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Violent Saturday
Three men case a small town very carefully, with plans to rob the bank on the upcoming Saturday, which turns violent and deadly.
Release : | 1955 |
Rating : | 6.9 |
Studio : | 20th Century Fox, |
Crew : | Art Direction, Art Direction, |
Cast : | Victor Mature Richard Egan Stephen McNally Virginia Leith Tommy Noonan |
Genre : | Drama Crime |
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Instant Favorite.
Great Film overall
Absolutely Brilliant!
Absolutely brilliant
Three men come to a small town to rob the bank and several of the local citizens get caught up in it. It sounds simple but there is a lot going on, building slowly as the robbers make their plans and the townsfolk sort out their personal lives until the robbery itself when Saturday explodes into violence affecting the citizens for good or for ill. Filmed excellently in colour and widescreen by Charles G. Clarke and directed with a sure hand by the versatile Richard Fleischer you get to know not just the physical look of a town but the darkness beneath the sunny exteriors.The acting all round from a reliable cast is very good. Victor Mature as the reluctant hero, Richard Egan as the unhappy mine owner, Tommy Noonan as the tormented bank manager, Margaret Hayes as the wayward wife and a bearded Ernest Borgnine as an Amish farmer to name a few. The bank robbers perfectly played by Stephen McNally, Lee Marvin and J. Carrol Naish are not branded as evil but just doing a job. Lee Marvin in his sleepless scene is splendid. The veteran Sylvia Sidney has a small role as a librarian with a secret.Well worth a watch.
Three criminals plan how they intend to rob a small town bank while the unsuspecting local citizens deal with their own personal problems, all of which results in a violent weekend full of men trying to prove their worth in this slow burn thriller starring Victor Mature. Shot in CinemaScope with glorious, rich colours, 'Violent Saturday' is an incredibly good-looking film and the vivid nature of the images suits the gradual build-up of tension very well; grumpy men step on kids' hands, solemn women offer piercing glares, etc. When push comes to shove though, the build-up occurs for far too long. It is over an hour in before the heist actually takes place and while a subsequent barnyard show down rates among the most intense sequences that director Richard Fleischer ever filmed, one has endure over an hour of (at times) histrionic melodrama before any such tension finally erupts. And yet, while it may have been a more effective film at half its length, the overall impact of the movie is hard to shake. The supporting characters vary in how engaging they are, but Mature is excellent throughout as the emotionally torn protagonist, resentful of the fact that he is not the war hero that his impressionable preteen son wants him to be. The film also benefits from one of Hugo Friedhofer's most powerful scores and seeing Ernest Borgnine as an Amish farmer has definite curiosity value alone.
Richard Fleischer may never have made it into the very front rank of the great directors but he did make some terrific films and "Violent Saturday" may be his masterpiece. It's a heist movie, (and it's an excellent heist movie), but one with a difference since fundamentally this is also another 1950's small town melodrama of the 'Peyton Place' variety. We get to know, not only the trio of bank robbers, (Stephen McNally, Lee Marvin and a superb J Carroll Naish), intent on robbing the Bradenville bank, but also a number of the town's inhabitants, (Victor Mature, Richard Egan, Virginia Leith, Sylvia Sidney, Tommy Noonan, Margaret Hayes), all of whom are destined to be caught up in some way in the robbery. It's a brilliantly paced movie, beautifully written by Sydney Boehm and impeccably directed by Fleischer, making superb use of the Cinemascope format. Largely dismissed at the time of its release it is now, deservedly, considered something of a classic.
I liked it. Those '50's melodramas/dramas-they were so great. Lee Marvin is always interesting. I liked his monologue about his "skinny ex-wife, her colds, and his inhaler." By the way-my small hometown Ohio bank was open until noon on Saturday up until the mid-seventies-until ATMs, of course. They were closed on Wednesdays. So a "Violent Saturday" (when most people did their grocery shopping, made deposits, etc.) made sense then. Some of the characters were strange; the librarian, and the Tommy Noonan character for sure. The nurse is very forgiving of him. I've always liked Richard Egan and thought his last scene was well-acted. Victor Mature is not one of my favorite actors, but this is one of his better roles. If you like '50's dramas/melodramas, check it out!