The Looters (1955)

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The Looters (1955). 1h 27m | Approved

“The Looters (1955)u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWell, it was at the Gratiot Drive-In outside of Detroit that the still obscure Swiss photographer Robert Frank saw this movie on its first release. I know because itu0026#39;s in one of his photographs, seen in his legendary book, u0026quot;The Americans.u0026quot; And thatu0026#39;s the only reason I sought out this B-movie. It has no DVD release, but thereu0026#39;s a lousy copy on Youtube. Check it out. The movie is better than it should be.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe plot seems simple enough—a plane has crashed in some truly steep and dangerous mountains in Colorado. Two ex-army associates, one now a low-level crook (Ray Danton) the other (Rory Calhoun) now a principled mountain guide, head off to find the crash. There are a few survivors, including a beautiful woman (Julie Adams with a great haircut) and a money-grubbing bank clerk. And with a box of money, little food, and a couple of guns, rivalry and greed take hold on their long walk to survival.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBut as with any crash movie, like the recent u0026quot;Grey,u0026quot; survival isnu0026#39;t enough to get through an hour and a half. And the other theme here is worth the effort—what it is to be a man, and a woman. There are some quick but sincere points made about the womanu0026#39;s superficial life as a model (and she reforms by the end) and the two young menu0026#39;s lives as u0026quot;real menu0026quot; playing it rough in a rough world (and the army wins that showdown). There is that box of money, a major plot point, but more important is the mink coat, which has its role right up to the final minute.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eA year later, Spencer Tracy starred in a rather similar movie, u0026quot;The Mountain,u0026quot; and on the surface thatu0026#39;s a better production in full Technicolor, set in the Alps. (Neither movie is great.) This 1955 black and white one has a kind of seriousness that creeps through all the thin ideas and holds it together. Adams (the woman) gets hit a couple times very hard, a weird roughness. And the director, Abner Biberman (in his first true feature film) even sneaks a scene past the censors where the Calhoun and Adams characters spend the night sleeping together in a tent. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eItu0026#39;s been noted that this was filmed on location, which really is rugged, though itu0026#39;s supposed to be bitter cold and it looks like a nice summer day. The army helped with its artillery training unit, so when the two young men get their final fistfight going, and the cannons are firing, and jets fly by, itu0026#39;s one hell of a scene. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eYeah, check this out for fun. The acting is solid, the cinematography is by the same guy who shot u0026quot;Miracle on 34th Streetu0026quot; and itu0026#39;s excellent, and the setting is intense. Different enough to warrant a look.”

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