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Pier 5, Havana

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Pier 5, Havana (1959)

October. 09,1959
|
5.4
|
NR
| Action Thriller
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A Yank comes to Havana in search of an old friend who disappeared during the Cuban Revolution, and discovers a group of Batista sympathizers plotting to overturn Castro.

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Mjeteconer
1959/10/09

Just perfect...

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Tedfoldol
1959/10/10

everything you have heard about this movie is true.

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Afouotos
1959/10/11

Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.

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Bumpy Chip
1959/10/12

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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bkoganbing
1959/10/13

I remember seeing this film way back in 1959 when it first came out in the theater. History was moving very fast back in this time in Cuba and within days this item was quickly withdrawn from circulation. Before 1959 was out you could never have made an American film with the Castro as the good guy and the Batista counterrevolutionaries as the bad guys.Cameron Mitchell in the immediate days after the Castro revolution in Cuba comes to Havana to find his friend Logan Field who has gone missing. What he finds is Field's wife Allison Hayes now involved with Eduardo Noriega a rich plantation owner and singing at the nightclub in hotel owner Nestor Paiva's palatial resort hotel, once the playground of touring Americans as were many such places in Batista Havana.Michael Granger the local Havana cop and Castro supporter is taking a real interest in the comings and goings of Mitchell. And before long Mitchell up to the neck in a counterrevolutionary assassination plot that the missing Mr. Field was involved in before.Within days of this film's release public opinion changed radically about Fidel Castro and this film was buried. Not that it should have been unearthed for art's sake. This is sloppily put together with the villains making stupid moves that would have rivaled some of the movie Nazis of World War II vintage. If Pier 5, Havana teaches us anything it is that with help like this no wonder Batista regained power.

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MartinHafer
1959/10/14

Cameron Mitchell plays an American who has come to Castro's Cuba in order to locate a friend who has mysteriously disappeared. The police are quite nice and helpful but Mitchell's life is constantly at risk due to evil counter-revolutionaries. In addition, Mitchell's old girlfriend and their past relationship together is a simmering subplot.This film was made during a tiny window in which the American film industry fell in love with Castro's Cuba and the Cubans moved towards Communism and repression. Errol Flynn made a couple films about this Cuba and "Pier 5, Havana" is another--odd little American relics where the new government was seen as very good and reasonable.Seeing this film and its very idealistic view of the new Cuba is pretty interesting. Here in Castro's new utopia, the police allow people to walk around town with handguns, they don't send suspects to political prisons and there are no purges and executions. Instead, the bad guys are all the counter-revolutionaries bent on undoing the recent revolution and a bringing about a return of the Batista government through violence and murder.Now all this is naive, but at the time it looked like this could be the new Cuba--so I can forgive this. However, what I had more trouble with was the occasionally bad dialog and awkward plotting. Now I am NO saying it's a bad film--it's just not a very good one. I'd recommend it more as an unusual curiosity as opposed to a good film.HORRIBLE Cliché WARNING: At the end, Mitchell catches the bad guy and is holding a gun on him. Does he shoot this dangerous man? NOPE! He drops the gun to duke it out man-to-man! Also, CONVENIENTLY, the lady's husband just happens to die so she and Mitchell can have each other. The way this is handled is SUPER-awkward.

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ksf-2
1959/10/15

Not a lot of background info on IMDb on this 67 minute shortie from "Premium Pictures", and even less info on the writer, Joseph Hoffman, and its director Ed Cahn; as of today, not even one message on the message boards at the bottom of the main page. "Pier 5" starts out with narrator (Cameron Mitchell as Steven Daggett) giving us the first-person background on Batista skipping town, and Castro moving in take over Cuba. Daggett tells us he is trying to find his best friend Hank Miller (Logan Field), but is quickly picked up by the police for questioning... we are introduced to the local bigshot Senor Ricardo (Eduardo Noriega), American singer Monica Gray (Allison Hayes), and local businessman Senor Schluss (Otto Waldis), who all may or may not be involved in something together.. Ms. Gray admits that she knows the missing man Miller, so Dagget starts following clues to try to find his missing friend. The biggest Hollywood name here is our narrator, Mitchell, who later had several successful TV series in the 1960s and 1970s (the Beachcomber, Swiss Family Robinson, High Chaparrel). The bombshell Hayes has an interesting bio.. apparently was a contestant in the Miss America Pagaent, but unfortunately died quite young at age 47, possibly from being overdosed with calcium...how strange.... she was even in "Tickle Me", with Elvis, and died a couple months before he did. "Pier 5 " Produced by Robert Kent aka James Gordon, who had started out as a writer in the 1930s, and wrote and produced many films with a foreign, exotic location. This one is a good solid script, with perfectly competent actors, but I guess isn't shown often, since it doesn't have any real big names. It's interesting that what some of the "bad guys" are involved in might today be treated differently than how it was regarded at the time.... but that's a matter for history to sort out...won't say any more to avoid giving away any plot points.

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django-1
1959/10/16

This is one of three low-budget programmers made by Cameron Mitchell for director Edward L. Cahn and the same production company (all UA releases) in 1959-60, all of which are worth seeing. Living in Miami, small businessman Cameron Mitchell comes to post-revolution Havana to find an old friend who was going to come and work for him, but never arrived and seems to have vanished. Although Mitchell's character is not a detective, this plays a lot like a detective film, and director Cahn is a master at pacing, so despite the miniscule budget (Havana is evoked by a few small sets and a few California exteriors with Spanish-language signs on them!), the film plays like a good little paperback-original mystery novel--especially so since Mitchell provides voice-over narration here and there to speed things along and to mention things that would be too expensive to show on camera. As always, Mitchell treats the role with the greatest respect, digging into the character and turning what could have been a generic role into someone the viewer cares about and roots for. Michael Granger is also excellent as the honest, professional Cuban police investigator who stays on the case himself and keeps running into Mitchell along the way. The film also features legendary 50s leading lady Allison Hayes (Gunslinger, The Unearthly, Attack of the 50 ft. Woman)as a woman who once knew Mitchell and was married to the missing man. Although a low-budget programmer that is only 67 minutes long and was no doubt made in a few weeks, PIER 5, HAVANA provides good, honest, hard-boiled entertainment and plays like a good 1950s detective TV show. Director Edward L. Cahn was the best kind of journeyman director, a true pro who could take a talented cast, a few small sets, and a genre-based script, and turn it all into a solid, unpretentious feature film that still entertains and engages decades after it was made. If you come to this film with enough willing suspension of disbelief, it won't matter that the punches thrown in the fight scenes miss by at least eight inches--the sound effects are synched accurately so you THINK the punch must have landed, and the scene has moved on before you have time to analyze it. I'll take honest entertainment like this over CGI effects any day of the week. This film was probably made for less than the bottled water budget on the last Eddie Murphy film. Bravo to director Cahn and star Cameron Mitchell!

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