Drive a Crooked Road (1954) Poster

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7/10
Affecting performance by Rooney as duped misfit in odd weeper/noir
bmacv18 August 2002
Is there such a thing as a male weeper? Bang The Drum Slowly certainly belongs, as do parts of The Knute Rockne Story (`Let's win this one for the Gipper!'). Probably the whole athlete-dying-young genre does for men what Stella Dallas did for women. Another candidate for inclusion is Drive A Crooked Road, a 1954 noir starring Mickey Rooney.

Rooney's abbreviated stature helped keep him in pictures as America's oldest teen-ager. But once he hit 30, it was inevitable that adult roles should come his way. As the noir cycle was in full swing, that's where he landed. In The Strip and Quicksand, he still managed to pass as a stripling. By the time of this movie, however, he was well into his 30s, with broad hits of chubbiness settling into his face and midriff. He was still the star, not yet relinquished to character roles, though it was unclear how to handle him. So he became a misfit – a `freak.'

He's an awkward, lonely auto mechanic with dreams of driving someday in the Grand Prix – dreams he knows won't come true. With one exception, his fellow mechanics tease him mercilessly, especially about his lack of sexual experience. One day an unattainable woman (Dianne Foster) gives him the big eye, and he succumbs, however tentatively at first. (His ache for her is palpable when she plays hard to get, as he tosses on his rooming-house bed with his few racing trophies now emblems of hollow triumph). But she's just a cat's-paw for her real boyfriend, Kevin McCarthy, living the high life in his beach-house bachelor pad; he's planning to knock over a bank in Palm Springs and needs Rooney as his daredevil driver. With Foster's increasingly reluctant urging, Rooney signs on....

The resolution, of course, is the falling out of thieves; a large portion of the plot was to be echoed, 10 years later, in Don Siegel's remake of The Killers. Though the robbery and escape should have been the centerpiece, or at least the central set-piece, of the movie, here it seems curiously perfunctory (these comments are based on viewing a version some minutes short of recorded running times, however). But the movie's staying power lies in Rooney's portrayal of the dupe, the victim – all the more memorable for being so understated.
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7/10
The Mechanic, The Racer, The Lover and The Avenger
claudio_carvalho27 December 2018
In California, the mechanic Eddie Shannon (Mickey Rooney) is also an excellent racing-car driver that expects someday to save money to race in Europe in Le Mans, Grand Prix and other car races driving a European car. Eddie is a short and shy man that has difficulties to date a woman. When the crooks Steve Norris (Kevin McCarthy) and Harold Baker (Jack Kelly) see the performance of Eddie in a local race, they use Steve´s girlfriend Barbara Mathews (Dianne Foster) to seduce Eddie to convince him to drive the getaway car in a bank heist. What will be Eddie´s attitude?

"Drive a Crooked Road" is a film-noir written by Blake Edwards and directed by Richard Quine. Mickey Rooney performs a dark and sad role that seems to be tailored for him. The femme fatale Dianne Foster is the key element of the story, first seducing Eddie and then triggering his anger leaving him full of hatred. The gloomy conclusion surprises, but fits perfectly to the story. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "Os Valentões" ("The Bullies")
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8/10
Mickey Rooney is Career Driven
howdymax23 April 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I tuned into this movie expecting to see Mickey Rooney doing his impersonation of a dramatic role. I mean, Mickey Rooney. Has anybody ever seen him do anything on film that wasn't over the top? Well, tune into this movie. I think you'll be as surprised as I was.

The story has to do with a lonely, out of step guy who has a dream of racing in The Grand Prix. He's an accomplished mechanic, who races on weekends, but you know he'll never amount to anything. Along comes, long legged Dianne Foster. He falls hard, and she sucks him into a devious plot to rob a bank. What Mickey doesn't know is that she is in cahoots with a couple of classy mutts played by Kevin McCarthy and Jack Kelly. Foster lures the Mick into driving the getaway car so they'll have the money for him to race and they can live happily ever after. Not a chance. The plan all along is to ditch Mickey after the robbery, so she can run off with the mutts. Poor Mick never catches on on until the hammer drops, but by this time, the girls conscience gets the best of her and she spills the beans to Mickey. There is an explosive ending, but it does leave the viewer hanging a little.

