Where the Sidewalk Ends (Fox Film Noir)
Actor(s):
Dana Andrews, Gene Tierney, Gary Merrill, Bert Freed, Tom Tully
Director(s):
Otto Preminger
Label: 20th Century Fox
Publisher(s):
20th Century Fox
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox
Binding: DVD
MPN: D2231560D
Format(s): Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $13.49
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Otto Preminger made four films noirs at Fox, all terrific. If we set aside the peerless Laura as more psychological mystery-romance than noir, there's plenty of evidence for judging Where the Sidewalk Ends the best of the lot (the other two being Fallen Angel, a study in small-town perversity, and Whirlpool, a delicious exercise in creepy psychology, slippery mise-en-scène, and daringly complicated point-of-view). It's a hard-edged tale of a borderline-vicious New York police detective, Mark Dixon (Dana Andrews), with tortuous personal reasons for overzealousness in going after the bad guys. Much of the film unreels in one night, when the murder of a high-roller from out of town precipitates a string of events that lead to Dixon's becoming an accidental killer. Preminger's direction is taut, forceful, and fluid, especially when Dixon sets about creating an alibi for himself. Unfortunately, an innocent man gets implicated, with Dixon looking on, and the guilty cop's moral and psychological torment increases with each turn of the screw.
Tightly scripted by Ben Hecht, Preminger's film lacks the anguished poetry of Nicholas Ray's On Dangerous Ground, another 1950 noir centered on a cop (Robert Ryan) addicted to ultraviolence, but its grip is relentless. Preminger had a shrewd instinct for tapping a certain thuggish strain in Andrews, whose performance here is arguably his best. They're reunited with Gene Tierney, as a woman caught in the sidewash of sordid goings-on, and Laura cameraman Joseph La Shelle, whose work has a luster beyond the accustomed semidocumentary look of Fox noirs. Gary Merrill, usually a bland nice-guy, relishes the chance to play nasty as Dixon's gangland bête noire Tommy Scalise, a homoerotic villain in the Tommy Udo vein with a menthol inhaler as fetish object. --Richard T. Jameson
Customer Reviews
OTTO PREMINGER, OPUS 15
***** 1950. Based on a novel by William L. Stuart, WHERE THE SIDEWALK ENDS was produced and directed by Otto Preminger. A violent policeman, son of a thief, accidentally kills a key witness of the murder he must investigate. The father of the dead man's wife is charged with the murder while the policeman is feeling more and more guilty. A movie about ambiguity, about the fine line that separates the cop and the thief, the prostitute and the married woman, a genuine film noir. Outstanding Dana Andrews performance and a lesson of mise-en-scene by Otto Preminger. Masterpiece.
Dana Andrews, not bad
I probably never gave Dana Andrews enough credit, but apparently Preminger did. This is actually a very good story about a good guy who just can't seem to convince himself that good guys finish last. An extremely good movie for the time.
Andrews in this and "Fallen Angel" are not to be missed. And Linda Darnell in 'Angel': where's a time machine when you need it!
Where the Sidewalk Ends
A great bad cop noir, centering on psychological father-son conflict. Not as great a film as The Big Heat, which is in same tradition of bad cop noir but worth watching. The film commentary by a noir expert goes to the heart of noir and analyses why modern audiences love this genre. Only flaw is expert's flash comment on Gene Tierney's bipolar disorder.
One of the best film noir from 20th Century Fox
I ended up buying this DVD after checking it out from the library 4 or 5 times. The combination of Gene Tierney and Dana Andrews is irresistable (as they were in Laura). Dana Andrews once again plays a detective whose down on his luck and in trouble for working outside the law - a character he was born to play. Gene Tierney is the femme fatale who can freeze an iceberg with a single glance but melt a heart with a single smile. Another favorite of mine, Craig Stevens, has a small part of the guy who ends up dead due to the Andrews character's conduct. A good addition to any film noir collection.
Standard Film Noir
Not the greatest film noir, nor from Preminger, but very professionally made, very enjoyable, except for the last five minutes where the censor steps in. The quality of the film was excellent, as good as when I saw it 56 years ago. Well worth an entry into my film noir collection.
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