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Walk a Crooked Mile

Walk a Crooked Mile

  • Status: Released
  • 02-09-1948
  • Runtime: 91 min
  • Score: 5.909
  • Vote count: 22

A security leak is found at a Southern California atomic plant. The authorities stand in fear that the information leaked would go to a hostile nation. To investigate the case more efficiently, Dan O'Hara, an FBI agent, and Philip Grayson, a Scotland Yard sleuth, join forces. Will they manage to stop the spy ring from achieving their aim?

Louis Hayward

Philip 'Scotty' Grayson

Dennis O'Keefe

Daniel F. O'Hara

Louise Allbritton

Dr. Anastasia 'Toni' Neva

Carl Esmond

Dr. Ritter von Stolb

Onslow Stevens

Igor Braun

Raymond Burr

Krebs

Art Baker

Dr. Frederick Townsend

Lowell Gilmore

Dr. William Forrest

Philip Van Zandt

Anton Radchek

Charles Evans

Dr. Homer Allen

Frank Ferguson

Carl Bemish

Reed Hadley

Narrator (voice)

Ray Teal

Police Sergeant

William Tannen

FBI Chemist

Gale Storm

Voice on Tape Recorder

Arthur Space

Mr. North

Tamara Shayne

Mrs. Ecko, the Landlady

Keith Richards

FBI Agent Miller

Grandon Rhodes

Adolph Mizner

Steve Pendleton

Police Detective Gaines

Howard Negley

Feodore

Jimmy Lloyd

FBI Agent Alison

Myron Healey

FBI Agent Thompson

John Hamilton

G.W. Hunter

Paul Bryar

Fred Coby

Bert Davidson

Marten Lamont

Lee Phelps

Suzanne Ridgway

Arthur Tovey

Crane Whitley

John Chard

Laundry and Liquidation. Walk a Crooked Mile is directed by Gordon Douglas and adapted to screenplay by George Bruce from a Bertram Millhauser story. It stars Louis Hayward, Dennis O'Keefe, Louise Albritton, Carl Esmond, Onslow Stevens and Raymond Burr. Music is by Paul Sawtell and cinematography by George Robinson. A Scotland Yard detective and a FBI agent investigate what looks to be a spy ring infiltrating a top secret Nuclear Physics centre. To fully get the drift you really have to understand the era when films like this were produced, a time of The HUAC and Cold War paranoia, when Hollywood itself was under scrutiny to weed out supposed communist infiltrators. Good pro Gordon Douglas directs in a semi-documentary style - complete with Reed Hadley stentorian narration - in what turns out to be a decent spy like thriller. J. Edgar Hoover stuck his oar in to ensure no sanction of how the FBI looked was granted, which actually gives the pic some kudos, as does the superb Frisco location filming. It's nicely photographed in a noir style by Robinson, which lends one to lament he didn't operate more often in that style of film making. While perfs are absolutely fine, with Burr not for the first time in 1948 proving to be a great nasty presence. Narratively it's hit and miss, the fear of the communist is solidly played, but actually the fear of the scientists is probably more sneakily bubbling away under the surface. There's a brilliant sequence of events that ties into Nazidom, with a landlady holding court for maximum impact, and for dramatic purpose the torture sequence and inevitable shoot out hit the right requisite notes. Not a must see in the realm of Cold War/Spy Ring pictures, but entertaining and well mounted enough to keep it well above average. 6/10

CinemaSerf

Despite a decent effort from Louis Hayward as visiting Scotland Yard Inspector "Grayson", this is still a pretty clunky, charm-free, cold war espionage story that sees him team up with FBI counterpart "O'Hara" (Dennis O'Keefe) to investigate the smuggling of top secret formulae from a government facility to an enemy.... Their method of transferring the information is quite clever, but neither the script, nor the rather over-powering Reed Hadley narration really get this going. It has an almost documentary feel to it; the scenes are stitched together rather than fluid, and it comes across almost like a public information film about being beware of traitors in our midst (I found the culprit to be pretty obvious from the get-go), rather than to create any meaningful sense of suspense or drama. It has many of the usual set-piece cloak and dagger scenarios, and as ever with these type of stories - the baddies seem always unable to push home their obvious advantages! It's not dreadful, just procedural and rather dull.