This is a Columbia cheapo, but the story is tight and well written. More importantly, the acting is first rate. All the principals really perform, but it's Mickey movie. He underplays the part of Eddie the sap perfectly. I didn't think it was possible, but this was later in his career, and I wish he had done more like it. It proved to me that he had much more range than one would think. I have to wonder if his height held him back. Or maybe it was his earlier body of work. Either way, I know he had much more to offer than Hollywood ever asked of him. Keep an eye open for it. You won't be disappointed.
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Little Guys Also Dream
dougdoepke2 June 2006
As other reviewers point out, America's favorite little guy was at a career crossroads at this point (1953). All in all, this downbeat low-budget caper film was a gutsy choice for MGM's former golden boy. Not only is Rooney's Eddie Shannon a rather pathetically repressed and vulnerable nobody, but the script stays entirely within that character, allowing Rooney none of his usual assertive (and often annoying) antics. The result is perhaps the biggest departure of his career, and also perhaps the most moving.

The film itself is a good one, benefiting from unfamiliar Southern Cal locations, excellent acting from a number of up-&-comers, Jack Kelly , Kevin McCarthy, et al., and a plausible script. As a caper film, it's inferior to the best ones of that decade (The Asphalt Jungle, The Killing, etc.), but as an account of one man's sad and lonely plight (never a Hollywood biggie), it holds its own with the best of them, thanks to Rooney.
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6/10
Mickey Rooney in an understated performance
AlsExGal1 January 2011
In his youth, and in particular his heyday over at MGM, Mickey Rooney would practically do cartwheels through his roles - he was that high energy. However, he was capable of something more than playing the energetic optimistic young man of pre-war America, and this film and 1950's Quicksand are probably the best examples of what that something was.

Here he plays auto mechanic Eddie Shannon that also does some race car driving. A mob of thieves take note of his talent behind the wheel at the race track and the gang leader's girl (Dianne Foster as Barbara) flirts with Eddie and gets him to believe that she loves him. Then the thieves lower the boom on him - they proposition him to drive their getaway car during a bank robbery in return for 15000 dollars. The reason that Eddie is so needed is that the road between the bank and the main highway past the point where any road blocks would be requires fast driving over what amounts to unpaved desert terrain. Eddie's an honest guy, willing to wait and work for the things he wants, but Barbara is holding out the need for this quick money as a condition of their relationship continuing, so he gives in and agrees to the robbery plan. To him, Barbara is his treasure, not any amount of money that he could land. Little does he know she's fool's gold.

Rooney is convincing as the little guy who takes it on the chin from a verbally abusive coworker at the garage who - like all bullies - doesn't seem to realize that high school is at least ten years behind him. Without saying much you can tell Rooney's character Eddie is a guy that has come to have low expectations of life, not so much abused as he is ignored and invisible to the opposite sex, and is surprised when a beautiful girl takes notice of him. Things are getting out of hand for Barbara too, as she feels deep remorse for using Eddie. Kudos also go to Kevin McCarthy and Jack Kelly as the two thieves. McCarthy's character has a very thin veneer of charm painted over what appears to be a soul of pure evil. When he kisses a rather apathetic Barbara and doesn't like her lack of enthusiasm, he warns her to never kiss him like that again in a way that will give you goosebumps. Jack Kelly's character is more of an all out wild man. You can just tell that he considers violence the most amusing pastime on earth.

I'd recommend this one for Rooney's performance, but I'd downgrade this one just a little bit on lost opportunities for what could have been some fine action shots during the bank robbery scene and the getaway thereafter.
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7/10
Drive A Crooked Rode Hits Right Path ***
edwagreen1 May 2008
Hell hath no fury like a man scorned.

Mickey Rooney starts out as if he is a Danny Kaye milque-toast character. Taken in by Diane Foster, he soon meets up with 2 guys who want his driving talent to be used in robbing a bank.

Rooney is great here as he goes from a quite guy, afraid of really living to aiding the guys in the heist.

Hurt by the betrayal of Foster, she shows compassion at the end and this leads to tragedy as Rooney becomes a killer.

This is really film-noir at its very best.

The robbery was a complete success but the thieves were done in by personal reactions. This one is worth catching.
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7/10
Mickey's other side
lee_eisenberg7 May 2007
I should say that "Drive a Crooked Road" probably won't hold your attention quite as much as most movies that I've seen. What's mostly eye-opening about it is just seeing Mickey Rooney in a gritty role in a film noir. He plays Eddie Shannon, a mechanic with little aim in life. The high points in his daily routine are when his co-workers ogle women walking by the shop. But when he gets mixed up with the wrong woman, he suddenly finds himself involved in a bank robbery with apparently no way out.

While some people might assert that Mickey Rooney was miscast here, I beg to differ. In this role, he shows that he can be something totally different from the "family-oriented" roles with which he's usually been associated (though I best remember him from "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World" and "Night at the Museum"). This movie is approximately as gritty as the average film noir, and while it's not any kind of masterpiece, still worth seeing. As it's apparently not widely available on video or DVD, Portland's video/DVD store Movie Madness has a copy.

Also starring Kevin McCarthy (of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers") and Jerry Paris (the neighbor on "The Dick Van Dyke Show").
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10/10
Perhaps Rooney's finest movie
bux29 May 2001
I saw this one at the theater, as a kid, when it came out. I have searched for a VHS copy of this one for years, and finally came across it recently on the internet. It is no wonder that this one stayed with me for so long. This is without a doubt Mickey Rooney's best movie as an adult. It would seem that after the war and the Andy Hardy series wound down that Mick was having a difficult time finding his niche in Hollywood. He did score very well with "Quicksand"(1950)but in this one he pulls out all the stops. Constantly he is referred to as "the little freak" and several comments are made concerning his manhood, or lack thereof. We slowly watch as Mick is played off by the gangster's moll, lured into the web of robbery and deceit; this is NOT a pretty movie. The movie builds slowly to an unforgettable, unexpected climax. Still a great movie after almost 50 years!
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7/10
Rooney holds his own; but the script falters
mollytinkers14 September 2021
If you've seen Quicksand and Killer McCoy, you know that Mr. Rooney was, at the core, a serious actor and entertainer. He tries hard to make his character believable in this film, but the script ultimately lets him down. He manages to deliver a great performance anyway!

A shoutout to the director for not using music during certain important sequences. An even bigger shoutout to composer George Duning, ultimately a five-time Oscar nominee, for an engaging score nonetheless.

Worth one watch.
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8/10
Nearly perfect with a couple of big problems
HEFILM12 April 2010
Richard Quine probably has his best "non comedy" film with this one, but maybe has to take the rap also for what's weak about this film. The opening car race and the key bank "race" are pretty blandly done as is any other action set piece in the movie. The opening scene is really poor, like something you'd see in a film made in the Early silent days. Badly matched rear projection, the camera angle is so wrong in the rear projection that is doesn't match the action of Rooney driving at all. The process work isn't bad, the footage shot is. The rest of the race material is also poor. And for a film about the ability to race, the fact that the racing is bad can't be overlooked. After this crappy beginning the excellent performances and dialog drive the film along perfectly. Most of the cast is perfect and the personal violence between characters is very strong. Rooney is very understated here--in many of his other adult work he'd tend to over act, not here though at all. It's an award worthy performance.

Just too bad that the action is treated like sloppy second unit work--some say (un)credited to Blake Edwards himself--but with Edwards interest in fast cars etc., hard to believe he'd shoot this stuff so badly. The ending, which also involves some action is perfunctorily done and the resolution too quick. Too bad because otherwise this would be a nearly perfect movie. Still if you get over, the opening especially, this is a must see.
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7/10
Crooks on a crooked road.
ulicknormanowen16 April 2021
A thriller verging on tongue in chick in its first part ,it turns film noir only in the final sequences .

Dianne Foster is an updated femme fatale ,but her prey is a not-so -handsome mechanic (Mickey Rooney,so naive he's really endearing) ,his colleagues 'laughing stock . One is far from the old film noirs , all happens in simple nay banal settings ,a garage or her lover's house by the sea.

The excellent Kevin McCarthy is superb as the coaxer who "wants to do the lad a service" : if he accepts to drive them on a crooked road ,he'll get a hefty sum .But it's after a bank break-up .And his love interest shows considerable skill too ("It's up to you; if you don't want to do it, leave it").

If the girl's attitude is predictable , the film ,in spite of a trite screenplay, is entertaining ,thanks to its good cast , MacCarthy my favorite.
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10/10
Great performance by Rooney
madformickey0524 October 2005
Drive A Crooked Road was a great performance by Mr. Mickey Rooney. I'm never ceased to be amazed by this man's talents. As a child I used to watch his films and he always amazed me then and always will. I recently discovered this classic gem and is one of the best performances of Mr. Rooney's. Mickey Rooney always gives a good performance. Mickey Rooney plays an auto mechanic who is framed by the girl he thinks loves him. Mickey Rooney did a lot of great film noir in the 50's. For other great Rooney 1950's performances check out Baby Face Nelson, The Big Operator, The Last Mile (an amazing performance by Rooney.) You will not be disappointed.
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7/10
Not too crooked
TheLittleSongbird2 March 2022
Seeing a different side to Mickey Rooney, a darkly gritty and more understated side rather than the comedy and enthusiastic cheekiness he was known for, immediately piqued my interest. Especially when also hearing that he was apparently very fond of the performance and film, if memory serves correct. Have also enjoyed a good deal of Kevin McCarthy's work and thought that seeing him in a more villainous role would be good.

