WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Thriller >

The 49th Man

Watch The 49th Man For Free

The 49th Man

Two federal agents do not believe an atomic-bomb threat is just another war game.

... more
Release : 1953
Rating : 5.9
Studio : Columbia Pictures,  Katzman Corporation, 
Crew : Director of Photography,  Director, 
Cast : John Ireland Richard Denning Suzanne Dalbert Robert Foulk Mike Connors
Genre : Thriller

Cast List

Related Movies

Traffic
Traffic

Traffic   2000

Release Date: 
2000

Rating: 7.6

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Crime
The French Connection
The French Connection

The French Connection   1971

Release Date: 
1971

Rating: 7.7

genres: 
Action  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Gene Hackman  /  Fernando Rey  /  Roy Scheider
Culebra
Culebra

Culebra   2010

Release Date: 
2010

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Pedro López
Southland Tales
Southland Tales

Southland Tales   2007

Release Date: 
2007

Rating: 5.3

genres: 
Comedy  /  Thriller  /  Science Fiction
The Business
The Business

The Business   2005

Release Date: 
2005

Rating: 6.6

genres: 
Drama  /  Action  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Danny Dyer  /  Tamer Hassan  /  Geoff Bell
The Executioner
The Executioner

The Executioner   1970

Release Date: 
1970

Rating: 6

genres: 
Thriller
Stars: 
George Peppard  /  Joan Collins  /  Judy Geeson
Captain Clegg
Captain Clegg

Captain Clegg   1962

Release Date: 
1962

Rating: 6.6

genres: 
Adventure  /  Horror  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Peter Cushing  /  Patrick Allen  /  Oliver Reed
Exit to Eden
Exit to Eden

Exit to Eden   1994

Release Date: 
1994

Rating: 4.2

genres: 
Comedy  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Dana Delany  /  Paul Mercurio  /  Rosie O'Donnell
Cargo
Cargo

Cargo   2006

Release Date: 
2006

Rating: 5

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Peter Mullan  /  Daniel Brühl  /  Luis Tosar
The Bribe
The Bribe

The Bribe   1949

Release Date: 
1949

Rating: 6.6

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Robert Taylor  /  Ava Gardner  /  Charles Laughton
Back in the USSR
Back in the USSR

Back in the USSR   1992

Release Date: 
1992

Rating: 4.9

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Frank Whaley  /  Natalya Negoda  /  Roman Polanski
French Connection II
French Connection II

French Connection II   1975

Release Date: 
1975

Rating: 6.7

genres: 
Drama  /  Action  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Gene Hackman  /  Fernando Rey  /  Bernard Fresson

Reviews

Lawbolisted
2018/08/30

Powerful

More
Rijndri
2018/08/30

Load of rubbish!!

More
Mjeteconer
2018/08/30

Just perfect...

More
Afouotos
2018/08/30

Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.

More
gordonl56
2016/06/02

THE 49th MAN 1953 This Cold War thriller was put out by the B unit at Columbia Pictures. The film stars, John Ireland, Richard Denning, Suzanne Dalbert, Mike Connors, Robert Foulk, Richard Avonde and Peter Marshall.John Ireland is a Federal agent who by accident gets mixed up in a plot to bring atomic bombs into the USA. The parts are broken down into several pieces for assembly at the target city. Richard Denning is the bigwig in charge of hunting down the devices. He drafts Ireland in to aid in the hunt.The Feds are tracking down various pieces all over the States. This is starting to get serious as the number of possible bombs increases. Now the Feds find out that some Uranium has been smuggled into the country, on board a US Navy submarine of all things.Ireland is sent undercover to France with the submarine on a return visit. They are to check out the last port of call for the sub in southern France. The plot thickens as several suspects are added to the pot. These include, Suzanne Dalbert and Peter Marshall. Also in the mix are several navy types, Mike Connors and Robert Foulk.Ireland however has gotten the wrong men with the NavyOfficers. The whole atomic bomb thing turns out to be a test to see if the US borders were secure from such a threat.Needless to say that would be too simple. It turns out the Reds had tumbled to the test. They have snuck a real atomic bomb into the States. Ireland and the Feds finally realize what the Reds are planning and are soon after them. It is a cat and mouse game being played out as the pursuit heats up. The Reds are killing everyone who might rat them out.The Feds manage to do the old nick of time stunt and capture the bomb before it explodes. They fly the device to an A-Bomb test site and boot the thing out the door minutes before it goes off. The Reds are foiled, this time! The film's story, by Ivan Tors is a bit weak kneed in parts, but as a low end thriller, it has its moments.Direction was by B film specialist, Fred C Sears, who keeps the pace moving. Sears cranked out about 50 films in his 1949 till 1958 Hollywood career. Sears' films include, WORLD WITHOUT END, UTAH BLAINE, RUMBLE ON THE DOCKS, THE 49th MAN, CELL 2455 DEATH ROW and CHICAGO SYNDICATE.

