Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

World for Ransom

1954 film by Robert Aldrich From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

World for Ransom
Remove ads

World for Ransom is a 1954 American film noir drama directed by Robert Aldrich and starring Dan Duryea, Patric Knowles, Gene Lockhart, Reginald Denny and Nigel Bruce (in his final film role).[4][5]

Quick facts Directed by, Screenplay by ...

Many of the actors and sets used in the film were recycled from Duryea's television show China Smith.

Remove ads

Plot

Mike Callahan is an Irish national and war veteran working in Singapore as a private detective. He takes a case from a former flame, now a nightclub singer, who suspects that her husband Julian March is involved in criminal activities.

Callahan learns that a man named Alexis Pederas has involved Julian in a plot to kidnap prominent nuclear scientist Sean O'Connor and hold him for ransom to the highest bidder. O'Connor is one of the only four men in the world who knows how to detonate the hydrogen bomb.

Remove ads

Cast

Remove ads

Production

Summarize
Perspective

Aldrich was inspired to produce the film while directing episodes of China Smith. When production was on hiatus, he wrote a story with a colleague.[6] Bernard Tabakin, who produced China Smith, agreed to produce the film along with Aldrich.[7]

Aldrich claimed that the script was almost entirely written by the uncredited Hugo Butler, a blacklisted screenwriter. Aldrich said: "There are optimists in the society, not many left, who thought that someday those guys [on the Hollywood Blacklist] would get post-mortem credits for their work. So he wrote World for Ransom and I put my name on it to try and get him the credit. And it went into arbitration with the Writer's Guild, and another guy, Lindsay Hardy, got total screen credit on it. It was a joke. He no more wrote that script than walk on the water. Butler made that total screenplay."[8]

Filming began on April 13, 1953 at the Motion Picture Center Studio.[9] It was shot over the course of six days, and then Aldrich halted production to shoot television commercials to raise money for the film's post-production. A five-day shoot ensued to finish production. The film's budget was between $90,000 and $100,000.[10][6]

Aldrich later said that the film "... first embedded what I wanted to say in films. It was mainly about two men with good and bad points. Both men believed in individual liberty but the belief of one man was weaker than the other because he had no respect for humanity."[11]

Reception

In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Bosley Crowther wrote: "Set it down as an item booked not beneath its class. Nothing gives it distinction, save possibly the people in its cast. ... Robert Aldrich produced and directed. He was trying. Some day he may learn how."[1]

Reviewer Wanda Hale of the New York Daily News called the film "a tight thriller" and wrote: "'World for Ransom' sustains suspense and the cast ... all give the star first rate support."[12]

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads