nephew of Louis B. Mayer. 1119 is the police emergency number in the film.
Plot
Homicidal escaped mental patient Wyckoff arrives by bus in Terminal City. As he leaves the bus, he is confronted by the bus driver for stealing the driver's Colt pistol and kills the bus driver with it.
Wyckoff trys to locate a 'Dr. Faron', at both his office and then at his home address (in an apartment building), with no luck. As he leaves the building, we notice it is a warm night, and he notices 'The Oasis Bar' across the street from the apartments. He goes into the bar and finds there is a good vantage point to observe the entryway to the apartment building.
There are four other customers in the bar, manned by Chuckles the bartender and his assistant/relief-person (whose wife is in hospital about to have a baby). Chuckles, seeing a 'news flash' story on the TV, notices Wyckoff is one of his customers and tries to telephone the police, but Wyckoff notices such, and shoots Chuckles dead. The gunshot attracts attention on the street, and as a beat officer approaches the bar he is noticed by Wyckoff and shot and wounded by firing through the window. Bystanders rescue the officer, and a call is put out for reinforcements to respond to 'a man barricaded in the bar'.
Wyckoff has the others sit close together so he can watch them. The relief barman notes to the others the gun holds eight rounds, but also that Wyckoff has an additional magazine, leaving many rounds still potentially available to use.
Wyckoff calls the police to inform him of his identity and the hostage situation. He demands the police stay away but deliver Faron to the bar within 25 minutes or he will kill the hostages. As the hostages converse, we discover Faron is the local police psychologist. The press set up TV coverage near the bar while the crowd of onlookers grows.
As police discuss tactics, Faron is located and brought to the bar. One of the hostages is a reporter, and reminds the others that Wyckoff's previous crime was 'a big local story' three years ago. As Faron pleads with the police to let him attempt to 'handle' Wyckoff, they attempt to enter the bar by surreptitious means. Wyckoff becomes aware of the attempted breach and seriously wounds an officer with two shots, as the hostages look on helplessly. Faron again pleads with the police, and says, "I demand that you let me do my job!", which Wyckoff sees happening on the TV. The police captain resents Faron's success at getting Wyckoff a 'light sentence' the first time around. The police prepare a breach 'en masse' with two minutes to go before Wyckoff's 'deadline', but Faron slips away and enters the bar. He tries to convince Wyckoff he is delusional, but after some discussion, Wyckoff becomes agitated and shoots Faron dead.
The phone rings, and the assistant knows it's the hospital calling about his wife. Desperate to answer, he struggles with Wyckoff; at the same moment, the police detonate an explosive charge and put out the lights. In the confusion, one of the hostages uses Chuckles under-counter bar-gun to shoot Wyckoff. In shock, he staggers outside and is cut down in a hail of police gunfire. The police enter the bar. As he kneels over Faron's body, the police captain wryly and rhetorically asks an officer "How far does man have to go to prove that he's right?". The survivors get to go home. The police outside implore the crowd to 'break it up', and do the same.
Cast
- Marshall Thompson as Gunther Wyckoff
- Virginia Field as Freddy
- Andrea King as Helen
- Sam Levene as Dr. John D. Faron
- Leon Ames as Earl
- Keefe Brasselle as Skip
- Richard Rober as Captain Henry Keiver
- James Bell as Harrison D. Barnes
- William Conrad as Chuckles, the bartender
- Dick Simmons as Television Announcer
- Hal Baylor as Lieutenant "Whitey" Tallman
Reception
Although the film was inexpensively made, it only earned $402,000 in the US and Canada and $201,000 elsewhere, resulting in a loss of $148,000.[1]
Critical response
Film critic Glenn Erickson discussed the production values of the film writing, "1950's Dial 1119 is a low-budget MGM picture that resembles a one-act play expanded to short feature length. With economic pressures coming down hard on the studios, the expense of something like An American in Paris had to be balanced by making other studio producers come up with something for nothing. Thus we have Dial 1119, a taut little suspense item that uses only a couple of sets and utilizes the services of contractees already on the payroll. The show also resembles a typical live TV production from a few years later, the kind that garnered attention for the likes of James Dean."[2]
Critic Jeff Stafford liked the film, writing, "A taut and suspenseful B-movie, Dial 1119 is distinguished by the crisp black-and-white cinematography of Paul C. Vogel (He worked on such film noir favorites as Lady in the Lake, 1947) and the excellent ensemble cast which includes Virginia Field, Andrea King, Leon Ames, Keith Brasselle, and William Conrad (star of TV's detective series, Cannon, 1971-1976) as the unlucky bartender. It was the first film directed by Gerald Mayer, son of the famous MGM tycoon, Louis B. Mayer, and remains the best movie of his brief career."[3]
DVD release
Warner Bros. released the film on DVD on July 13, 2010, in its Film Noir Classic Collection, Vol. 5.[4]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
- ↑ Erickson, Glenn. DVD Savant/Talk, film and DVD review, July 10, 2010. Accessed: July 13, 2013.
- ↑ Stafford, Jeff. Turner Classic Movies, film review. Accessed: July 13, 2013.
- ↑ Abrams, Simon. "Film Noir Classic Collection: Volume 5." SlantMagazine.com. July 20, 2010. Accessed: July 13, 2013.
External links
- Dial 1119 at the Internet Movie Database
- Dial 1119 at allmovie
- Dial 1119 at the TCM Movie Database
- Dial 1119 film trailer at YouTube