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Stephen McNally and Dorothy Maguire |
MAKE HASTE TO LIVE (1954). Director: William A. Seiter.
At the very beginning of
Make Haste to Live, a shadowy stranger arrives at the home of Crys Benson (Dorothy Maguire) -- who has learned that her dangerous husband Steve (Stephen McNally of
The Black Castle) has just been released from prison and may
be coming to kill her -- and is able to easily open the front door which is
not even locked and get inside. This is just one of many problems with the script for
Make Haste, but the movie has other issues as well.
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John Howard with a distraught Maguire |
Crys (originally named Zena) got away from her husband after she discovered he had shot and killed a cop. He gets away with that murder but winds up going to jail for the murder of Zena in an explosion (it was actually another unknown woman and it may have been an accidental death). Zena has reinvented herself and lives far away from Chicago in New Mexico with her teenage daughter, Randy (Mary Murphy of
The Mad Magician). She has a boyfriend named Josh (John Howard of
The Mad Doctor) whose proposals she keeps rejecting. The scene when Steve shows up -- something "Crys" has clearly been dreading and is terrified of -- completely lacks tension and impact and is badly muffed. Maguire was certainly a talented actress but in this sequence she acts as if it was only her brother -- whom Steve pretends to be -- showing up instead of the man who spent twenty years in prison for her alleged murder! McNally could also give decent performances but there are a dozen actors who could have made much, much more of this interesting role. For that matter Barbara Stanwyck could also have made a lot more of Crys and her situation.
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Ron Hagerthy and Mary Murphy |
The supporting cast, including Howard, Murphy, Ron Hagerthy as her boyfriend, Edgar Buchanan as the sheriff, and Carolyn Jones as Crys' old friend, Mary -- who at Zena's direction tells the authorities she is alive but who is not believed -- are all good, and there is an effective score by Elmer Bernstein [
Far From Heaven]. But there are a few too many holes in the plot, and Crys' actions are often senseless. The reactions and attitudes of the two lead characters in an incredibly difficult situation simply do not ring true. There are interesting elements to this that never jell. A bit with a bottomless pit in some Indian diggings being worked by Josh leads to a moderately exciting climax. From Republic studios.
Verdict: An intriguing situation but you can see why this flick is completely forgotten today. **1/4.
Have become a real Dorothy McGuire fan since falling in love with Gentlemen's Agreement, but maybe this is not one to earmark--but who knows, I may end up seeing it.
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Now this one is on youtube currently. I had never heard of it before.
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