Hunt the Man Down (1950) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
23 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
He's right. I've drunk better alcohol out of compasses.
hitchcockthelegend2 February 2020
Hunt the Man Down is directed by George Archainbaud and written by DeVallon Scott. It stars Gig Young, Lynne Roberts, Mary Anderson, Harry Shannon, James Anderson, Willard Parker, Carla Balenda and Gerald Mohr. Music is by Paul Sawtell and cinematography is by Nicholas Musuraca.

Plot finds Young as a hard-working public defender who seeks to clear the name of an alleged murderer (Anderson) who has been on the run for 12 years and who is only caught when he plays hero during a robbery attempt at the diner he has been working at.

Economical for sure, but this is a tight noirish legal thriller that is well written, tidily performed and has the skills of Musuraca for noir photographic shadings that belies the film's obvious low budget. Story is interesting because the accused is adamant he was framed all those years ago, and when we see his story in flashback we understand just why Young's lawyer is so determined to crack the case. So roping in his ex policeman father (Shannon excellent), who lost an arm in service, the scene is set for trying to track down witnesses and hopefully prove the client's innocence.

The pic then shifts into noir gear, cynicism hangs heavy as the one time group of young upwardly mobile socialite witnesses are now either dead, damaged by fate or have mental health problems. The American Dream has not surfaced for these people, and with a couple of nifty twists for resolution purpose, pic - while not a hidden gem or anything like that - is worth tracking down by fans of noir like crime programmers. 7/10
13 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Fast-paced film noir lite with a little social comment
meaninglessname8 May 2020
Really more of a murder mystery than a noir, with a Perry Mason-like final courtroom scene. One of those films where the detective keeps getting information a bit too easily.

It's about a public defender representing a murder suspect apprehended after fleeing a courtroom while on trial 12 years earlier. What gives it more interest than usual is its showing the changes in the suspects' live from 1938 to 1950 caused by the war, their involvement with the murder, and life in general.

Chief virtues: the fast pace without needless explanation, crisp dialog, and minor characters with their own personality, even if only onscreen briefly.

Not a classic but hold yours interest and provides some food for thought. Perhaps a "B" picture but with quality production values you'd expect from RKO.
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
A little noir with some little unexpected pleasures for the enthusiast.
max von meyerling9 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Hunt The Man Down is a routine little noir of slightly more than an hour in length but rich in its characterizations so not a total waste of time. It's a strange combination of Call Northside 777 and Chandler's Farewell My Lovely which was filmed as Murder My Sweet. A short order cook in a one arm joint thwarts an armed robber and his photo in the paper reveals him to be an escaped murderer who escaped his trial 12 years previously just before the verdict was to be read. Now if you ignore the plot hole that a man wanted and nearly convicted of murder and facing the gas chamber would stick around Los Angeles you can watch him as he passively is rearrested. He draws Gig Young as his public defender who, though initially skeptical of his client's innocence, goes about proving it.

The writer was a hack who slid into TV series easily as did the veteran hack director, George Archainbaud who had been making "B" pictures and western programmers as long ago as 1917. The cinematographer was a genius, Nick Musuraca, and the playing by a phalanx of character actors, most of whom I believe were radio regulars, including the estimable Iris Adrian, make this a very enjoyable little picture. Veteran oh-I-know-him villain Gerald Mohr, who had been in hundreds of radio plays and series and who was the stentorian voice over at the beginning of TV's The Lone Ranger, many of which were also directed by Archainbaud, makes a rare benign appearance.

It doesn't hurt that there is a lot of filming done on the 1950 streets of Los Angeles. And not just the usual recognizable landmarks but places with a breathtaking ordinariness that are somehow even more interesting than seeing an exterior of the Brown Derby. The film can't pretend that its anything other than a piece of work. By 1949 20 % of films were independently produced. By 1957 it was up to 57%. Pushed by the Paramount consent agreement and headed for TV, cut price films were being churned out. It's merely a coincidence that Hunt the Man Down was made in the middle of the noir era. A few years later and it would have been a cheap western or sci fi horror picture.

