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The Sleeping City
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Directed by George Sherman
One of the finest and most troubling films to come out of Universal-International, The Sleeping City tried to emulate some of the cinéma vérité elements of The Naked City (which had been produced at Universal's facilities). The producers got the permission of the city of New York to shoot at Bellevue Hospital, and, in exchange, opened the movie with a disclaimer spoken by star Richard Conte, stepping out of character to point out that nothing like the story in this movie ever happened at Bellevue and offering tribute to the actual hospital and its staff. That's the last reassuring moment that one will find in this eerie crime drama -- in the first six minutes, a young doctor taking a break from work is shot in the head, and the police can't find a clue even as to a possible motive. Inspector Al Gordon (John Alexander) decides that he has to put some men on duty at the hospital, and one of them is Fred Rowan (Richard Conte), a detective with experience as an army medic, masquerading as an intern. What Rowan finds is a high-pressure world in which interns are hopelessly squeezed for time, sleep, energy, and -- most of all -- money, and walk a fine line on the edge of personal and professional disaster. His roommate, Steve Anderson (Alex Nicol), seems especially desperate. The only relief from the bleakness and tension, on a personal level, comes from the attentions of Ann Shelton (Coleen Gray), the ward nurse in traumatics, where Fred is assigned, and the good-natured needling of Pop Ware (Richard Taber), an elevator operator who likes to take an avuncular interest in the interns around him. But before he can get too far in his investigation, potential witnesses start dying around Rowan , and one of his friends at the hospital is threatened. Soon the whole scheme and the motives for the murders suddenly become clear, along with Rowan's earlier failure to spot the clue he needed. He also suddenly recognizes the involvement of the people closest to him at the hospital, but before the squad can move, he also finds his own life at risk. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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In 1947, producer Mark Hellinger and director Jules Dassin made The Naked City on the streets of New York, with distribution and studio facilities provided by Universal-International Pictures. The movie was a huge hit, and led to a cycle of cinéma vérité-style crime thrillers set (and usually shot) on the streets of New York -- RKO did The Tattooed Stranger and MGM did Side Street, while Universal made The Sleeping City as its own contribution to the cycle, directed by George Sherman. The results weren't as stylistically striking as The Naked City, but had an appeal all its own -- the location shots had a more polished and slightly more visually lyrical look than those of The Naked City, and if the music by Frank Skinner (who'd scored part of the Dassin movie) wasn't as ornate as that of Miklos Rozsa (who scored the Dassin movie's finale), it helped sustain the tension set up by the script. Richard Conte practically melted into the role of Fred Rowan, the detective masquerading as an intern, and Coleen Gray wasn't far behind him as duplicitous ward nurse Ann, and John Alexander, who'd made his name playing Teddy Roosevelt in the play and the film of Arsenic and Old Lace, was nicely hard-boiled as Rowan's boss, Inspector Al Gordon. Alex Nicol also acquits himself well in one of the better roles of his career, as a depressed, tormented intern. But the best performance in the movie comes from Richard Taber as Pop Ware, the eccentric elevator operator, who commands the camera with the cock of an eyebrow. Sherman, whose main forte was comedy, showed himself quite capable of handling a sometimes violent and very atmospheric mystery-thriller. The only criticism lies with the final chase, which -- apart from mimicking the chase in The Naked City, carrying us to higher and higher elevations -- isn't shot or edited too well, with a man clearly hit in his chest and looking stricken in some shots, yet shown capable of running very fast for a significant distance and up a large number of steps. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
 

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