- Source: The Sniper (1952 film)
The Sniper is a 1952 American film noir, directed by Edward Dmytryk, written by Harry Brown and based on a story by Edna and Edward Anhalt. The film features Adolphe Menjou, Arthur Franz, Gerald Mohr and Marie Windsor.
The film marks Dmytryk's return to directing after he had first been named to the Hollywood blacklist and had a jail term for contempt of Congress. He chose to testify in April 1951, and named fellow members of leftist organizations from his brief time with the Communist Party. Afterward he went into political exile in England for a time. Producer Stanley Kramer was the first to hire him again as a director. The film was shot on location in San Francisco, though the city is not named in the film.
Plot
Eddie Miller (Arthur Franz), a delivery man, struggles with his hatred of women. This hatred is exacerbated if he feels drawn to a woman who turns out to be unattainable; he tends to see this as a personal affront. Also, he is especially bothered when he sees women with their significant others. Miller knows he is disturbed and, out of despair, burns himself by pressing his right hand to an electric stove. The doctor treating him in an emergency room suspects he might need psychological help, but gets too busy to follow through.
Miller begins a killing spree as a sniper by shooting women from far distances with an M1A1 carbine. Trying to be caught, he writes an anonymous letter to the police begging them to stop him. As the killings continue, a psychologist has the keys (early criminal profiling techniques) to finding the killer. The film is unusual in that its ending is non-violent, despite its genre and expectations raised throughout.
Cast
Adolphe Menjou as Police Lt. Frank Kafka
Arthur Franz as Edward "Eddie" Miller
Gerald Mohr as Police Sgt. Joe Ferris
Marie Windsor as Jean Darr
Frank Faylen as Police Insp. Anderson
Richard Kiley as Dr. James G. Kent
Lilian Bond as Mrs. Fitzpatrick
Mabel Paige as Landlady
Marlo Dwyer as May Nelson
Geraldine Carr as Checker
Wally Cox as Laundry Worker
Charles Lane as drunk in a bar
Jean Willes as passerby on sidewalk
Karen Sharpe as unnamed teenager on drugstore stool
Production background
Producer Stanley Kramer was the first to hire Dmytryk as a director after his encounters with the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) and testifying in 1951. For first refusing to testify, Dmytryk was named as one of the "Hollywood Ten", barred from work in the film industry and jailed for contempt of Congress. In April 1951 he changed his mind and testified, both about his brief time with the Communist Party and naming fellow members of leftist organizations. Afterward he went into a short political exile in England.
The film's comparatively comprehensive outdoor footage of 1952 San Francisco remains unsurpassed in variety for a narrative film. Many of the film's outdoor scenes were shot in the Telegraph Hill area, and at the Paper Doll Club. One scene not shot in San Francisco, although it purports to be Playland at the Beach, was actually filmed at The Pike amusement park in Long Beach.
Reception
= Critical response
=Critic Bosley Crowther of The New York Times gave the drama a mixed review when it opened, writing:
"Therefore, The Sniper develops, as it casually gets along, into nothing more forceful or impressive than a moderately fascinating "chase." The kick-off murder of a sultry saloon singer, whom Marie Windsor plays, is ticklishly enacted, and the dragnet thrown out by the police, headed by a clean-shaved Adolphe Menjou, is interesting to observe. Frank Faylen, Gerald Mohr and Richard Kiley also contribute to the pace as assorted police factotums and the real San Francisco building and streets used for locales of the picture give it authority. But the menace and understanding of the sex fiend hopefully implied in the foreword to the picture are never clearly revealed."
Britain's Channel 4's wrote in its 2008 review,
"A little dated now, especially the nervous documentary-style camera work which soon outstays its welcome, The Sniper's thriller mechanics nevertheless work efficiently, while Franz's psycho is uncannily convincing."
= Awards
=Nomination
25th Academy Awards: Academy Award for Best Story, Edna Anhalt and Edward Anhalt; 1952.
References
External links
The Sniper at IMDb
The Sniper at AllMovie
The Sniper at the TCM Movie Database
The Sniper at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
The Sniper film trailer on YouTube
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Clint Eastwood
- Academy Award untuk Film Terbaik
- Steven Seagal
- Mabel Paige
- Academy Award untuk Aktor Terbaik
- Richard Kiley
- Warner Bros.
- National Board of Review Awards 2014
- Frank Faylen
- Gregg Rudloff
- The Sniper (1952 film)
- Sniper (disambiguation)
- Telegraph Hill, San Francisco
- 1952 in film
- List of American films of 1952
- Lyudmila Pavlichenko
- List of films featuring the United States Navy SEALs
- List of Korean War films
- Oppenheimer (film)
- F2