Hunt The Man Down shares many of the budgetary virtues of other noirs: concise storytelling, brisk pacing, location shooting, lack of distracting sub-plots and themes, no nonsense acting. The cinematography is wonderful which is consistent with classic noirs and the direction is uninspired but competent which is all that's needed for a decent noir. The writing is passable because, as they say, the writer stole from the best. There is one superb line, however. A witness is in a bar drinking and Gig Young's father is trying to get him away by promising him better liqueur and the man agrees, saying "You're right, I've drunk better alcohol out of compasses". A jewel in a dung heap. Hunt the Man Down was also made during the black list era and what better a match-up than an outlaw writer and a cheap producer. I don't know if the writer was a front or if the script was subjected to a polish job by a blacklisted writer. Only time will tell.

The courtroom denouement is more than just a little over the top but its all wrapped up so neatly and so quickly so where's the complaint? And Gig Young's father, a retired one armed police detective, is played by Harry Shannon who also played the father of Charles Foster Kane. If you love noirs you will enjoy this film but if you expect profound cinematic art you will be disappointed.
26 out of 31 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Missing Witnesses
bkoganbing17 December 2014
Watching Hunt The Man Down put me in mind of a Law And Order episode where Mandy Patinkin had to be retried again after jumping bail some 20 years after the crime and Sam Waterston's problem was the same as Gig Young's, missing witnesses. Only Young is the public defender.

James Anderson after years of hiding foils a robbery at a restaurant/bar where he was a dishwasher. That act of heroism cost him his freedom.

Young is appointed to handle his new trial and he prevails on his retired cop father Harry Shannon to locate all the people who were witnesses. On the night in question Anderson fell in with a crowd of young 20 something yuppies as we would call them today. One of them is shot while he's sleeping and Anderson is the one who looks good for it.

This group has gone up, down, and sideways on the social scale in the intervening years. One murder, and two attempts on other witnesses convince Young he's got an innocent client. In the end it's an act of kindly deception perpetrated on one of them that's the key to solving the case.

Standing out in this film is Willard Parker as the blind veteran, once a rising star in business now a bookbinder. Lynne Roberts who believes in Anderson's innocence and Cleo Moore a brassy blond from the Veda Ann Borg school. Veda must have been busy because Cleo's playing her kind of part and she does well with it.

Hunt The Man Down is a well made B film from RKO and it looks like a television pilot. I think that Young and Shannon in a series based on this film would have worked.
16 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Promising crime programmer compromised by its very brevity
bmacv6 December 2003
The main shortcoming of Hunt The Man Down is that it's too short. It tells the attempt to exonerate a man of a crime committed a dozen years earlier, half a dozen eye-witnesses to which have long since scattered. That's a lot a backstory to cram into a scant 68 minutes – programmer length – when the plot to unfurl is almost as complicated as The Killing or Out of the Past. Despite some nicely observed detail, ranging from Los Angeles' Skid Row to Beverly Hills estates where maids stand by swimming pools with towels on their arm, the many characters don't get their due – Hunt The Man Down becomes less complex than confusing.

James Anderson, working as a dishwasher in a bar that's held up after hours, shoots and kills the intruder; in the resultant publicity, he's spotted as the man who went on the lam before being sentenced for murder some years before. It falls to the public defender (Gig Young) to prove his innocence. With the help of his father, a one-armed retired cop (Harry Shannon), he tries to locate the guests at the impromptu drinking party in 1938 which (as such shindigs so often do) ended in the violent death of one of the merry-makers. He finds the original witnesses elusive, dissembling, deranged or dead. He also finds that, once a habit for homicide takes hold, it's hard to break....

Though Young looks, well, young, he was 37 at the time, with close to two dozen movies behind him. He's still far and away the best-known member of the cast, with the exception of Iris Adrian (as a streel) and Cleo Moore (who shows up for the concluding courtroom scene in a knock-‘em-dead black number, topped off by the sort of hat worn only by floozies in witness boxes). The movie could have used more of her, and of Adrian. For that matter, it could have used more of just about everything.
27 out of 33 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
"This a very ugly affair and getting uglier"
richardchatten18 February 2022
Gig Young and Harry Shannon make such a likeable team as father & son sleuths it's too bad this absorbing little RKO potboiler didn't lead to a series.