'Drive a Crooked Road' struck me as well done and well worth watching, and if Rooney was fond of the film and his work here it is not hard to see why. It was great to see a different side to him and see it done as well as it was. Is 'Drive a Crooked Road' perfect or great? No, there are things that could have been done better. Is it good? To me, yes it was and thought it had a lot of things done extremely well. So yes it's recommended, if not quite in a raving fashion.

Am going to begin with what could have been done better. The film doesn't start all that promisingly, with a cheap-looking and atmospherically bland opening scene. The final quarter also could have done with more excitement.

It is agreed too that some of the pace early on is on the drawn out side.

Rooney however excels in a performance that has grit but genuinely moving pathos, this is an example of an actor doing something completely against type and managing to bring out a different side that sees them in a different way. The other standout is McCarthy, who has a deceptively suave charm but underneath that is a sinister slyness. Jack Kelly brings wit and edge to his role and Dianne Foster is alluring. Richard Quine shows that he could do thriller with class and atmosphere, while not one of my favourite directors he did do some films worth seeing, such as 'How to Murder Your Wife', 'Pushover' and 'Bell, Book and Candle'.

With the exception of the opening, 'Drive a Crooked Road' doesn't look too bad. The locations in particular are very nice. There is plenty of gritty tautness in the script and once the film gets going it is crisply paced, darkly suspenseful and absorbingly told. The climax does have tension, even if not a major surprise.

Overall, interesting and well done. 7/10.
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4/10
Ill-conceived plot that took most of the dull film to develop
FlushingCaps19 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
We begin with a rural road race where Mickey Rooney finishes second and is observed by two men who decide he's just right to be part of something-we don't learn until much later what they have in mind.

Most of the first 50 minutes of this film shows Rooney's character, Eddie, getting acquainted with a female customer in the garage where Eddie works, where she seems interested in him, but all he does is talk about cars and his desire to drive in big road races in Europe. We later learn she is "a friend" of Steve, who was one of the two men watching Eddie in that opening-scene race.

One scene had a big flub. In front of Barbara's apartment, Eddie drives a little MG and parks right in front of her car. He fixes her car and she drives away-with the MG nowhere in sight.

Then they attend a party at Steve's together and Steve seems to want to talk cars with Eddie, but they keep getting interrupted by another woman who is a bit drunk. There seems no point in her part other than annoying.

Eddie takes her home-as Barbara says, only four hours before he needs to go to work. Still not even a good night kiss, and he leaves, not noticing Steve and his friend Harold are sitting in a car right across the street. Steve tells Harold he'll "be back in ten minutes," so we know he isn't going there for a late night romantic visit. I say that although his relationship with Barbara is made clear by several kisses. The surprise visit was to talk about whether or not Eddie can be persuaded to do their job. We are over 40 minutes into the film and still have no idea what sort of job is being planned.

Later we see Eddie entering the beach house where Steve and Harold are waiting to tell him about their plans. Fully 52 minutes after the film begins, we learn that they are planning a bank robbery and merely want him to drive the getaway car. Eddie totally rejects the offer on moral grounds and leaves. He later talks to Barbara who doesn't truly urge him to do it, merely talks about the desire for easy money. I thought it key in this discussion that she never suggests they will be together after the robbery, only saying she wants him to go to Europe and drive in big races. He says "no" and it appears they are through.

About 10 minutes later, we see Eddie has decided to join in the plot. The mastermind shows him movies depicting what the road looks like when being driven over but apparently he is never given a single chance to drive it himself. Here the details of the plan are explained.

We come to the holdup scene and then a long getaway with the men racing away, at speeds up to 100 MPH on this narrow, dirt, winding, twisting road. The rest of the story deals with Barbara attempts to let Eddie down gently, and how things go awry. I won't reveal those ending scenes.

My complaints focus on how boring those first fifty minutes were before we learned about the robbery. OK, Eddie is awkward with women, but the way Barbara behaved we knew this would not be a real romance. She seemed to like him, but that was it. He seemed comfortable only with cars and engines.

As for the bank robbery, as explained Steve's plan was to take this 19-mile back road away from the Palm Springs bank back toward Los Angeles with his race car driver getting them past the points where the police will set up road blocks before they do so. He details that the teller will open the bank at 8:05. At 8:10 the vault opens. Harold will do the actual robbery, needing to be out of the bank by 8:15. The rest of the workers arrive at 8:28. He states that "by the time the others arrive and notify police, we'll have 22 minutes before road blocks can be set up." He further explains they need four minutes to slowly drive through town to get to the highway where they will race away. So they'll have 18 minutes to go 19 miles, having just one minute to spare.

