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Gun Crazy (1949)
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Synopsis
The definitive Joseph H. Lewis-directed melodrama, Gun Crazy is the "Bonnie and Clyde" story retooled for the disillusioned postwar generation.
John Dall
plays a timorous, emotionally disturbed World War II veteran who has had a lifelong fixation with guns. He meets a kindred spirit in carnival sharpshooter
Peggy Cummins
, who is equally disturbed -- but a lot smarter, and hence a lot more dangerous. Beyond their physical attraction to one another, both Dall and Cummins are obsessed with firearms. They embark on a crime spree, with Cummins as the brains and Dall as the trigger man. As sociopathic a duo as are likely to be found in a 1940s film, Dall and Cummins are also perversely fascinating. As they dance their last dance before dying in a hail of police bullets, the audience is half hoping that somehow they'll escape the Inevitable. Some critics have complained that Dall is far too effeminate and Cummins too butch, but Joseph H. Lewis was never known to draw anything in less than broad strokes: recall the climax of Terror in a Texas Town, wherein
Sterling Hayden
participates in a western showdown armed with a whaler's harpoon. The best and most talked-about scene in Gun Crazy is the bank robbery sequence, shot in "real time" from the back seat of Dall and Cummins' getaway car. Originally slated for Monogram release, Gun Crazy enjoyed a wider exposure when its producers, the enterprising King Brothers, chose United Artists as the distributor. The film was based on a magazine article by
MacKinlay Kantor
; one of the scenarists was uncredited blacklistee
Dalton Trumbo
. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Cast
David Bair
Dave Allister, Age 14
Trevor Bardette
Sheriff Boston
Don Beddoe
Man From Chicago
Morris Carnovsky
Judge Willoughby
Peggy Cummins
Annie Laurie Starr
John Dall
Bart Tare
Virginia Farmer
Miss Wynn
Harry Hayden
Mr. Mallenberg
Berry Kroeger
Packett
Harry Lewis
Clyde Boston
Mickey Little
Bart Tare as Child
Anne O'Neal
Miss Sifert
Robert Osterloh
Hampton Policeman
Shimen Ruskin
Taxi Driver
Anabel Shaw
Ruby Tare
Russ Tamblyn
Bart Tare: younger
Ned Young
Dave Allister
Stanley Prager
Bluey-Bluey
Production Crew
Russell Harlan
Cinematographer
Victor Young
Composer (Music Score)
Norma
Costume Designer
Joseph H. Lewis
Director
Harry Gerstad
Editor
Leo Shuken
Musical Direction/Supervision
Sidney B. Cutner
Musical Direction/Supervision
Frank King
Producer
Maurice King
Producer
Gordon Wiles
Production Designer
Dalton Trumbo
Screenwriter
MacKinlay Kantor
Screenwriter
Millard Kaufman
Screenwriter
Raymond Boltz
Set Designer
Tom Lambert
Sound/Sound Designer
Year: 1949
Runtime: 87
Country: USA
MPAA Rating:
Category: Feature
Genre
Crime
Produced by
United Artists
Awards
1998 - U.S. National Film Registry - Library of Congress
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