James Anderson learns the hard way that no good deed goes unpunished when his bravery during a holdup reawakens interest in a murder he was accused of a dozen years earlier. The downward mobility most of those present on that fateful night twelve years earlier (one blind, one drunk, one mad) paints a surprisingly downbeat picture of life scraping along the bottom in the good old U. S. of A.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Fast blast from the past.
ulicknormanowen12 July 2021
A good screenplay :a William Irish-like hero against the outside world ,with father-and-son investigating in the tradition of Ellery Queen .Classic murder mystery indeed.

After risking his life in break-in ,a man whose photograph makes all the headlines ends up in jail for he was once sentenced to death and escaped after his warden had a heart attack.

But he claims he's totally innocent and there were witnesses on that fateful night when the murder was committed. Hence the necessity to find all these people ,some of whom are dead or mentally ill; the problem of the movie is that it's inevitably too short, and too hurried for comfort: one has not enough time to make acquaintance with the witnesses who become suspects overnight. The fast pace of the movie does not help , but the scenes are generally strong and gripping ,acting is convincing.

The subject is very interesting though:how a man ,after a good deed , may go from one extreme (hero) to the other (criminal) overnight.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Some Lurid B-Movie Delights
LeonLouisRicci11 November 2013
Jam Packed Little Movie with Probably more Characters than the Budget or the Short Running Time can Encompass. There is much Cynicism in the Fate of the Many "Witnesses" to the Murder at Hand. Some like Mental Illness, Alcoholism, and Class Elitism are quite at home in the World of Film-Noir.

The Movie does its best to keep all the Players in Line but it can be somewhat of a Challenge to keep them all Straight. But it makes up for the Complications with some Sharp Cinematography and Deeply Affected Participants. There is the Wrongly Accused Man trying to Unwind the Events that happened Years before, and Gig Young is the Public Defender trying Desperately to Help.

The Film is so Full of Interesting Stuff that it Manages to be Entertaining Despite the Confusion. There is more than one Great Scene and some others that are Lurid B-Movie Delights. In the End it just Needed more Breathing Room to Elaborate on some of the Truly Interesting and Off-Beat Characters. But as it Stands there are some really Intriguing Interludes and doesn't Pull Punches as it Relies on some Stylized Realism for its Portrayal of Pulp Fiction.
14 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
TV Fare
dougdoepke8 November 2009
This RKO release is typical of the routine second-feature fare that TV would soon replace. It's a pretty pedestrian account of an innocent man (Anderson) being cleared of a murder charge by his Public Defender. There's quite a number of suspects, at the same time, the script muddles them in confusing fashion that takes away the guessing game. Young more or less walks through the undemanding role of attorney-defender, while the usually villainous Anderson gets a rare shot at a sympathetic role. Anderson is a familiar face from that era, especially from the popular Dragnet series. He's one of those unheralded actors with a strong presence that could spice up the dullest screenplay. Catch the early bar scene where he shows his trademark moody snarl, otherwise he's pretty much wasted. There's one scene, the "moment of truth" in the courtroom, where director Archainbaud rises above the script with a dollying shot of the unhinged Rolene (Balenda). It's a sudden, chilling camera move, and Balenda does well with the histrionics. Otherwise, this is the sort law and order melodrama that would soon be done on, say, Mr. District Attorney (1954).
9 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Almost
jeffhaller12 May 2021
Stumbled on this today. It is contrived and the direction like so many of that period can be obvious and almost makes you smile. It becomes like a Ten Little Indians. Gig is great but the others do a lot of "acting.. The ending becomes so ludicrous in the last ten minutes that everything before loses its significance. Still, it is not boring and quite gripping.
4 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Run-of-the-mill murder mystery
frankfob3 December 2003
Low-budget murder mystery about a Public Defender trying to clear his client of a murder the man had been convicted of 12 years previously. Complicating things is the fact that he escaped custody after his conviction, but the PD believes the man to be innocent of the murder and works to find the real killer. Gig Young as the PD is okay, and James Anderson as the convicted killer is actually pretty good, but the picture as a whole just rambles along with little suspense, and despite some good character actors in the cast, the performances are generally below par. Director George Archainbaud was apparently more at home making westerns--he was churning out Gene Autry's TV series at Columbia at around this time--but even if he had tried to inject any liveliness into this picture, the hack script would have defeated his attempts. Average at best, the film climaxes with a courtroom scene that's straight out of an episode of "Perry Mason" and is just as predictable.
16 out of 37 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
very well done little movie
modinesuggins23 March 2005
It amazes me when people dismiss a movie because of its short length. I much more appreciate a compact, well written and directed movie than some drivel that drags on and on and makes me wonder what happened to the editor. I watched this movie with low expectations since i had never heard of the director and most of the actors. Despite the number of central characters, the director did an excellent job of quickly defining them and getting to the point of the movie. Any additional footage would have been superfluous and only bogged down the steady pace of the movie. James Anderson was excellent at avoiding the stereotypical unjustly accused victim, he neither ranted about his predicament nor did he come across as the overly likable guy who just happens to be at the wrong place at the wrong time, which is what is normally expected of that type of roll. Though it's hard to imagine a public defender putting as much work into the case as this one did, i thought it was a great bit of writing to make his pivotal discovery an accident despite the pd's dogged pursuit of those involved 12 years earlier. I highly recommend this movie to those who appreciate tightly written and economically directed movies.
53 out of 57 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Kinkaid the killer
nickenchuggets29 June 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Some movies have a habit of seeming longer than they really are, whether it's because the plot takes too long to get going, a lack of music or some other reason. Hunt the Man Down doesn't really have any of these problems, but it still felt quite long to me despite only being about 70 minutes. I think this is due to the linear nature of the story, which follows a decade old murder case, and the main character won't stop until he sees the outcome of it (predictably). The plot begins with a girl in an LA bar getting robbed by someone in a trench coat. Someone who works at the bar attacks the bandit and shoots him. Some time later, the heroic deed appears in the newspaper and is noticed by investigator Paul Bennett (Gig Young). Strangely, the hero didn't want his picture taken for the papers, but Paul soon finds out why: the person responsible for shooting the robber is actually Richard Kinkaid (James Anderson), a wanted criminal tied to a 12 year old murder case. Despite most people thinking the contrary, Paul believes that Kinkaid is innocent. He then embarks on a quest to find the original 7 witnesses associated with the case (back in 1938) in order to find the truth about Kinkaid. He was accused of murder because at a house party 12 years ago, he met Kerry McGuire and his wife Alice. Also at the party were Walter Long, Rolene Woods, Brick Appleby, Patricia Sheldon (Cleo Moore) and Joan Brian. The latter's husband Dan came to the party and threatened to shoot Kinkaid if he didn't stay away from her. Dan almost shoots Kinkaid, but is disarmed. People attending the party restrain Kinkaid, who says "it's a good thing your friends are here or I'd kill you." That same day, Dan was found dead in his house with a pistol nearby, and Kinkaid's prints were on it. He was apparently out for a walk around the same time Dan was murdered, but someone saw him leave the house and thought the killing should be blamed on him. 12 years later, Paul tries to track down the witnesses to this crime, but it proves hard since most of them want to distance themselves from that night, and others have endured lifechanging events. Appleby, made blind during his service in Italy during World War 2, works with books now. Kerry and Alice are now divorced. Walter went on to marry Joan after Dan was killed, and Rolene, her existence a closely guarded secret, spends her life in her room and became deranged. During the trial at the end, Kinkaid is expected to be found guilty, but Paul calls Patricia to the witness stand. She reveals she had changed her name since the murder, and two years after it she was engaged to Appleby. Right when she was about to marry him, he was drafted. While he was in the military, Pat started seeing Kerry McGuire instead. Pat is also pressured into giving up knowledge that suggests she was blackmailed by Kerry about her involvement in Dan's killing, so she later sent two people to kill him. Paul keeps trying to trap Patricia in incriminating questions, and she eventually reveals she went home with Rolene that night, waited for her to fall asleep, and then went to kill Dan. She tries denying that she ever left her apartment, but Rolene shows up in the courtroom and recognizes Patricia, so there really isn't any point. Now that Paul has solved the case, he wants Patricia to be held for further questioning. I thought this movie was ok. The storyline is quite confusing and although I didn't expect this particular ending, I've seen this cliche before. Of course the cute girl whom nobody suspects is going to be the murderer. Speaking of which, Cleo was also in that movie where she is an accomplice to her boyfriend who kills the owner of a junkyard by running him over, making it pretty similar to this one. With that film, the audience is in on the fact that she's guilty of something, but here, it's unknown to us until the final moments. Since the film doesn't really have any well known actors (except her), it felt more amateurish than most other crime movies I've looked at. Still, it doesn't overstay its welcome due to the runtime and the concept of trying to solve a mystery long after its debut is original, so it could be a lot worse.
3 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
A rather average film noir, it has to be said
Leofwine_draca27 October 2015
Gig Young is a rather bland stand-in for Robert Mitchum in this murky film noir thriller about an attorney on a mission against the clock to track down witnesses to an old crime. The set up is actually a neat one, in which a seemingly innocent man is accused of being the suspect in a 12-year-old murder, leading a chief lawyer to track down witnesses to the crime to get their version of the events and to hopefully prove the man's innocence.

