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Pickup on South Street
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Directed by Samuel Fuller.
Samuel Fuller scarcely used Dwight Taylor's source material, a languid courtroom romance, in crafting this pugnacious potboiler. Pickup on South Street is strictly Fuller film noir -- lean and wicked straight to its core. Barely out of prison, loner and pickpocket Skip McCoy (Richard Widmark) quietly helps himself to the contents of a woman's purse. His beautiful victim, Candy (Jean Peters), turns out to be an unwitting courier for the communist underground; McCoy's booty is actually microfilmed U.S. government secrets, formerly en route to Moscow. Both the FBI and Candy's employers are desperate to retrieve the film. The apolitical and arrogant McCoy has a plan to play both ends against the middle and come up ahead. However, dealing with the authorities may mean life in the clink, and the sadistic communists would rather kill McCoy than pay him off. He quickly becomes embroiled with Candy, who will risk everything to right her wrongs, and eventually even more to save her new man. When McCoy loses a cohort and Candy is almost killed, the cocksure pickpocket finds a stronger motivation than personal gain. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, All Movie Guide
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RisseladaRisselada Re:Is Pickup on South Street a ...
by Risselada in Noir
loved it.
"Just a bit of news: Lead actor from Pickup on South Street Richard Widemark died on Monday. " [More]
KarinaKarina Richard Widmark, Dead at 93
by Karina in Karina on SpoutBlog
hasn't rated it.
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"Richard Widmark, who appeared in 70+ films including Saint Joan, Panic in the Streets and No Way Out, has died at the age of 93. Widmark began his career in the 40s, often playing vicious villains and anti-heroes. In the mid-50s, he started a production company, through which he made a number of Cold War-era social dramas including Time Limit and The Bedford Incident. My favorite Widmark film is probably Sam Fuller’s Pickup on South Street; I’ve embedded a typically, casually violent clip from that film above. The New York Times‘ obit lives here. Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Richard Widmark, Dead at 93
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Richard Widmark, who appeared in 70+ films including Saint Joan, Panic in the Streets and No Way Out, has died at the age of 93. Widmark began his career in the 40s, often playing vicious villains and anti-heroes. In the mid-50s, he started a production company, through which he made a number of Cold War-era social dramas including Time Limit and The Bedford Incident. My favorite Widmark film is probably Sam Fuller’s Pickup on South Street; I’ve embedded a typically, casually violent clip from that film above. The New York Times‘ obit lives here. Originally posted on:SpoutBlog " [More]
JimBellJimBell Is Pickup on South Street a noi ...
by JimBell in Noir
hasn't rated it.
"Pickup on South Street (1953) is a film noir well worth seeing. When a pickpocket steals a young woman’s wallet on the New York subway, neither at first knows that he has stolen top secret microfilm on its way to the enemy Communists. Samuel Fuller, screenwriter and director, tells a complicated story with easy and clarity, maintaining tension throughout. The acting is superb. Richard Widmark is wonderfully insolent as the cocky pickpocket. Thelma Ritter is world-weary and street smart as the middle-aged informer surviving day by day (her Academy nomination was deserved). Jean Peters as Candy is not quite perfect in every scene and she has to say a couple of stereotypical lines that almost no one could breath life into, but she exudes sexuality, and that is important to her role. The supporting actors, from Richard Kiley as Joey the Communist agent on down the list, give solid, credible performances. All of this is supported by an edgy score by Leigh Harline. I particularly a ... " [More]
JimBellJimBell Pickup on South Street
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Pickup on South Street (1953) is a film noir well worth seeing. When a pickpocket steals a young woman’s wallet on the New York subway, neither at first knows that he has stolen top secret microfilm on its way to the enemy Communists. Samuel Fuller, screenwriter and director, tells a complicated story with easy and clarity, maintaining tension throughout. The acting is superb. Richard Widmark is wonderfully insolent as the cocky pickpocket. Thelma Ritter is world-weary and street smart as the middle-aged informer surviving day by day (her Academy nomination was deserved). Jean Peters as Candy is not quite perfect in every scene and she has to say a couple of stereotypical lines that almost no one could breath life into, but she exudes sexuality, and that is important to her role. The supporting actors, from Richard Kiley as Joey the Communist agent on down the list, give solid, credible performances. All of this is supported by an edgy score by Leigh Harline. I particularly a ... " [More]
quintquint The early stuff is just as good
by quint in An inordinate number of peppers
liked it.