Why in the world would this bank have a procedure that every day the vault opens while only one person is inside? How do all the other employees always arrive right at 8:28 a.m.? How could the crooks possibly know the exact time police can set up roadblocks at specific points? I dare say that the time to set them up depends on where exactly their patrol cars are when they hear about the crime. The one car that would be sent where the crooks will be, could have had say, a traffic stop a few minutes earlier that leaves the officer two minutes closer to where he will be sent, and, given the time line, that foils the whole crooked scheme.

I've never worked anywhere where a group of employees arrive exactly at the same time. If they need to report at 8:30-as suggested-probably two will be there 8-10 minutes early most days, and a couple others about 5 minutes early. Everyone getting there exactly two minutes early is preposterous.

The biggest flaw in this is the notion of the crime mastermind, Steve, that it is smart to approach an honest man with no criminal history and within a week of meeting him tell him all about his illegal plan and invite him to join in for a big payday.

It would be far easier to plan the crime without the need for this fast getaway. With just a minute to spare, they could easily get delayed by one farm tractor or other slow vehicle on that escape route that slowed them down.

As executed, Harold gets into the teller's car at his house and surprises him, riding with him to the bank, with Steve and Eddie following closely in the souped up escape car. When the teller is untied (I presume that's what they did) he could fully describe the car he saw, with two men inside, following them to the bank. They could have just been waiting near the bank and then their getaway car would be totally unknown to any cop in a roadblock.

If after the holdup, the man the teller saw close-up went one way, and Steve and Barbara slowly drove in another direction, neither would be likely suspects for the roadblock cops to search, since they were looking for three men. They were stealing $150,000 total, when divided into two bundles, it could easily be hidden and not found when cops stopped either party at the roadblock. No need for a death-defying dash along a 19-mile mountain road at all. No need to bring an honest man into the scene.

Frankly, Steve could have gotten into the teller's car like Harold did, committed the holdup, and jumped into his own car-perhaps with Barbara driving and the two could have gotten away cleanly and not had to let Harold have half of the loot. As shown, Steve's part was only in the planning, then riding along in the getaway car. He didn't need Harold at all.

Between the totally illogical, needlessly-risky, overly-complicated robbery scheme that could have seen Steve and Barbara come away with $150,000, but instead dwindle to $67,500 after splitting most with Harold and paying Eddie his 10%, and the 50 minutes of boring not-really-romantic scenes between Eddie and Barbara, I cannot give this movie more than a 4, despite the presence of Rob Petrie's neighbor Jerry Helper (Jerry Paris), his fellow former Untouchable Lee Hobson (Paul Picerni), and Bart Maverick (Jack Kelly).

Rooney's character didn't get us to care about him. Not even before he turned crooked.
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6/10
m rooney fans will like it.
ksf-230 October 2021
Weird, short, Mickey Rooney is Eddie, who falls for Barbara (Diane Foster), who just happens to be hanging out with a gangster. So now he's caught up in that underworld that he had avoided until now. Rooney plays it straight in this one.. he's the every-guy, working stiff, while his co-workers crack jokes all around him. Co-stars Kevin McCarthy (had just been nominated for Salesman.) and Jerry Paris (neighbor on Dick Van Dyke show, and will go on to direct many many tv series). Eddie doesn't even say much until fifteen minutes in, when he is asked to report to Barbara's house to fix something he already fixed once. Then its off to the beach at malibu. ... and 48 minutes in, we finally get to the plot.. when Eddie finds out the chick wants him to help pull a heist. A different role than everything Rooney has done up until now. But it's all very serious. Plot is a bit thin, but it goes. He seems to have the mind of a very innocent 15 year old, being tricked by just everyone around him. It's barely okay. No biggie. I guess the M. Rooney fans will dig it. Directed by Richard Quine; had worked with Rooney on about ten films, as well as Rooney's own television show. Story by James Nablo.
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6/10
Taut but not always believable tale of auto mechanic's seduction by femme fatale
Turfseer23 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
In his 30s at the time, Mickey Rooney needed a vehicle (no pun intended) to reinvigorate his career which began as a child actor and soon afterward as a teenage matinee idol. He found it in the crime drama Drive a Crooked Road.

Rooney plays Eddie Shannon, a crackerjack auto mechanic and low rent race car driver who works at an autobody shop where he's occasionally mocked by some of his co-workers for his complete inexperience with women.