This set up turns out to be an excuse for the writer to shine a flashlight into some very murky areas of society, in which various promising characters have fallen by the wayside into the depths of alcoholism and mental illness. It sounds rather more interesting than it is, with pedestrian direction contributing to an overly familiar feel to the whole thing, and the lack of any stand out performances makes it a rather forgotten and forgettable piece too. It's not bad by any means, but it's not one of the classics.
6 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
old style crime drama
SnoopyStyle4 November 2022
Richard Kincaid (James Anderson) thwarts a robbery, but he turns out to be a fugitive hiding under a false identity. 12 years earlier, he was tried for murder, but escaped during the trial. The prosecutor spots him in the newspaper and promptly brings him back to trial. Public defender Paul Bennett (Gig Young) takes on his case and has to track down some long-gone witnesses.

This is a crime B-movie courtroom drama. The investigation is not the most exciting. It consists of Paul going around tracking down and interviewing each witness. There is some intermittent action and the court case. It's like an old school police procedural.
3 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
average B movie
blanche-212 November 2015
Gig Young stars with Lynne Roberts, Mary Anderson, and Gerald Mohr in "Hunt the Man Down," a 1950 B film.

James Anderson is an escaped criminal who makes a mistake by stopping a robbery where he is working. His face is shown in the newspaper, and he's immediately recognized by law enforcement as Richard Kincaid, who was on trial for murder and escaped 12 years earlier.

Anderson is assigned a public defender, Paul Bennett (Young) who listens to his story carefully. Anderson met some strangers who invited him to a party; he was in an altercation with the husband of a woman he was dancing with; Anderson took a gun away from the man and left, after threatening to kill the man himself. He threw the gun on the bed, though no one admitted seeing it. Later, the husband was found dead.

It's a tough story to break, and it falls to Bennett and an old detective (Harry Shannon) to find the witnesses. Twelve years earlier, they were couples; now, one man (Willard Parker) was blind from the war and believed his wife (Cleo Moore) dead (though she had left him).

The victim's wife had remarried (Gerald Mohr), and another witness had split with his wife and had become an alcoholic.

The detective and Bennett realized they were on to something when the witnesses started being attacked and/or killed.

Someone on this board said Gig Young made a bland Robert Mitchum type in this noir. The way this was directed was less noir and more documentary, which was a style for crime films around this time. For that style, Young seemed right and very public defender-like.

The one thing never addressed was why the wife and her husband, the man killed, slept in separate rooms. I mean, wouldn't someone have asked about that?

One character in this film was mentally unstable, but I can't figure out from the cast list which one she was. It's just as well -- her acting was abominable, totally off the wall.

This film comes to the defense, as it were, of public defenders, a much maligned group. So often in the media, they are denigrated and shown as the reason people are found guilty.