More
Robert J. Maxwell
2011/07/09

This is a diverting, entertaining, interesting, tense, and ultimately still-relevant story of agents of the Soviet Union smuggling parts of an atomic bomb into the US of A and planning to explode it in San Francisco, the swine.John Ireland is part of a counter espionage federal agency and is given the assignment of finding out who is smuggling all these A-bomb parts into the country. They're being brought in by ordinary people in suitcases, each suitcase containing one third of a bomb. There are forty-eight people all together -- or forty-eight bombs or forty-eight suitcases. I found myself confused from time to time.Before you can enjoy watching this Cold War paranoia piece, you have to work your way through several layers of dreck. First, you need not simply suspend disbelief. You must first strap it down, cut it open, disembowel it, and stuff its abdominal cavity full of minced Habanero chili peppers. All sorts of improbabilities pop up, large and small.Example of small thing. Two men are holding John Ireland prisoner in the back seat of a car. One man offers him a cigarette. Ireland accepts the cigarette, pulls out the red hot cigarette lighter from its socket, and jabs it into the man's hand. Then he leans over and strangles the man into unconsciousness, while the victim sits there passively and grimaces. The other captor merely watches the goings on. Ireland leaps from the car and escapes.That's a small thing. Here's a big difference between the observed frequency and the expected frequency. Those forty-eight suitcases? (Or people or bombs?) They were all part of a war-game exercise run without Ireland's knowledge by the agency he's part of. When this is revealed -- after all the intrigue, danger, and pain -- it's like one of those endings in which the hero is about to die and then wakes up from the nightmare. Big joke.The problem, though, is that it develops there was a forty-ninth suitcase -- or bomb or person. Real Russians were pulling a fast one on us while using our drill as a screen. But, you -- the discerning viewer ask -- you wonder how the Russians could possibly have known that such a super-secret exercise was taking place? Is that the question? Answer: You are justified in asking the question.I understand that this movie was made by a couple of schlockmeisters, but, as I said, it's entertaining nonsense. And it doesn't seem nearly as cheap as some of the sci-fi B movies of the period. The helicopters are real, not models. The airplanes are real. The submarine is real. And if the actors don't shoot out the lights, well -- what do you want, egg in your beer? John Ireland is curiously reassuring. His squinty eyes are too close together, barely kept apart by the bridge of his nose. And he's not well directed. When he's having an earnest conversation with a colleague, he seems to be arguing with some heat, not explaining something to a friend. The writing is a bit clumsy at times as well, but fortunately Ireland is given only one rah-rah speech about "you and your kind", without using that exact phrase.The ending is a happy one, though hard to believe for too many reasons to list here. But I do wish it were as difficult to smuggle the makings of a bomb into this country as the film tries to persuade us it is. I live half an hour from the Mexican border. I believe I could smuggle forty-eight or forty-nine bomb parts across that border without being caught. It doesn't take 49 bombs. It just takes one. The USSR is no more, but the threat will always be there.

More
dougdoepke
2008/10/07

Despite a muddled script, the movie manages to generate some suspense. It's really an exploitation flick aimed at America's Cold War fears of the growing spread of nuclear weaponry. In 1953, the Soviets had the A-bomb but lacked a delivery system to threaten America's shores. The screenplay cleverly suggests a way of threatening those shores without a long-range system. Instead, bomb parts are smuggled in for later assembly. However, the script incredibly never suggests who is behind the scheme or why. Perhaps they thought audiences would logically suspect the Soviets since the Cold War was boiling, especially in Korea. Nonetheless, the absence of who the planners are and why they're doing it amounts to a big hole in the story.There's a lot of globe trotting since Intelligence agent John Ireland is on the trail of the culprits who have international connections. It looks like crew members of an American sub are the chief suspects and Ireland is ready to pounce. At this point, however, more than half- way through, the movie does a startling turn-around. It's puzzling why the script would abruptly convert the cat-and- mouse into nothing more than a war game. My guess is to reassure audiences that our Intelligence defenses were adequate to defeat the nuclear dangers posed by such insidious schemes. However, ending the movie with nothing more than a war game would have disappointed viewers. Thus an improbable shadow scheme of real plotters is tacked on during the final few minutes. At that point, you may need a score card to keep up with the complications.The movie is surprisingly well-produced. Fast-buck artist Sam Katzman was not known for attention to detail, but the international scenes are in fact well mounted. Low budget director Fred Sears films with some imagination, but crucially fails to exploit the suspense-charged final scene in the airplane. Too bad, because this is the big pay-off. With its key twists and turns from higher-ups, this little B-film surprisingly anticipates many of the big-budget spy thrillers of the 60's and 70's, where agents were routinely manipulated for "higher purposes". Of course, by that post-Vietnam period, the popular mood had become less trusting than the unquestioning atmosphere of 1953. Contrast, for example, this film's confident documentary style with 1975's super cynical Three Days of the Condor. All in all, this McCarthy era artifact remains a rather interesting little curiosity that retains some relevance given current fears of a terrorist sneak attack.

More
jim riecken (youroldpaljim)
2001/07/14

Federal agents get wind of a nefarious plot by enemy agents to smuggle components of an atomic bomb into the United States. The enemy agents plan to then assemble it and blow up a major American city. The feds try to hide the fact that they have captured several of the smugglers in order to find the meeting place and capture the ring leader.This "B" grade thriller is of interest for its moderately interesting plot. John Ireland gives a good performance as a federal agent determined to catch the enemy agents. Everything else is pretty standard.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now