One day a very attractive woman, Barbara Matthews (Dianne Foster), brings her car to the shop where Eddie is assigned to repair it. After seemingly fixing it, the following day Barbara calls the shop and informs that she still is unable to start the car. Eddie drives out to fix the car again and Barbara feigns interest in him despite his obvious shyness and lack of confidence with women.

Barbara is the girlfriend of a criminal, Steve Norris (Kevin McCarthy) who has conscripted her to seduce Eddie and get him to participate in a bank robbery in which there is a necessity for an experienced driver to drive to a location hyper-fast to avoid police roadblocks.

The mechanics of the robbery just don't seem to be fraught with any kind of verisimilitude. For starters, Norris's associate Harold Baker (Jack Kelly) kidnaps the bank teller as he's leaving for work. Inexplicably, Norris with Eddie driving, follow Baker and the teller to the bank. During the ride to the bank, the teller is able to see what kind of car is following them and hence is in a position to identify it later on.

If they didn't follow the car, the teller could not describe the make and model and there would be no necessity to avoid a roadblock (Barbara could have joined Norris and Eddie and simply hid the loot in the car). The presence of a woman in the car would not have raised suspicions had the car been stopped and the bag of cash could have been easily hidden where the police would have no probable cause to search it.

There is also the problem of Baker forcing the teller to give him all the cash with the bank vault opening automatically at a set time. How is it possible that only the bank teller is present when Baker pulls off the robbery? You would imagine that there would at least be an armed security guard at the location.

Before the bank robbery goes down, Barbara reveals to Eddie she knows about the robbery and convinces him to participate as proceeds from the robbery will allow him to fulfill his dream of purchasing an expensive race car and compete in international racing competitions. At no point does Barbara show any physical affection toward Eddie (like even giving him a chaste kiss). But the poor schlub Eddie is so smitten with this femme fatale that he'll be content with the mere expectation of a future romance and hence will do anything for her (including committing a crime that could land him in jail).

Eddie's misguided obsession and infatuation with the scheming Barbara seemed plausible enough and despite the questionable (previously alluded to) mechanics of the robbery, I wanted to see how Eddie would end up driving the car and outwitting the police.

Then there's Barbara's regrets and feelings of guilt over seducing Eddie and manipulating him. In the dark moment at the end of the Second Act, she confesses her treacherous subterfuge with Eddie present, which convinces Norris that Eddie must now be eliminated. Baker is given the job of finishing Eddie off but while driving away from the beach house, Eddie causes the car to crash and Baker is killed.

I was a bit disappointed in the denouement. While Eddie saves Barbara from being killed by Norris, I wanted him to escape punishment at the arms of the law. But this is supposed to be a full blown tragedy-the expectation is that punishment will be meted out to Eddie as he was a direct participant in the robbery (his obsession with the manipulative Barbara of course does not absolve him of the crime-and the argument of "mitigating circumstances" would probably fall on deaf ears with a jury during Eddie's upcoming criminal trial).

Rooney does well enough in this low-key role but he's still too much of a pathetic sad sack to care for the character. It's really Foster and McCarthy who steal the show as the bad guys who interestingly enough have the inevitable falling out at film's end-due to the aforementioned guilt feelings that arise.

A few lessons we can learn from this "crime doesn't pay" drama: 1) many women have difficulty avoiding "bad boys" which they are drawn to; and 2) nice guys finish last!
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7/10
Come for the cars, stay for the Rooney.
sibleybridges21 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I know he's more known for his 1930s/40s portrayal of a corny comedic actor in various family movies or musicals or when he became a popular b actor the 60s/70s that would show up in anything for a paycheck, but Mickey Rooney is fantastic in this dramatic role.

A criminal gets his girlfriend to flirt with Rooney's mechanic character to convince him to be a wheelman on a bank heist. She flirts with him for nearly 30 glorious minutes before anything happens and then we get a classic heist followed by a great car escape that feels amazing even though it's obviously not real because it's shot in classic projection style mixed with some outside car shots.

Even though there are some scenes of very over the top cat calling of a woman and a gang member who thinks he's hilarious as he spits very dry one-liners which don't fit with the mood of the movie, this is a classic that needs to be seen. I think if I had a top 100 list, this wouldn't be at the top, but would easily fit nicely with any other crime thriller. As far as acting best performances, Rooney is probably in my top 50 of all time here. As far as driving movies, it top 5 of all time.

Watched on YouTube.
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8/10
A nice change of pace for Mickey Rooney
planktonrules29 May 2017
"Drive a Crooked Road" is an excellent picture--written by Blake Edwards and starring Mickey Rooney. Most would probably consider it an example of film noir, though its camera-work and dialog aren't exactly typical for noir.

When the story begins, you learn that Eddie (Rooney) is a small-time race car driver and mechanic. He also is rather quiet and is treated rather poorly at times due to his being so small. Because of that, he's vulnerable when a pretty lady (Dianne Foster) begins showing him a lot of attention. But she is not such a nice lady and halt ulterior motives. It seems her boyfriend (Kevn McCarthy) is a mobster and they are actually setting him up to become part of their robbery scheme! What's next? See the film.

Most Mickey Rooney films, particularly those earlier in his career, are similar because Mickey plays nice guys or guys who become nice guys. Here, however, he agrees to become entangled with gangsters...gangsters who really are scum. Overall, well acted and interesting throughout...and well worth seeing. If you are interested, it's currently posted on YouTube.
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7/10
ROONEY STICK TO YOUR TOOLS...!
masonfisk14 December 2020
A film noir about a mechanic/racecar enthusiast caught up in a bank robbery & a femme fatale from 1954 starring Mickey Rooney. Rooney is a mechanic & a sideline driver who dreams of racing in Le Mans but due to his an injury (his face bears a scar) & diminutive status, he's aces at fixing cars but not in engaging w/people. One day a slinky woman, played by Dianne Foster, comes into his shop w/car trouble & catches his eye & her being pliant to him awakens a possibility of romance. It turns out she's actually the lady of a traveling bank robber, played by Kevin McCarthy, who gives Rooney an opportunity to be a driver for a bank robbery (a chunk of the getaway takes place on a desolate road leading to the highway) so at first he emphatically says 'no' but after being massaged verbally by Foster, he goes along w/the heist which yields the typically depressing bouts of crosses & double crosses apropos for the genre. A nice vehicle (sorry!) for Rooney who was going through a new phase in his career since he wasn't the cute youngster anymore belting out tunes w/Judy Garland so this film (ironically there's another movie he made around the same time where he played a car driver) was a good stepping stone for the bottom of half of his resume. Funnily the film was scripted by Blake Edwards (the Pink Panther auteur himself) who would cast Rooney in Breakfast at Tiffany's (which he directed & Rooney played Mr. Yunioshi) w/direction by Richard Quine, an actor turned director (he also was briefly married to Kim Novak), who showcases his actors well in a lot of sun dappled locales which in itself is an antithesis to the usual morose doom & gloom of most noirs.
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8/10
20 miles in under 20 minutes
RanchoTuVu5 January 2011
A shy Los Angeles mechanic and weekend racer (Mickey Rooney) is duped into being the getaway driver for bank robbers played by Kevin McCarthy and Jack Kelly. It seems as if they have a rather elaborate plot to hook him into their scheme by using McCarthy's girlfriend played by attractive Dianne Foster as lure for the shy and withdrawn Rooney who only has his job and his racing trophies to keep him going. It all works fairly well and shows how an innocent person is lured into doing something he would never ordinarily do with the bait being implied sex. Rooney is really good but so are both Kevin McCarthy and his partner played by Jack Kelly. The robbery itself occurs in Palm Springs and does not disappoint in execution with Kelly especially good as the gunman cracking jokes as he accompanies the head teller to the bank followed by the getaway car (which was souped up by Rooney). The film's title comes into play as Rooney drives like mad over a twisting mountain road back to the highway in under twenty minutes. All the elements of the story are mixed pretty well with a tough ending.
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6/10
Why did they slip the theme song from the film "From Here to Eternity" in here?
kapelusznik1824 April 2014
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** In one of his best adult roles Mickey Rooney is car mechanic and race car driver Eddie "Shorty" Shannon who gets caught up in a bank robbery not for money but for love in him impressing gun moll Barbara Mathews, Dianne Foster. It was Barbara who made a play for Eddie in getting him involved, as a wheel man, in a bank robbery that her boyfriend greasy Steve Norris, Kevin McCarthy, and his pal Harold Baker, Jack Kelly, were planning to pull off.

Not at all interested in his take of $15,000.00 in the robbery but only wanting to impress Barbara Eddie against his better judgment went along with the plan only to end up getting stiffed by her in dropping him like a hot potato and planning to check out to France with her greasy boyfriend Norris. Eddie for his part heart broken as he was still carried a torch for the double-dealing Barbara and after he escaped being murdered by Baker in order to keep him from talking to the police went back, bloodies and battered after his escape, to the beach house where Norris & Barbara were and that's where the real action in the movie began.

***SPOILERS*** A tour de force by Mickey Rooney who's acting in the film was so both tragic as well as touching that it should have easily earned him an Academy Award. Mickey playing against type and a lonely and shy , with girls, young man compared in real life where he romanced the most beautiful women, Lana Turner Norma Sherer Ava Gardner & Marilyn Monroe, in Hollywood Mickey made you forget who he was in the role, as a love starved schnook, that he so convincingly played.
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10/10
Not a dry eye in the house when I saw this.
NRREX5 February 2000
Single greatest B picture I've ever seen. Sad ending is beyond belief, yet there is comic relief in the middle that is really funny. Mickey Rooney wondered why Redbook magazine voted this best picture of the year (over the A pictures.) He should have SEEN the picture! An absolutely unforgettable movie.
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7/10
shy Mickey
SnoopyStyle12 September 2021
Eddie Shannon (Mickey Rooney) is a shy master mechanic with a scar across his face from a crash. He finishes second in a car race and two men (Kevin McCarthy, Jack Kelly) take an interest in the loner. Femme fatale Barbara Mathews (Dianne Foster) stops by the garage and every guy's head is turned. She seems to keep coming back to Eddie. In fact, she's trying to recruit him for nefarious purposes.

I like the shy Mickey Rooney. It loses a little bit with the melodramatic love. It might be better if Barbara doesn't have second thoughts. It's more compelling with Eddie being taken advantage of. There's no need for the girl to fall for him. It gets a bit overwrought anyways. This is an interesting little crime noir.
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McCarthy Clearly Steals the Show
Michael_Elliott6 January 2011
Drive a Crooked Road (1954)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Mickey Rooney plays Eddie Shannon, a race car driver without a bit of self respect due to a scar that covers part of his face. He spends most of his time alone or working as a mechanic until one day he meets the beautiful Barbara (Dianne Foster). The two strangely hit it off but it turns out she's working for a small-time gangster (Kevin McCarthy) who needs to use Eddie for a bank heist. This semi-noir isn't the greatest film ever made but there are enough interesting moments to make it worth sitting through if you're a fan of the genre. It's always funny seeing some of this non-MGM roles that Rooney was in at the middle point of his career because on one hand it just doesn't seem right seeing him in a part like this but at the same time it gives the film a somewhat interesting twist simply because you are seeing him in this type of role. It's strange but I think Rooney's performance starts off a tad bit stiff but gets better as the movie goes along. The early scenes we see Eddie sitting alone, in deep thought and simply being too shy and embarrassed of himself to talk or act like a normal person. I thought Rooney struggled a little bit during these scenes but at the same time this could be one just simply in shock because this isn't the Rooney we're use to seeing. Once the story starts to pick up and he begins to come to life with the girl then I found Rooney to be much better suited. Foster really looks like a prettier version of a young Barbara Stanwyck. I thought she did a very good job in the film as she was perfectly believable as the love interest but she also handled the cold-blooded villain as well. McCarthy clearly steals the film with his slick, laid back performance. You can't help but feel he's a villain you love to hate because of his lack of emotion when it comes to fooling this weak guy by making the loser think he's a winner. There are many memorable moments in the film including an early scene between Rooney and Foster on a beach where she tries to bring him out of his shell. The greatest sequence in the film is the actual heist, which is followed by a sequence where Rooney must drive at a fast speed on a dangerous road in order to get past a road block that police will put up once they learn of the robbery. This sequence here has some nice tension in it and the editing is very good. DRIVE A CROOKED ROAD is probably going to appeal to fans of Rooney and McCarthy more than your typical crime-picture fan. I think a stronger screenplay would have been beneficial especially early on when this hot woman falls for the Rooney character as it simply isn't very believable.
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3/10
Coming out of his shell may kill him.
mark.waltz17 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Mild-mannered race track mechanic/driver Mickey Rooney is shyly in love with pretty Dianne Foster which alerts her boyfriend and his fellow drivers to the possibility of using him as the get-away driver in a bank heist. He is desperate to remain honest but being infatuated with Foster gives him more temptation than he can handle.

Lacking in any real passion, this ends up being just another one of the many heist films and one of Rooney's more unmemorable B films after his long reign at MGM. He may have continued to work regularly, but other than a few great supporting parts here and there was shoved mainly in crap to continue to get a paycheck.

Supporting actors show more life here than Rooney does, his acting mainly tepid until the finale. For most of the film, its mostly talk, talk, talk and little action. The location footage is pretty good and the over a photography is excellent. But there really is little action and absolutely no spark between Rooney and Foster. Mainly for the most loyal of the Mick's cult following or lovers of crime drama. The noir aspect of it is obviously subtle which indicates that it will be questioned in the list of films in that genre.
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