My sister worked for the PD office and would often hear from potential clients, should I use a public defender or a real lawyer? Public defenders in my sister's office won more cases than they lost; they are hard-working people and interested in their clients and in justice, not in money. It's a shame that this wasn't an important film, as it's a point that needs to be driven home.
6 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
WE'LL CALL IT LAW & ORDER...WHAT DO YOU THINK...?
masonfisk25 June 2023
A film noir from 1950 which plays like an early progenitor for TV's Law & Order (much like 1948's The Naked City). When an escaped murder suspect, James Anderson, is recaught due to his heroics during a bar robbery where he works, the services of a defense attorney, Gig Young, are brought to bear to exonerate him whereby he even enlists his retired one armed father (who was a detective), Harry Shannon, to help in the investigation. Years before Anderson met some people at a bar (he was adept at playing the piano) & they brought him along to keep the party going at an apartment w/everyone coupled up but then when the jealous husband of one of the women shows up, he picks a fight w/Anderson where a gun appears but Anderson disarms him throwing the gun on a bed behind him. Hours later the man is found dead w/the remaining couples testifying against Anderson at trial who managed to escape when his transfer guard had a heart attack. Now w/the audience up to date, Young & Shannon hunt down the witnesses from that day to get to the bottom of the crime which proves to be an uphill trek as some witnesses have died, gone crazy or have become alcoholics. Running a brisk 69 minutes (which further puts the viewer in the mindset of having watched a TV episode) the film keeps viewers on edge as every twist & turn begets a triumph or a defeat w/Young & Shannon an affable & able pair of lawmen. Co-starring 50's pin up Cleo Moore as one of the tracked down witnesses.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
hunt the man down
mossgrymk20 March 2023
Great moody cinematography from Nick Musuraca but little else. Aside from Gig Young's public defender investigator and the guy who plays his law and order dad (shades of James Garner and Noah Beery here) the acting is one long crap fest. And the writing and direction are lackluster, at best. Not even a feeble attempt is made by scenarist DeVallon Scott to explore the interesting theme he has set up of glittering youth's fall, during WW2, from the moral and physical heights, as the seven "clean cut kids" of 1938 are, by 1946, financial and emotional wrecks. And although his pacing is decent, when over 75% of your actors ham it up or phone it in then director George Archinbault must be looked upon with at least a somewhat jaundiced eye. C plus.

PS...Bob Ewell playing a good guy? Again, less than stellar acting.
1 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
A Solid Noir With Intriguing Twists as a Public Defender Seeks to Prove His Client's Innocence Despite an Unconvincing Climax
Turfseer23 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
"Hunt The Man Down" boasts a unique plot that deserves attention, despite featuring a predominantly B-list cast. The story kicks off with an interesting twist when Dick Kincaid, a solitary dishwasher going by the alias Bill Jackson, becomes a local hero after killing a robber at the bar where he works.

However, Dick's newfound fame is short-lived, as he is also wanted for a murder that occurred 12 years earlier, having escaped custody before the trial. In a flashback, Dick recounts the unfortunate events to his public defender, Paul Bennett (Gig Young).

The flashback reveals that Dick's troubles began when he met three couples at a restaurant, who invited him to one of their apartments for drinks. While dancing with a woman named Joan Brian, things took a dark turn when her soon-to-be intoxicated husband, Dan, suddenly appeared. An altercation ensued, and in a fit of jealousy, Dan pulled out a gun. After a scuffle, Dick left, uttering an ill-advised remark about killing Dan.

Later, when Dan is found dead with the murder weapon bearing Dick's fingerprints, the District Attorney builds a strong circumstantial case against him. The success of the film hinges on the fascinating nature of the witnesses that Paul must track down to prove someone else committed the crime.

Paul enlists the help of his one-armed ex-cop father, Wallace, and their first lead is Burnell "Brick" Appleby. Brick proves to be a key figure in keeping the story engaging, as he unwittingly misleads Paul and his father by falsely claiming that one of the witnesses, his ex-girlfriend Pat Sheldon, is dead.

Toward the climax there's a great scene in which Brick brings Paul to a cemetery where he puts flowers on a stranger's grave believing it to be Pat's. Paul learns from Pat's father he made up a story that Pat was dead to spare the blind veteran the knowledge that his girlfriend had married another man.

As the plot unfolds, Paul tracks down other witnesses, including the alcoholic Kerry McGuire and his ex-wife, now known as Peggy Lynden, who works as a puppeteer's assistant. In a pivotal moment, Kerry attempts to blackmail Packy Collins over the phone. Tragically, Kerry is soon shot to death by two thugs while Paul's dad is driving on the highway. Wallace later reveals to Paul that these thugs were connected to Packy. In a courageous act of self-defense, Wallace returns fire on the highway, causing the thugs' car to crash and killing them.

In light of a subsequent attempt on Alice's life and the revelation that the two thugs were associates of Packy, Paul soon discovers that Pat had been dumped by Dan before he married Joan, and later had an affair with Kerry.

Kerry knew that Pat harbored intense anger towards Dan for leaving her, and he believed she was the one responsible for Dan's murder. However, it remains unclear why Kerry thought he could use Packy, a dangerous figure, to blackmail Pat. The motives behind Kerry's misguided decision are puzzling.

Paul eventually confronts Joan and another witness, Walter Long, who are now married and living in a lavish mansion. Unfortunately, these characters offer little assistance to Paul, lacking the depth and quirks of the other witnesses he encounters.

The final crucial witness is revealed to be Rolene Wood, who roomed with Pat on the night of the murder and is now mentally ill. During the climax, Paul brings Rolene into the courtroom while Pat is on the stand. Remarkably, Rolene's mere presence unnerves Pat, leading to a surprising confession of Dan's murder. It's puzzling to comprehend why Pat didn't choose to remain silent, forcing Dick to shoulder the blame. It seems implausible that she suddenly developed a pang of conscience. Moreover, considering Rolene's mental illness, one might question her value as a witness if she were to take the stand for Paul.

Gig Young delivers a solid, if somewhat perfunctory, performance as the determined public defender, supported by a competent B-list cast. Notably, Paul Frees offers an uncredited yet memorable portrayal of the gangster Packy Collins, while Lynne Roberts shines as Sally Clark, Dick's loyal co-worker.

Overall, despite the unconvincing climax, "Hunt The Man Down" delivers a fairly suspenseful noir experience, blending a compelling plot with unexpected twists, making it worth a watch for fans of the genre.
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Better than many A films
tony-70-6679202 July 2021
Warning: Spoilers
On Bill Maher's programme recently Quentin Tarantino said the 1950s were dog days for Hollywood. I certainly preferred that decade's output to what we get now. A whole string of master directors were at the top of their game (Hitchcock, Ford, Mann, Lang, Kazan, Aldrich and others) and also you got second features. When one was as good as this little gem it was worth the price of admission on its own. I've watched this twice, something I rarely do.

I approached it without any high hopes. The director had a long and prolific career, but I'd never heard of any of his films, nor had I heard of the scriptwriter. However, the fact that RKO had assigned Nicholas Musuraca as DoP suggests they had faith in the project ( he'd photographed some of their great films noir such as "The Spiral Staircase" and "Out of the Past.") If so, the faith was justified. This is probably the best work Archainbaud and DeVallon Scott did, and it's a pity that they and Musuraca worked almost exclusively in TV later in the decade.

There are no real stars, unless you count Gig Young. He had a reputation as an abusive drunk, while James Anderson tended to play villains, but here both give attractive and sympathetic performances, as do Anderson's sister Mary, Lynne Roberts and Willard Parker. The script is intelligent and original, populated with believable and well-defined characters rather than just tough stereotypes. I'm not sure, though, why Young's father had to be one-armed. The film's one weakness was the scene where he manages to keep driving while shooting dead two hitmen, one shot for each.
12 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Witnesses Wanted!!!
kidboots25 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Calling this movie a noir is drawing a long bow in my opinion but it is a terrific little movie whose compact length keeps it tight and exciting. Gig Young, one of the few "name" stars in this movie, was excellent as a young public attorney, Bennett, who, along with his father, a retired policeman, proceeds to hunt the man (or woman) down as he tries to unravel an eight year old murder mystery.

Bill Jackson (James Anderson) a dishwasher at a local bar thwarts a robbery and reluctantly finds himself a hero with his picture in the papers. He has good reason to be reluctant - eight years before, as Richard Kincaid, he escaped from police custody where he was being held for murder. When he is re-arrested he still maintains his innocence and his story of a chance meeting with a group of friends at a bar has a ring of truth. Bennett believes him and attempts to track down the 7 people with varying results. Mr. Popularity (John Kellogg) has turned into a hopeless alcoholic, his adoring wife (Mary Anderson) is still adoring but finds it safer to lead a new life under a different name. The college athlete (Willard Parker) has returned from the war a blinded veteran and is now a book binder and his girl (Cleo Moore) has died - or so he has been told!!! The last couple, the quiet ones - she has moved away and Walter (Gerald Mohr) is now wealthy and his present wife was the young wife of the murdered man. Kincaid was accused by the man of having an affair with his wife and he then hastily left the party before the murder took place.

