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Walk Softly, Stranger

Walk Softly, Stranger (1950)

October. 14,1950
|
6.5
|
NR
| Drama Crime Romance

A petty crook moves to an Ohio town and courts a factory owner's disabled daughter.

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Moustroll
1950/10/14

Good movie but grossly overrated

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JinRoz
1950/10/15

For all the hype it got I was expecting a lot more!

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AshUnow
1950/10/16

This is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.

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Guillelmina
1950/10/17

The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

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Spikeopath
1950/10/18

Walk Softly, Stranger is directed by Robert Stevenson and written by Frank Fenton. It stars Joseph Cotton, Alida Valli, Spring Byington, Paul Stewart and Jack Paar. Music is by Frederick Hollander and cinematography by Harry J. Wild.Chris Hale (Cotton) arrives in Ashton, Ohio, with manipulation and a robbery on his mind. But when he meets wheelchair bound Elaine Corelli (Valli), it alters the course of his future plans…It's the other Cotton and Valli movie, the one that isn't The Third Man. It's also the movie hat marked the wind of change at RKO as Howard Hughes breezed into the studio and promptly set about putting his own stamp on things, badly as it happens. Walk Softly, Stranger on the shelf for two years and subsequently got released in 1950, no doubt due in part to the success of The Third Man the year previously.It's a strange blend of romantic melodrama – cum thriller – with some film noir edginess, something which doesn't all together work. It's very slowly paced and settles into a mood approaching disquiet, a femme fatale of sorts is nicely set up, and the whole "just one last job" vibe keeps interest in the story high. Acting from Cotton and Valli is strong, Paul Stewart is as usual good value when playing a twitchy loser bad guy type, and Byington almost steals the film from the leads with an ebullient show as the widow Brentman.Unfortunately, come the final third the picture fails to deliver on its moody promise, choosing instead to rely on one action set-piece and a waft of optimism for pic's closure. It's not the pay off required or hoped for, a shame because as a production in general it's of good quality. 6/10

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dbdumonteil
1950/10/19

I like Joseph Cotten and Alida Valli ,but you cannot always win ,that is to say you cannot expect another "third man" every time ;their parts are unworthy of their talent ;the screenplay is desultory -for instance ,Cotten is to work in Valli's father's factory ,but he is so busy gambling and cheating you do not see him work at all-;Valli spends the whole movie in her wheelchair.The best scenes are to be found in Cotten's landlady's house ,particularly when another man shows up.Cotten was ideally cast for he is par excellence the ambiguous man,not quite the good guy but not the villain either ;even when he's a criminal ("shadow of a doubt") we feel for him;the movie avoids the traditional "happy end" or at least postponed it for years.

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Roger Burke
1950/10/20

This forgotten gem was of interest for a number of reasons.First, it's directed by Robert Stevenson, the man responsible for a superb thriller, To the Ends of the Earth (1948) with Dick Powell in the lead. Steveson, however, has a long list of fine films to his credit, beginning (for me) with Tom Brown's Schooldays (1940), all the way to The Love Bug (1968) and Herbie Rides Again (1974) – if you like fantasy comedy...But second, this film echoes the matching of Cotton and Valli in The Third Man (1949), arguably one of the best film-noir made (directed by Carol Reed, of course). Reading the additional information about this film, however, I learnt that it was actually made before The Third Man but keep on ice for two years.In this narrative, however, Cotton as Chris Hale breaks the mold of the bashful, loyal and trustworthy good guy he was known for in so many previous movies. That is, while this is certainly another of the film-noir genre, it doesn't have a femme fatale: Chris Hale is the homme fatale – the man with the fatal flaw in his past, and the one that catches up with him.In contrast, Valli as Elaine Corelli is the broken rose: a woman of substance and great beauty but, because of a tragic accident, unwilling to expose herself to potential failure again, especially in matters of the heart. When Hale turns up, however, she is drawn to him, despite her misgivings at first.Arguably, she should have listened to her head because Hale has a hidden agenda – in fact, that's why he's in Elaine's town where her father practically owns it: Hale wants to stay hiding in plain sight, as a model citizen, because he thinks the guys he robbed a while back – gangsters who ran a casino in another state - will never find him... More fool he, because his ex-buddy turns up to ask for a handout – and so, Hale's cover is blown and it's only a matter of time before the killers follow.What follows then are Hale's attempts to get clear of the bad guys and redeem himself with Elaine; so, I'll leave you to enjoy that denouement. When you do, watch for the great sight gag that includes the words: "Next time, go by air", a moment of levity that foreshadows an ending that is, if not entirely happy, at least shows promise of hope.Cotton does an excellent job as a calculating, unflappable and competent con man who gradually sees the need, within himself, to change his ways; Valli once again exudes troubled emotions and repressed sexuality with great finesse; that great character actor, Paul Stewart shines as the craven Whitey Lake, Hale's buddy; and John McIntire appears, for once, as not a cop – as In Psycho (1960) - but as an office manager, Morgan. And, let's not forget Spring Byington who plays...well, Mrs Brentman/Spring Byington, the landlady.Recommended for all, especially for film-noir fans.

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Gilly-13
1950/10/21

I watched this shortly after seeing a print of The Blue Angel. It was hard to imagine how the same man who wrote "Falling in Love Again" managed to write the neo-pretentious, pseudo-classical background music for this movie later that same lifetime. But then, Alida Valli's beauty would make anyone wax rhapsodic.

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