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Split Second

Split Second (1953)

May. 02,1953
|
6.8
|
NR
| Drama Thriller Crime

Escaped convicts hold hostages in a ghost town targeted for a nuclear bomb test.

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FuzzyTagz
1953/05/02

If the ambition is to provide two hours of instantly forgettable, popcorn-munching escapism, it succeeds.

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InformationRap
1953/05/03

This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.

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Arianna Moses
1953/05/04

Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.

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Bob
1953/05/05

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

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utgard14
1953/05/06

Two escaped convicts and an accomplice take hostages in a Nevada ghost town where an atomic bomb test is set for the next day. Nice little thriller. The 'criminals taking hostages' plot has been done before and since but the atomic testing site is a nice touch. Stephen McNally makes a vicious baddie but Alexis Smith's character turns out to be the most vile person in the film. Keith Andes is good. He sounds like Peter Graves. Pretty Jan Sterling is a tough blonde. She and Andes have nice chemistry. Paul Kelly plays one of the convicts. That wasn't an acting stretch for real-life ex-con Kelly. Arthur Hunnicutt is fun as a grizzled old prospector. Robert Paige, Richard Egan, and Frank DeKova round out the cast. Everybody does a good job. Dick Powell's directorial debut. Yes, that Dick Powell. Impressive climax is a nice payoff.

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Spikeopath
1953/05/07

Split Second is directed by Dick Powell and written by William Bowers, Irving Wallace and Chester Erskine. It stars Stephen McNally, Alexis Smith, Jan Sterling, Keith Andes, Arthur Hunnicutt, Richard Egan, Paul Kelly, Robert Paige and Frank DeKova. Music is by Roy Webb and cinematography by Nicholas Musuraca. Escaped convict Sam Hurley (McNally) is on the run with his wounded pal Bart Moore (Kelly) and henchman accomplice Dummy (DeKova). Carjacking two lots of hostages, Hurley takes them to a ghost town on an Atom Bomb test sight figuring it's the perfect place to hole up. But with Moore in need of medical help, the test bomb set to go off in the morning and tempers frayed within the group, something is going to have to give... A taut and sweaty noir, Split Second taps into the 50s fear of the bomb and explodes the character dynamics Petrified Forest style. The premise is simple, once the character introductions are out the way, we wind our way to a bleak ghost town and stay in the company of a disparate group of people for the remainder of the film. As the clock ticks down, with the bomb set to be detonated on the town at 06.00, the various characters introduce their respective traits into the story. The tension mounts and the over-spills are often nervy, sleazy and poignant. The makers don't soft soap the situations, but they do dangle shards of sympathy. As is the case with Hurley, who is a cold blooded killer, we know and witness this, but his back story is that of a war hero, he also has a deep affection for his injured older pal, somewhere along the line a good man lost his balance. Dottie Vale (Sterling) is a dancer, street wise and aware of how to play the situation, but sadness resides behind her waspish tongue. Kay Garven (Smith) is a lost cause, she will do anything and trample on anyone to save herself. One of the best sequences in the film finds Garven throwing herself at Hurley, the rest goes on behind closed doors, but we know what happens and it adds spice to what follows in the final third. Not all of the characters work for dramatic impact, such as Hunnicutt's talkative miner who wanders in to the plot at the mid-point (it's amazing how easy everyone finds it to get into this supposedly secure military site!), but the dynamics work wonderfully well. Weaklings, heroes in waiting, the forlorn, the foolish or the borderline psychotic, they all make for a potent and spicy psychological stew. The suspense angle of the impending bomb detonation is water tight, as is the ebbing away of Bart Moore, directer Powell never resorts to cheap tactics or clichés to keep the noose tight, and we are constantly wondering just who, if anyone? Will survive the ordeal. Once daylight disappears and we leave the scorching Mojave vistas behind, night time envelopes the ghost town and ace cinematographer Musuraca brings his atmospheric magic. Webb scores it with dramatic verve and the RKO effects team (headed by Harold Wellman) do sterling work to pull it all together without cheap and tacky baggage. Powell gets great performances out of McNally, Kelly, Sterling, Egan and Smith, while his ability to not let the logic holes dominate the narrative belies the fact that this was his first directing assignment. From the ominous opening shot of two men fleeing over sun-baked mud flats, to the thrilling and darkly tinged denouement, Split Second is a coiled spring waiting to explode. 8/10

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Polaris_DiB
1953/05/08

Boy oh boy, is this a rare gem! Here's the deal: a man escapes from jail with one of his friends and hides away in a ghost village right in the primary event area of an atomic bomb set to go off the next day. Through various coincidences and car troubles, he ends up putting a reporter, a prostitute, a wife about to get a divorce and her insurance salesman lover and her doctor husband, and a hillbilly for hostage as he tries to decide how to get out of there before the bomb goes off and what to do with people who have to stare down the barrel of his gun, trying to figure out if he'll let them live or not. It's like High Noon with claustrophobia and an atom bomb--the majority of the film is set in a single cabin and the characters have nothing to do but deal with each other as the threat of death looms closer and closer.Unsurprisingly, the characters' characters ultimately decide their final fate as they all try to socially compromise, some fatally and some ineffectually and some with surprise chain effects. It's everything that a well-made low budget survivalist movie can be, and then a friggin' atomic bomb goes off! What more could you need? I was extremely tired while watching this movie, but it woke me up like a cup of good coffee. It's amazingly compelling, multivaried, and unpredictable. I especially like how the production code constraints on one of the seduction scenes created a harrowing horror effect for the un-naive viewer: we "know" what happened, but we don't really know what happened. And the characters have some real surprises to give beyond their type, keeping the drama fresh and relentless and the clock ticks nearer to doomsday. This is an infinitely satisfying movie.--PolarisDiB

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krorie
1953/05/09

The success of this film is due largely to Dick Powell's analogy that international violence is caused by many of the same forces that trigger personal violence. Some might say the nation is the individual writ large. His pairing a detonation of an atomic bomb in preparation for a possible conflagration that would eliminate the human race with the escape from prison of a perverted hostile trio of killers hiding out in a deserted western town is indeed inspired. Add to this a clever, telling script written largely by Irving Wallace, who knew how to make today's headlines into entertaining stories, and the result is a near classic film for its genre.Some of the best lines are given to Jan Sterling in the role of a good-hearted showgirl, Dottie Vale, who has been ridden around the block a few times. At one point in carefree desperation, she states, "looks like we're caught between the devil and the bright red bomb." The ambiance of nonchalance permeates the entire picture and helps to lessen the tension caused by the split second count down to Armageddon for the trapped hostages. Even more humor is introduced with the character of Asa Tremaine, a desert rat who attempts to tell tale tales not unlike those of Gabby Hayes. Played by Arkansas native Arthur Hunnicutt (He's buried at Greenwood, Arkansas), Asa plays a pivotal role near the conclusion of the film. The rest of the cast is effective, particularly Stephen McNally who portrays the coldblooded killer with no morals, Sam Hurley.The story involves an assortment of personalities who unwittingly end up kidnapped by three escaped killers, one of them mute. The root of the plot centers on the interaction among the characters when their lives are stripped bare with doomsday at 6:00 am the next morning. They hold up in an abandoned town waiting for a doctor who happens to be the husband of a two-timer who is traveling with her boyfriend, now held captive by the killers. There is much edge-of-the-seat suspense as the clock clicks away the minutes.

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