I admit there was a bit of a problem keeping track of who was who. For a start they all actually looked as though they had aged 8 years and because none of the actors and actresses ever became household names it was hard to tell them apart. There were exceptions - Gerald Mohr's resemblance to Humphrey Bogart helped him become a familiar face in 1950s movies and TV, he always played the slick shyster. Cleo Moore started her career as a blonde bombshell in several of the Joe MacDoakes shorts and for a while, in the 50s, had the dubious honour of being Hugo Haas' muse in movies like "Bait", "One Girl's Confession" etc. And if that is not the notorious Lila Leeds as one of the prison visitors, I'll eat my hat!!!
22 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Hunt The Man Down - Another RKO Big 'Little' Picture
krocheav25 March 2019
This unusual RKO supporting feature was ambitious to say the least. Its director was a prolific French born veteran of numerous American features, George Archainbaud. Some of his work has been recognised for its artistic merits (13 Women '32 - The Lost Squadron '32) Archainbaud turned to TV later in his career. The involved and imaginative story was penned by generally undistinguished writer De Vallon Scott - both the direction and story were worthy of being treated to main feature status. An interesting, above average cast bring this rather complicated tale to life with dedicated conviction. Gig Young (why he chose to lump himself with that peculiar name is beyond understanding) plays a dedicated public defender working to uncover the truth behind a re-opened murder case that spans a pre and post WW11 timeline. To save on investigative expenses he asks for assistance from his retired ex-cop father (the always interesting Harry Shannon who played the father of 'Citizen Kane' in '41) together, they make a formidable team.

The time distance between the original crime can make keeping track of this intriguing plot a little difficult - as the audience is expected to remember who the players are - and with most not being particularly well known, this demands some concentration - especially as the war years have brought various changes to their circumstances and appearances. It also looks as if RKO may have shortened the production schedule or made post production cuts at some stage (?) There's no boring padding within this story, it starts and holds fast to the main threads till the end - while it could have done with a tad more character development to assist us to more readily identify them. The casting makes good use of James Anderson (To Kill A Mockingbird '62) and a bevy of wonderful looking - hard working B feature women, including Mary Anderson (Lifeboat '44), Carla Balenda (Sealed Cargo '51).

Especially interesting is the Grace Kellyish; Christy Palmer, who plays the eventual wife to the Gerald Mohr character. Christy Palmer, who in real life married actor Alan Baxter, doesn't seem to have stared in any other film (our loss!) she is another plus for this little movie. Good use is also made of a variety of character actors all given snappy lines to bolster interest as it speedily rolls along. Visually, it's perfectly captured on film by the marvellous Nicholas Musuraca. Above average and under recognised.

Note: The old C&C TV print currently being run on local Aust TV is in need of replacing and either they are running it at a faster speed or they have clipped it - as it only clocks in at 65m while being listed at 69mins. Those four mins just might have helped with further character recognition.
14 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
A dandy B-movie.
planktonrules7 January 2020
When the story begins, an armed robber breaks into a cafe and the guy tries to shoot a guy who is working there as he steals the money. However, the worker manages to overpower the robber and shoots him in the process. Now you'd think he'd become a big hero. Instead, the police see the newspaper clipping showing a photo of the hero...and he's recognized as a man who vanished 12 years ago after he was convicted of murder but before he could be sentenced.

The public defender (Gig Young) believes the reluctant hero and decides to investigate the case himself*. Soon, he's able to track down a few of the witnesses but then something weird happens....folks try to kill the public defender and his father! And, they also try to kill one of the witnesses. Obviously somebody doesn't want anyone looking into this old case!

While "Hunt the Man Down" is clearly a B-movie due to its short run-time and cast of mostly 2nd and 3rd tier actors, it's a terrific film. Well acted, tense and a nice script more than make up for the cheap production. Well worth seeing.

*I have no idea IF defense attorneys EVER do this. They do it in films and on TV but I also know that they are generally overworked and overwhelmed and assume they literally don't have enough time to investigate anything.
11 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed