Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Announcing the John Wayne Blogathon



My fellow blogger Crystal over at In the Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood is always running star-oriented blogathons.  I bugged her a couple of times to run one of John Wayne, then I decided, well, why the hell don't I just do it myself?  Then I found out Rachel over at Hamlette's Soliloquy is just as big a Duke fan as I am, so we got to talking and agreed to a co-hosting gig.  And here it is:

Announcing the John Wayne Blogathon
Dec 9-11, 2016


"The Duke", as he was affectionately known, was an icon of the silver screen for many years.  Beginning in the early 20's as a stuntman and prop man, Wayne found his way into acting roles.  And gradually over the next 50 years he managed to make himself a household name, including the phenomenal feat of being named the most popular Hollywood star multiple years over that period.  

The IMdB entry for John Wayne lists 178 acting credits, including a few guest star roles on TV, about 20 or 30 uncredited walk-on roles early in his career, but also an astounding 100+ stints as the star or co-star of feature films.  Which leaves us a pretty good pot to draw from for the blogathon.  So we are proposing the following set of rules for the blogathon.

1. Absolutely no duplicates allowed.  At 100+ choices (plus you could talk about his politics or his private life, if you want) there is more than enough opportunity for diversity. 

2.  You can state your choice in the comments below.  First come, first served.  And please note, your humble bloggers have already picked Sands of Iwo Jima (for Hamlette) and a double feature of Stagecoach and The Shootist (for Quiggy)


















3.  Snag one of the banners below to put on your own blog with a link back to us so we can have lots of participation.

















































4,  Write your blog entry.  The dates of the blogathon are December 9-11 and you can choose any one of those three days.

5.  As an added bonus, I (Quiggy), have a copy of a good biography of John Wayne titled: American Titan: Searching for John Wayne by Marc Eliot.  The name of every blogger who submits a blog entry will be thrown into a hat, and one lucky winner will get the book (and location is not a consideration, even if you are in Canada, Europe or Australia).  But you HAVE to follow through and write a blog entry.  No award for signing up but not writing the entry...




The Blog Roll


The Midnite Drive-In: Stagecoach (1939) and The Shootist (1976)
Hamlette's Soliloquy: The Quiet Man (1952)

Caftan Woman:  Island in the Sky (1953)
Christina Wehner:  In Old California (1942)
Coffee, Classics, & Craziness:  The Man Shot Liberty Valance (1962) and The Horse Soldiers (1959)
Crítica Retrô:  Wayne/Ford early collaborations
High Noon:  Rio Bravo (1959) and The Big Trail (1930)
Incidents of a Literary Nature:  Rooster Cogburn  (1975)
In the Good Old days of Hollywood:  Sands of Iwo Jima (1949)
Love Letters to Old Hollywood:  John Wayne on I Love Lucy (1955)
Movies Meet Their Match:  The Sons of Katie Elder (1965) and True Grit  (1969)
Old Hollywood Films:  She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949)
Phyllis loves Classic Movies: Rio Grande (1950)
Pillow Shots:  The Searchers (1956)
Sidewalk Crossings:  Rio Lobo (1970)
Silver Scenes:  Tall in the Saddle (1944)
Silver Scenes:  The films and relationship of John Wayne with Maureen O'Hara
Silver Screenings:  Operation Pacific  (1951)
Thoughts all Sorts:  The War Wagon (1967) and Big Jake (1971)
The Wonderful World of Cinema:  Dark Command (1940)
Mike's Take On The Movies: Wake of the Red Witch (1948)
4 Star Films: A walk in John Wayne's footsteps

Sunday, September 4, 2016

Sunshine Blogger Award





Defiant Success nominated me for a Sunshine Blogger award.  Don't know much about it, it appears to be a clone of a Liebster Award.  One thing for sure, if "Sunshine" is a synonym for happy and carefree, my output so far has been on the darker side of happy.  (They make me happy, I'll grant that.)  But who am I to quibble.