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"I saw this on Netflix on demand thing. Whatever they're calling it. I'm becoming quite a fan of the service although it only works on a tricked out pc. It's pretty cool to have all this stuff at your disposal and although the selection is still slim, there are gems like this: early Sam Fuller. If you are not a fan of Sam Fuller, you probably haven't seen enough Sam Fuller. This is from a great Criterion Collection of his early films and it has all the tight structure and controversy of Shock Corridor or Pickup on South Street. If you've never seen a Sam Fuller film, think Quentin Tarantino, but in the 50's. That's doing Fuller a great injustice, but I think fans of the one should become fans of the other. I've always found Fuller's films to be well written. That is mainly why I am drawn to them. He reminds me of Clifford Odets. Fuller should be ranked with John Houston and he's better than Peckinpah at a lot of things. Check out everything yo ... " [More]
JymkataJymkata Re: Top Five Movies with Budget ...
by Jymkata in Top 5
liked it.
"interesting topic, I must admit I like a lot of films with higher budgets but here is my top 5 without spending too much time looking up the numbers- 1. 12 Angry Men - $350,000 in 1957, about $ 5.6 mil. in today's dollars according to your rules. This is one of my favorite films. Yeah, the setting is a couple of rooms, but the direction is taut and wow, what a cast!2. Mad Max - est. $350,00 in 1979, about $ 2.8 mil. Amazing low budget film. They got a steal with an unknown Mel Gibson, but it's pretty gutsy to make a futuristic movie with this scale.3. City of God - This movie looks like it was made with $ 50 mil. thanks to the direction and cinematography, but can you believe it only cost Miramax $ 3.3 mil. ?4. Donnie Darko - This is another one that looks like it cost a lot, but it was made with $ 4.5 mil. and I loved it 5. Reservoir Dogs - I know it's hip to trash Tarantino as just a hip poser, but he made an outstanding debut for $ 1.2 millionin 1992. Big budgets, sm ... " [More]
JymkataJymkata Re: Top Classic Noir
by Jymkata in Top 5
liked it.
"[quote user="Risselada"] As much as I have LOVED pretty much every classic film noir I've seen, I'm surprised that I've seen so few. But here's my top 5. It's pretty much more than half of all of them I've seen. 1. Out of the Past, 1947. 2. Pickup on South Street, 1953. 3. The Killing, 1956. 4. The Big Sleep, 1946. 5. Strangers on a Train, 1951. If you'd have let it go to 1958, I would have put Touch of Evil up there for sure! Here's a couple I'm hoping to see. Anyone want to recommend any of them?D.O.A., 1949.The Big Clock, 1948.The Postman Always Rings Twice, 1946.In a Lonely Place, 1950.The Lost Weekend, 1945.This Gun for Hire, 1942. [/quote] Rizzo- In my opinion This Gun for Hire is a masterpiece - midget-sized Alan Ladd makes a very tough noir anti-hero. I would also highly recommend The Big Clock (decently remade as No Way Out in the 80's) and D.O.A. (horribly remade in the 80's), but I would caution that I only have one problem with D.O.A. (early in the film there ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Top Classic Noir
by Risselada in Top 5
loved it.
"As much as I have LOVED pretty much every classic film noir I've seen, I'm surprised that I've seen so few. But here's my top 5. It's pretty much more than half of all of them I've seen. 1. Out of the Past, 1947. 2. Pickup on South Street, 1953. 3. The Killing, 1956. 4. The Big Sleep, 1946. 5. Strangers on a Train, 1951. If you'd have let it go to 1958, I would have put Touch of Evil up there for sure! Here's a couple I'm hoping to see. Anyone want to recommend any of them?D.O.A., 1949.The Big Clock, 1948.The Postman Always Rings Twice, 1946.In a Lonely Place, 1950.The Lost Weekend, 1945.This Gun for Hire, 1942. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Pickup on South Street is a quick, belligerent tour de force of film noir. A crime reporter turned filmmaker, writer/director Samuel Fuller is famous for adhering to the who, what, when, where, and why of cinematic storytelling, an aggressive tendency that is fully realized in Pickup. He offers no superfluous subplots, back story, or Hitchcockian MacGuffins. He shuns a first act set up and jumps immediately into the film's main action, proceeding at a breakneck pace toward a tight, curt finale. His shooting technique is equally straightforward and informative. With a cinematic style that never fails to "hook you with a headline tabloid mentality," as described by fan Martin Scorsese, Fuller exploits extreme close-ups, high angles, long takes, and zooms to make each of Pickup's shots a pronouncement. Combined with Richard Widmark's vigor as the erratic, narcissistic, and violent protagonist, this frankness truly packs a punch. Such intensity may seem incongruous with the grace of most prestigious film noir melodramas, but one must not forget that the genre is the offspring of hardboiled fiction, an unsentimental tradition bred from tabloid journalism and tough-minded heroes. Pickup's only flaw is its reliance on the Red Scare as a plot device. The film's collection of capitalist thieves (both patriotic and unpatriotic), communist villains, and unimpressive government agents pays homage to every type of political reading, and can distract many critics from its craft. Yet, Pickup on South Street's raw energy prevails; it is Samuel Fuller's most heralded work and one of film noir's greatest thrillers. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, All Movie Guide
 



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