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High Sierra
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Synopsis
In a manner of speaking, Humphrey Bogart had George Raft to thank for his ascendancy to stardom: after all, if Raft hadn't turned down both High Sierra and The Maltese Falcon, Bogart might have continued playing second-billed gangsters to the end of his days. Adapted from W. R. Burnett's novel by Burnett and John Huston, High Sierra opens with gangster Roy Earle (Bogart) being paroled after a lengthy prison term. Though he enjoys the fresh air and sunshine of the outside world, Earle has no intention of giving up his criminal ways. In fact, his parole has been arranged by Big Mac (Donald MacBride), so that Earle can mastermind a big-time heist at a fancy California resort hotel. After a few unkind words with a crooked cop, Kranmer (Barton MacLane), in Big Mac's employ, Earle heads toward a fishing resort, where he is to commiserate with his inexperienced, hot-headed cohorts Babe (Alan Curtis) and Red (Arthur Kennedy). En route, he befriends a farm family, heading to LA in search of work. He falls in love with the family's club-footed daughter Velma (Joan Leslie)--though she never really gives him any encouragement--and makes a silent promise to finance an operation on her foot once he's gotten his share of the loot. At the mountain cabin rendezvous, Earle meets Marie (Ida Lupino), Babe's tough-but-vulnerable girlfriend. He angrily orders her to scram, but she stubbornly remains. Earle also finds himself the owner of a "jinxed" dog, whose previous masters have all met with early demises (a none-too-subtle foretaste of things to come). Marie is strongly attracted to Earle, but he refuses to have anything to do with her, reserving his affections for Velma. He arranges an operation for the girl with mob doctor Banton (Henry Hull), never suspecting that the self-serving Velma is planning all along to marry someone else. The robbery goes off without a hitch, save for the fact that "inside man" Mendoza (Cornel Wilde) panics and nearly gives the game away. While escaping, Babe and Red are killed in a car accident, but Earle and Marie escape. Having been disillusioned by Velma's indifference and by the fact that the untrustworthy Kranmer has taken over the late Big Mac's operation, Earle at last realizes that the only person he can truly depend upon is the faithful Marie. With the police hot on his trail, Earle tells Marie to look after herself, then heads alone into the High Sierras--where, in Greek Tragedy fashion, he "busts out" of life. As in Petrified Forest, Humphrey Bogart plays a burnt-out anachronism from an earlier era in crime in High Sierra; in the latter film, however, Bogart has an innate nobility that allows the audience to empathize with him throughout. It is nothing short of amazing that, despite his superb performance in this 1940 film, he still had to wait until The Maltese Falcon for top billing in an "A picture." High Sierra was remade in 1949

Cast

Willie Best Algernon
Humphrey Bogart Roy Earle
Spencer Charters Ed
Jerome Cowan Healy
Alan Curtis Babe Kozak
John Eldredge Lou Preiser
Elizabeth Risdon Ma
Minna Gombell Mme. Baughman
Paul Harvey Mr. Baughman
Sam Hayes Announcer
Henry Hull Doc Banton
Isabel Jewell The Blonde
Joan Leslie Velma
Donald MacBride Big Mac
Barton MacLane Jake Kranmer
George Meeker Pfiffer
Robert Strange Art
Henry Travers Pa
Arthur Kennedy Red Hattery
Ida Lupino Marie Garson
Cornel Wilde Louis Mendoza

Production Crew

Ted Smith Art Director
Mark Hellinger Associate Producer
W.R. Burnett Book Author
Tony Gaudio Cinematographer
Adolph Deutsch Composer (Music Score)
Milo Anderson Costume Designer
Raoul Walsh Director
Jack Killifer Editor
Jack L. Warner Executive Producer
Perc Westmore Makeup
Leo F. Forbstein Musical Direction/Supervision
Hal B. Wallis Producer
John Huston Screenwriter
W.R. Burnett Screenwriter
Dolph Thomas Sound/Sound Designer
Byron Haskin Special Effects
H.F. Koenekamp Special Effects
Year: 1941
Runtime: 96
Country: USA
MPAA Rating: NR
Category: Feature

Genre
Crime

Produced by
Warner Brothers

Awards
1941 - Best Picture - National Board of Review