Just like the Liebster I have to answer 11 questions asked by my nominator.  Then I have to nominate 11 more bloggers (that's the part I hate)  Then I have to make a list of 11 questions of my own.  As I stated in my acceptance of the Liebster award, I love answering questions about myself, and my own tastes, so...

1. Favorite movie not many people have seen?

This one is easy.  I've answered it before.  There was a dark and quirky indie movie from New Zealand called "The Navigator: A Medieval Odyssey".  It's about a town in the 12th century being devastated by the plague and a young boy leads a crew of people to find a cure, and they end up in the 20th century.



2. Same question but with a TV show

There's a whole list of decent TV shows that only lasted one season for some reason or another that I liked, most of them based one or  another  popular movie.  "Planet of the Apes", "Logan's Run" etc.  But I really like one based on the Van Damme movie "Timecop", and starring Ted King (Lorenzo Alcazar for you General Hospital junkies). The problem with that one, I'm sure, was that it was too complicated and cerebral  for the average person to follow.  I have an abiding interest in the scientific theories pertaining to time travel and even  I had a tough time following it.

3. Who do you want to see a biopic of and whom would you cast?

Somebody should do a biopic of John Wayne.  It's about time, don'tcha think?  Haven't seen "Trumbo" yet, so I can't say yea or nay to David James Elliot's performance.  But I admit I have no idea who else to cast...

4.  Any movie(s) you're looking forward to?

I'm always looking forward to the next Marvel Comics Universe film.

5.  Have you attended a film festival?

No.  But Austin has one that occurs during SXSW that I'd like see.

6.  Black and white or Technicolor?

Depends on the genre.  War and westerns are better in color.  Film noir is only good in B/W.  With a few exceptions that are more correctly termed "neo-noir".

7.  What is your favorite book?

I've read Stephen King's "The Stand" ½ a dozen times in the past 30 years since I first read it in 1985.  Plan to read it again at least once or twice  more before I die.

8.  Star Wars or Star Trek?

Before the sucky prequels I would have said "Star Wars".  Now I'd have to go with "Star Trek".  Preferably the Shatner as Kirk original crew, but in a pinch I'd take the new crew.  Next Gen I liked most all of the characters but Troi (she was played by a hot actress, but the character just annoyed me to no end)

9. Western or film noir?

If John Wayne is in it, western, if not, film noir.

10. Sci-fi or musical?

I mostly loathe musicals, sorry.  Sci-fi is the answer to this one hands down.

11. Comedy or drama?

Comedy.  I love to make people laugh, and I love to laugh  myself.

Now I'm supposed to nominate 11 blogs.  I'll take the chicken's way out and just nominate you, yes, you reading this blog right now.  You are nominated.  And you don't even have to get dressed up to accept it.  You can accept it in your underwear.

Your 11 questions are:



1.  Who was the best screen villain (before 1961)?
2.  Who was the best screen villain (after 1961)?
3.  Best screen hero (before 1961)?
4.  Best screen hero (after 1961)?
5.  Who was the most romantic actor (before 1961)?
6.  Who was the most romantic actor (after 1961)?
7.  Same question for actress? (before 1961)?
8.  Same question for actress (after 1961)?
(Why 1961?  Because that was the year I was born, and my birthday is coming soon...)

9.  Who is/was the best screenwriter for dialogue?
10. Which movie had the best costumes?
11.  It's a three day weekend.  Assuming you have no other plans, list the movies you will binge on.  In this hypothetical scenario, you don't need sleep unless you just want it, so you could potentially have 72 hours in which to watch them.

Now go have fun

Quiggy

Friday, September 2, 2016

Sex, Drugs and Rock'n'Roll; 70's Style



This is my entry in the Back to School Blogathon hosted by Pop Culture Reverie




The last day of school.  Anything and everything can happen.  If you were alive in those post Nixon times, with a new president from Georgia on the horizon (even I, a simple high school freshman saw that then-President Ford wasn't going to be re-elected), and gas hovering around 60 cents a gallon.

And, if you believe what's going on in this movie, everyone, and I mean EVERYONE in high school lit up a doobie now and then.  (Note:  I don't have any clue whether this was true about my high school, but I attended a very small high school; my graduating class numbered only about 40, and there was only 120 in the entire 4 grades of high school when I graduated. And I didn't partake of any drugs, legal or illegal until after I turned the then legal age of 18.)





Dazed and Confused (1993)

Like my previous post for The Great Escape, I have decided that this review is better served by addressing each character in the movie, rather than an overall view of the plot.  Besides, there REALLY isn't much of a plot in this one in the first place.  It's just about the last day of school and the night AFTER the last day of school in the life of the students at (the fictional) Lee High School in Austin, Texas.  Most of the action centers on initiation rituals by the incoming seniors for the incoming freshmen (paddling for the boys, and a strange ritual that has to be seen to be believed for the girls), and a beer bust party in which the entire gang is involved in various unrelated antics.


















Randall "Pink" Floyd: (Jason London)

Pink is the star football quarterback for the high school.  He is an independent soul who values his friendship more than fitting in with what is expected of him by his coaches and teachers.  In particular, his head coach, Coach Conrad (Terry Mross) who is extremely disapproving of his choices for friends, particularly those who are not his football teammates.  Pink is also the friendly "big brother" figure to incoming freshman Mitch Kramer.














Mitch Kramer:  (Wiley Wiggins)

Mitch is an incoming freshman, and, initially, the prime target for the initiation proceedings by the seniors, primarily because his older sister, Jodi, tries to protect him by asking that her friends go easy on him, which only makes them that much more determined to single him out.  After his initial paddling from a few of the seniors, Pink takes him under his wing and lets him hang out through the night.








Jodi Kramer: (Michelle Burke)

Jodi is Mitch's older sister, and one of the incoming female seniors.  She also takes one of the initiated freshmen under her wing, Sabrina, after the girls perform their own initiation ritual.  She is one of the more friendly and likable girls in the senior class.











Sabrina Davis: (Christin Hinojosa)

Sabrina is one of the incoming freshmen girls, and the only one on whom any focus is made after the initiation ritual.  The movie hints that she and Mitch may end up hooking up in the future, but that is open to speculation.













Danny Wooderson and Ron Slater: (Matthew McConaughey and Rory Cochrane)

Wooderson is a dropout who still likes hanging out with the high school kids, especially the girls...("That's what I like about high school girls.  I get older, they stay the same age"  A dirty old man in the making...)  Wooderson is the "brains" behind the keg party tha happens in the second half of the movie.

Slater is the ultimate dope head.  Personally, I'm thinking he probably lights up in the classroom, since he is always stoned.  Always trying to hook up with the doobie crowd, he is basically just a hanger-on.












Fred O'Bannion:  (Ben Affleck)

If there is a villain in the movie, it's O'Bannion.  Hostility is his middle name, and he is a sadistic jerk, taking great pleasure in the initiation procedures for the freshmen.  He is going to be a senior for the second time, since he failed, and some think he failed on purpose so he could be a sadist to freshmen two years in a row.











Mike Newhouse, Tony Olson and Cynthia Dunn:  (Adam Goldberg, Anthony Rapp and Marissa Ribisi)

These three are bosom companions, probably the most intellectual of the entire school.  They hang out with each other and have deep philosophical conversations, such as Mike's weird dream of having sex with a girl with the head of Abraham Lincoln.  Plus Mike has determined that he has changed his goal in life and wants to be a dancer.












Don Dawson and Benny O'Donnell:  (Sasha Jensen and Cole Hauser)

Dawson and O'Donnell are Pink's buddies from the football team.  They encourage him to sign the sobriety contract the coaches want him to sign, but Pink remains aloof.  They are also his partners in crime when hunting down incoming freshmen.

There are plenty of other characters in this movie, and, as well, more future stars who were still basic unknowns in this movie, including Milla Jovovich, Parker Posey, Joey Lauren Adams, Nicky Katt, and if you don't blink, Renee Zellweger.

So, do you wonder which character best represents your humble blogger?  I would have been an incoming freshman in 1976, so the obvious answer would be Mitch Kramer, but I think I identify most with Mike Newhouse.  Watch the movie and see how this character is played and you'll get a good idea of how my high school experience played out.  (But no, I never dreamed I had sex with a girl who looked like Abraham Lincoln...)

If you are going to drive home, folks, be sure to hide the empty beer cans, and for God's sake, air out the interior so it doesn't smell like  Cheech and Chong's apartment.

Quiggy


Saturday, August 27, 2016

It's a Small World After All






Around the World in 80 Days is not so much a movie as it is an event, and one in which producer Michael Todd worked tirelessly to bring to the screen.  The background to this film is almost, if not more, interesting than the movie itself.  Robert Osborne of TCM fame gives an 8 minute long introduction on my DVD that enlightens with panache.

This was the ONLY movie that Michael Todd produced.  Given that it won the Academy Award for Best Picture, that is rather impressive on it's own.  The movie also has a plethora of cameo appearances. (Some 50 or so are listed on the wikipedia page, and there are probably even more, since I only can identify by sight about ½ of those on THAT list).  Todd was apparently quite the expert at talking people into doing appearances for him in this film.

In particular was the addition of Cantinflas (a Mexican playing a Frenchman, without, I might add, even trying to pretend that he was French).  Cantinflas had never made an English language film before, and in fact, had not made a film in which he was not involved in all aspects of the filming for quite some time.  But Todd got his Passepartout.  As well as his Fogg.  It seems David Niven was the only person Todd considered for the part, and Niven was enthusiatic about playing him.  But both of those are the stars.

Niven and Cantinflas


As far as cameo roles (and according to Osbourne's commentary, Todd's movie was the first to co-opt the term "cameo role"), the list is astounding.  People who have no lines, as well as certain roles that are a bit meatier than you would expect for a role termed as "cameo" fill out this film.  Just a smattering of names to drop : Frank Sinatra, Peter Lorre, Marlene Dietrich, Caesar Romero, John Carradine, Charles Boyer, George Raft, Victor McLaglen, Buster Keaton,  Sir John Guilgud, Noel Coward and many more.

Sinatra as a piano player, one of the many "cameos"


The picture really does not convey all it's magnificence on a small screen, even in wide screen format.  To do it justice, you really should view it on the big screen.  I vaguely recall seeing it that way on a re-release when I was a wee lad.  I don't think I knew half of what was going on, but I have memories of some magnificent vistas.  The film was the first to use Todd-AO film process, which incorporated the stle of Cinerama, but instead of having to use three separate cameras to capture the scenes, it only used one.

If you are blessed with a big screen TV and surround sound capabilities, I highly recommend this film for family movie night.  Even if you don't have $$ coming out the wazoo for that, it's still worth a look.




Around the World in 80 Days (1956)

The movie starts out with a bit of trivia, designed to show how the world has shrunk, in effect since man first walked on the Earth.  Included is a monologue, delivered by Edward R. Murrow, and a viewing of the Georges Méliès' film adaptation of Verne's moon trip novels, called A Trip to the Moon.  Also included is a wistful conjecture that man may actually make it to the moon in the near future.  (The movie was made in 1956, and the actual first moon landing was still in the future).  Gradually the movie gives way to the actual film we came to see.

Phineas Fogg


It is set, at the beginning, in Victorian London.  Phileas Fogg (David Niven) approaches the Reform Club, and we are given evidence of his punctual nature by the fact that he checks his watch as he steps in the door.  Around the club we see various patrons engaged in being very, very conservative British aristocrats.  At the same time we are introduced to Passepartout (Cantinflas) as he is engaged in navigating a bicycle (what is known as a "penny-farthing", the one with the over-sized front wheel) around the city, as well as his attraction to those of the opposite sex.

Passepartout


Passepartout is in search of a job.  While waiting in the employment office, he observes a despairing valet (Sir John Guilgud) announce to the employment agent (Noel Coward) that he cannot take any more of his job, at which he has been employed only 20 days.  The frustrating employer, as it turns out, is our Mr. Fogg, who is particular about every aspect of his life, from the time he takes his meals to the temperature and level of water of his bath.  Passepartout volunteers for the job and is immediately hired (the employment agent has a hard time keeping Fogg supplied with valets...)

Meanwhile back at the reform club, discussion during a game of whist centers on the recent robbery of the Bank of England, of which one of the members at the table is the President (Robert Morley).  The discussion turns to the size of the globe where the culprit could had, which leads to Fogg stating that you could navigate the entire globe in only 80 days.  A wager is made in which Fogg agrees to prove his statement, rather impulsively stating that he will leave that very evening.

At the Reform Club


Fast forward a bit, because the next scenes are of Fogg and Passpartout in Paris, where they are busy trying to engage a train trip.  But a kink in the plans causes Fogg to have to abandon the train trip in favor of using a hot air balloon.  This is good, in a sense, because, at least according to the story, Fogg gains some time in his itinerary due to this development.  (We also get to see some of the first magnificent vistas for which you will wish for the big screen...)

The duo land in Spain where, due to a need to use a visiting dignitary's private boat, Passepartout is engaged to perform in a bullfight.  There are some very comedic acrobatics when Cantinflas enters the ring.  (He was among other things an acrobat).

In the bullring


Meanwhile a police inspector named Fix (Robert Newton) has begun a systematic attempt to find some way to arrest Fogg whom he suspects is the bank robber involved in the previously mentioned Bank of England robbery.  He will doggedly pursue Fogg, and use his wiles to get to be a passing acquaintance who just happens to be on the same ships and trains that Fogg is using for his wager.

I
Inspector Fix


At every point, there is some predicament that seems to interfere with Fogg's potential success at winning his wager, including a train that is derailed, a ship that sails without him but with Passeportout aboard), and the need to rescue a princess (Shirley MacLaine, looking astoundingly young and beautiful in only her third role) from a sacrifice ritual.  Aouda, the princess, becomes their companion through out the rest of the journey.

Fogg, Fix and Aouda


Spoiler Alert!  If you don't already know the ending and  want to watch the movie before you know the ending stop now! As I intend to reveal an important fact, as well as the ending.

When Fogg finally arrives in England, Fix finally gets his proper papers to have Fogg arrested.  This causes an extra delay, which Fogg thinks causes him to lose his bet.  He is released, but he goes about normal business as if he had lost.  Passeportout discovers, however, that during the journey they had gained a day by crossing the International Date Line from the West to the East.  Meaning that Fogg wins the wager, that is IF he can make it to the Reform Club before the final bell tolls on the clock.



The question that is skimmed over, in case you missed it, is, if they crossed the International Date Line, and Fogg's itinerary was actually a day ahead, wouldn't he have noticed long before he got to London that he was running a day ahead of schedule? Everything was planned according to a set schedule, and Fogg, if anything, is a perfectionist about being on time.  This little slip can be blamed on Verne, since it is the key fact at the end of the novel and the filmmakers were faithful to that part of the book, at least.

That little bit does not reduce the enjoyment of the movie, for me, anyway.  I just tend to be a nitpicker sometimes...

Well, it's time to pack up the timetables and cruise on home.  The old Plymouth is dependable for at least that short distance.  Have a safe trip home kiddies.

Quiggy


Saturday, August 20, 2016

The Future of the Drive-in

Well, folks, 2016 is almost 2/3 over (and I am rapidly approaching the first anniversary since its inauguration).  In the words of The Grateful Dead "What a Long strange trip it's been".



I have co-hosted one blogathon (The Oscars Snubs Blogathon) and have gone solo on another (The Film Noir Blogathon).  Both of them had lots of participation and I hope they were fun for those who got involved.




















Looking forward to the future, I hope to do another blogathon (this one dedicated to John Wayne) in the near future, if I can wangle a fellow blogger to co-host with me (that one is still pending.)  Update: It is no longer "pending".  Hamlette @ Hamlette's Soliloquy has stepped up to the plate to help me run the blogathon, coming to a blog near you in December.




I will also be finishing out the year with a few more entries into other blogathons.  Keep your eyes peeled for those.  As well, since my anniversary is on or about Halloween, I want to celebrate with a week long tribute to some of my favorite horror movies.








Next year I am also going to celebrate the 55th birthday of James Bond movies by posting a year long tribute titled "The Year of Bond" (24 movies so far, so @ 2 movies a month, I will finish in December of 2017.  These will appear regularly on the "007"th day of the month...)



Plus there will be plenty more fellow bloggers' blogathons to enter and fulfill.  If you were one of the early readers of this post, you will notice that I replaced "Killer Klowns from Outer Space" with "Creepshow" for my Halloween tribute.  That's because since I wrote this, I joined a circus themed blogathon, scheduled for mid-November, and decided to move Killer Klowns to that blogathon instead, so keep watching the blog.

 I have no plans to go anywhere.  But I am going to take a break for another week to rest up from The Film Noir Blogathon I finally put to bed.  Take care, and look for "Dazed and Confused" for Pop Culture Reverie's Back to School Blogathon as my next post next weekend.


Quiggy


Monday, August 15, 2016

A Final Note on the Film Noir Blogathon


Thanks to all who joined this blogathon, making my first SOLO blogathon a rousing success.  Just a note:  I am not big on time limits (or rules of any kind for that matter...)  If you signed up but were unable to complete your entry before Sunday was over, you can still submit it and I will add it to the blog list.  Hate to see anyone disappointed because Joe Workingman had to fulfill other priorities but still wanted to get an entry in.


Thanks, all.

Quiggy

Saturday, August 13, 2016

Death Wears a Shattered Look





This is my entry to the Film Noir Blogathon sponsored by yours truly, Quiggy.





Film noir.  The concept is one that is familiar to aficionados of classic film, but may be a strange term to the novice.  Film noir (or dark film, or if you will, "black" film) is a term that is used for films made in the 40's and 50's that featured some gritty crime dramas with characters who were not all that socially acceptable by the norms of the day.

The classic film noir characters were bad guys with almost no scruples and good guys who had only a few more scruples than their counterparts.  Or, as in the case of the following two entries, the good guys just found themselves thrown into a hellhole they never expected and had to confront demons that would never have happened to the average person.

Edmond O'Brien, the star of both of these entries, (the man with the "shattered look" of the title of my blog piece), had a stellar career in noir.  He was the star or co-star in many noir movies from the classic period, including The Killers, The Web, An Act of Murder, Shield for Murder, White Heat, and of course D.O.A. and The Hitch-hiker, just to name a few.  He was also a two-time nominee and one time winner for an Oscar (both as Best Supporting Actor, the win coming for 1954's The Barefoot Contessa, not a noir role, but still worth a look-see)

He ended his career mostly as a character actor on various episodes of TV shows, but had one memorable role as one of The Wild Bunch in 1969.  But we are here to discuss the noir O'Brien, so....






















D.O.A. (1950)

This is NOT a spoiler!  Frank Bigelow (Edmond O'Brien), in a long opening sequence goes in to the L.A. police office to report a murder, his own.  The police however are expecting him.  He had last been seen in San Francisco.  Bigelow goes into detail, via flashbacks, of what happened since a couple of days before.

The flashback sequence opens with Bigelow making plans to take a few days away from his accountant office in Banning.  He has something of an argument with his secretary, Paula (Pamela Britton), who is also his girlfriend, who resents that he is taking the trip alone.  She thinks he is just going to get away from her.



After, he arrives, he finds a town and a hotel room that is awash in parties.  Apparently he has arrived on the last day of a convention.  He hooks up with a fellow attendant across the hall of his hotel room and ends up in a bar called "the Fisherman" down on the waterfront.  He makes arrangements to meet a girl he sees there later, while, unbeknownst to him a mysterious figure switches his drink on him.  (It will become apparent shortly that the drink was poisoned).

He wakes up, not feeling all that hot, and attributes it to having too much to drink. When the hangover does not dissipate, he goes to a doctor where he is informed that he has ingested a "luminous poison" and that he is going to die and nothing can be done to save him.  He doesn't believe the doctor, and with a "shattered look", apparently runs across the entire city of San Francisco to get a second opinion.  This doctor not only confirms the poison, but also tells him since he didn't know he took it, he has been murdered.


He then runs across town to the bar where he thinks he was poisoned.  (Doesn't San Francisco have cabs or cable cars or something?)  Finding the place closed he goes back to his hotel room, where Paula informs him that a man who had tried to get in touch with him the day before had committed suicide.  Now Bigelow thinks there might be some connection, so he goes to the office where the man worked and then to visit the man's widow.  Since all the remaining figures in this story are in L.A., he flies there.  (Thank God he didn't try to run from S.F. to L.A....)

The plot reveals that Bigelow had unwittingly notarized a bill of sale to the dead man for a batch of stolen "iridium".  The man to whom it was sold, a man named Majak (Luther Adler), tries to dissuade him from investigating any further, including having one of his henchmen, Chester (Neville Brand, a familiarly sadistic character actor) take care of him, but Bigelow gets the upper hand and ditches him.



It turns out, of course, that the notarizing of the stolen "iridium" is NOT exactlyy the reason Bigelow was poisoned.  Red herrings abound within this movie, and all issues are resolved, but if you are a little dense like me, you may have to watch it twice to figure out the real reason he was poisoned.  Still, this classic edgy noir is one of the best of the bunch that I've had the pleasure to see.








The Hitch-Hiker (1953)

The movie starts out following a mysterious figure who keeps hitch-hiking, and then hijacking the cars while killing the owners.  The police come across the remains, or at various times, the ditched cars, but we don't see the killer only the victims until later in the movie.

Roy Collins (Edmond O'Brien) and Gilbert Bowen (Frank Lovejoy) are driving in Mexico on a fishing trip.  They pick up a hitch-hiker, who, unbeknownst to the two is the escaped criminal Emmett Myers.  Of course, if you watch the opening credits, you already know that the third star, William Talman, is going to be the titular "hitch-hiker".  Even knowing that, you could hardly be blamed if you didn't recognize him.



Previously, in my own experience, I only knew Talman as the straight-laced D.A. Hamilton Burger on the TV series "Perry Mason".  In this movie, Talman is a lot more rugged looking and has a partially paralyzed eye which gives his face a gaunt look.  Perfectly fitting for the type of character he is essaying, a sadistic, moral-less criminal.




Myers hijacks our reluctant duo and forces them to drive to Santa Rosalita, where he plans to take a ferry across the Gulf of California to safety in Mexico.  Along the way he sadistically threatens to shoot them if the radio reports end up linking him to the two and his whereabouts.  Luckily for them, at least in the early part of the movie, the authorities think he is anywhere BUT south of California.

Myers hampers any success attempts at escape by refusing to let his victims us Spanish when talking to the locals, some of which don't understand any English.  



Collins and Bowen, for their part do any number of various attempts to give away their whereabouts, but Myers always seems to be having the upperhand on any of these tricks.  Things don't look well, even after Collins manages to sabotage the car so that the three have to continue on foot.  They are slowed somewhat by the fact that Collins has a twisted ankle and can't move as fast.

When the trio finally arrive in Santa Rosalita, it turns out that the ferry that was to be Myers salvation had recently burned up, so they are stranded in Baja California.  But they find a willing man to charter his fishing boat to get them across.  Will Myers escape?  Will he kill Collins and Bowen before he does?  Tune in to find out.

Enjoy both of these.  And always watch you drink, and NEVER EVER pick up strangers on the side of the road.  Drive home safely kiddies.

Quiggy