I, the Jury (1953) Poster

(1953)

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5/10
The private-eye thriller and film noir begin their final descent
bmacv20 April 2003
In 1953, I, The Jury became the first of Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer series to hit the screen, but it takes its cues from movies of 1947, when the book hit the kiosks. The yuletide cards serving as scene dividers, the violence counterpointed to Christmas carols recall The Lady in the Lake, while the duplicitous female psychiatrist reprises Helen Walker's Dr. Lilith Ritter in Nightmare Alley (the final, fatal tryst comes from the even earlier Double Indemnity).

These echoes may have been attempts to invest Hammer with some respectability, linking him to the more subtle and textured characters of the 1940s. It's clear something had to be done with him, because Spillane went for raw sensation in a way that caused a sensation of its own. His private eye is uncouth, short-fused and randy but misogynist, bowing to no authority save his own (hence the title). Spillane luckily or shrewdly had as readers of his punch-drunk prose men who had survived overseas combat and were making up for lost time in the footloose, post-war prosperity; he gave them not just sex and violence but sex-and-violence.

So in one sense, Biff Elliott makes an ideal Hammer, closer to Spillane's lout than his (relatively) spruced-up successors Ralph Meeker and Robert Bray (plus Armand Assante, in the marginally better 1982 remake of this title). He comes across as a Dead End kid grown up with a license and a gun, slow-witted but fast with his fists and his trigger.

When his best friend, an insurance investigator and combat amputee, gets himself coldly killed, Hammer scours New York to avenge him. The urban locales bring out the talents of director of photography John Alton, who here tried his hand at the 3-D process (thus I, The Jury, along with Man in the Dark, The Glass Web and Second Chance, becomes one of the few noirs so filmed).

The shoot-from-the-hip action, however, rides roughshod over any intricacies of the plot. Characters Hammer encounters stay generic, with the exception of Peggie Castle as the shrink. The film's last scene is hers, not Elliott's, as she moves into a languorous striptease that comes to a quick finale. For better or worse, it's an emblematic image that showcases Spillane's coarsened sensibility, his fusion of brutality and eroticism, and spells an end to the more freighted ambiguity that was a hallmark of the noir cycle.
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7/10
I, the Jury - Worth Saving, Restoration Valid!
airearthfire3 November 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I, the Jury (1953), the first flick to feature Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer, is a substandard Film Noir, but it has a Lot of Heart with Great Dialogue, an Engrossing Plot and requisite Bevy of Beautiful Dames.

Having Biff Elliot in the starring role of Mike Hammer is its most obvious flaw. You're immediate alarmed by the character's appearance, akin to a battered punch-drunk ex-boxer. One wonders if his appearance is due to post-traumatic stress, a victim of 'Shell Shock' from exposure to the horrors & brutality of war in the South Pacific. We get an idea of the savagery when he laments at the passing of his friend Jack Williams, a guy who literally gave his right arm for a friend when he caught a Japanese Bayonet that was meant for Hammer.

The blind loyalty displayed by Margaret Sheridan's characterization of Hammer's Assistant 'Velda' can be reasoned again by what happened to him in the South Pacific, feeling indebted to him for his sacrifice.

Is it the private hell he went through the reason the chemistry between Hammer and femme fatale Psychoanalyst Charlotte Manning (Peggie Castle) doesn't ever feel right? Whatever the reason, whenever she appears on screen Hammer isn't the only one being mesmerized by her!

There's a truckload of great moments from character actors practicing their craft. While each scene is not without random flaws, it's not the fault of the actors as they endeavor to showcase their performance range.

This is particularly true of Alan Reed. As his second entry into the Noir World, he performs the role of George Kalecki aka 'Mister Big'. In his case, direction of the camera never seems to be framed properly. However, Mr. Big's Emotional Relationship with his mobster lieutenant Hal Kines (Robert Cunningham) is decades ahead of its time! Previously in 1946, Reed got the tar beaten out of him by John Garfield in The Postman Always Rings Twice. He would return to the Noir Genre again with Humphrey Bogart in 1955's Desperate Hours.

Other notable character performances include: Preston Foster - Captain Pat Chambers, Elisha Cook, Jr. – Bobo, Nestor Paiva - Bartender Manuel, John Qualen - Veterinary Doctor R.H. Vickers

The film's Cinematographer, John Alton, worked on a dozen Noir Films of varying quality during 1947 to 1955, the most celebrated are those made with acclaimed Director Anthony Mann: T-Men (1947), Raw Deal (1948), He Walked by Night (1948) & Border Incident (1949).

There's a showdown of fisticuffs where Hammer is out-numbered and out-gunned, while Velda's life is held in the balance. The scene is set on a marble staircase of the interior court inside the legendary Bradbury Building containing Hammer's Office. Renowned for its unique architecture, the Bradbury has been featured for decades in motion pictures, television and music videos from as early as 1944. Its most famous use includes the films D.O.A (1950), Marlowe (1969), Chinatown (1974), as well as the Television Series 77 Sunset Strip, City of Angels and Banyon.

Those critical of this film should keep in mind that judging by the high quality of the promotional posters accompanying the film, it was being made for the lucrative Drive-In Market. It bears the similar qualities and short cuts utilized by Roger Corman during his turn at making movies for Drive-Ins during the 1950's.

To his credit, Biff Elliot does a good job at portraying the Private Investigator as brawny, physically tough with his fists and never shying away from violence. His performance displays the traits fans associate with Mickey Spillane's anti-hero: machismo, misogynist, sexist, unapologetic and politically incorrect. He's a solitary hard-boiled sleuth, who's impatient with the legal system and willing to avenge victims as Judge, Jury and Executioner.

The visual finale baring the physicality of Peggie Castle doesn't disappoint! But if you're expecting the suave sophistication of Sam Spade, you'll be sadly disappointed; instead you'll get a metaphor of a brutal garbage man who's come to take out the trash!!!
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7/10
Question: Why did you? Answer: It was easy.
sol-kay21 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
****SPOILERS*** Based on the Mickey Spillane character from his book of the same name "I the Jury" introduced to the movie going public in film Noir black and white and 3D no less the very first glimpse at the Neanderthal like tough as nails private eye Mike Hammer,Biff Elliot, who shoots and beats his opponents brains out first and never bother to ask them any questions later. Since most if not all of them are in no physical condition to be able to answer them anyway. It's just before Christmas that Mike finds out that his good friend and army buddy the one armed Jack Williams, Robert Swanger, was found murdered in his Manhattan apartment. William an insurance investigator has been checking out a number of claims for missing or stolen jewelry at the time of his murder. Despite being told to stay out of the case by police Captain Pat Chambers, Preston Foster, Hammer has his own plans to find and bring to justice his good friend Jack Williams killer. Even if he has to turn the entire city as well as state of New York upside down in order to do it!

Hammer going on the contents of a collage yearbook given to him by Captain Chambers that was found in Williams apartment at the time of his murder gets the feeling that his killer was one of those students in the yearbook and tracks down everyone in it to find Williams killer. As for Williams fiancée Myrna Devlin, Frances Osborne, Hammer finds that she's holding something back in why Williams was murdered and the reasons behind it. And as it later turned out the collage yearbook did have the clue to who but also why and what were the reasons for Williams being knocked off. Hammer also tracks down psychoanalyst Doctor Charlotte Mannings, Peggie Castle, who was treating both Jack Williams and his fiancée Myrna Devlin for severe emotional problems in her clinic. It's Dr. Mannings who's also been secretly supplying Myrna a recovering drug addict with illegal drugs!

***SPOILERS**** Mike Hammer we also find out is being used by Captain Chambers as a battering ram to brake the Jack Williams murder case wide open without Hammer, who's too busy tearing up the whole place, actually knowing about it. What Williams found out about a secret jewelry smuggling operation that covered two continent's turned out to be his own death sentence. Now his friend Mike Hammer is determined to be the both judge and jury, thus the title of the movie "I the Jury, as well as executioner in having those who murdered him pay with their lives for it. Check out Film Nior veteran Elisha Cook Jr as the drunken department store Santa Clause "BoBo" who clues Mike Hammer into what were the reasons behind Jack Williams murder and what the mysterious collage yearbook had to do with it.
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A Rare Experience
Trampyre20 September 2003
I got the chance to see this film today in a movie theater in its original 3-D glory. And WOW- not NEARLY as mediocre as you've heard. The audience LOVED it- what WAS bad dialogue is now hysterically camp. Biff Elliot (the screen's first Mike Hammer) was in attendence, full of vigor at age 80. A charming man, some wonderful anecdotes about his Hollywood experiences, but in his first film, he doesn't cut it. However, the supporting cast is wonderful- Peggy Castle is not only beautiful, but does a wonderful film noir dame. And my almost-Mother-In-Law Margaret Sheridan turns in outstanding support as Mike's secretary Velda...sexy & wise-crackingly smart(she retired in the early 60's to be a housewife and mother to two daughters- unfortunately, she passed away from cancer in 1981). A lot of "B" stars show up, like Elisha Cook Jr. and Joe Besser(the great tie-in to Joe was the 3-D Three Stooges short PARDON MY BACKFIRE which was also shown). And, as for the 3-D, it was rarely shown in that format, and the print shown was definately worn by time, but while there was no mandatory "throw it in your face" shots, the 3-D emminently added to the film's mood, with some wonderful photography, especially in L.A.'s Bradbury Building. I will definately check this one out again, albeit in it's "flat" version!
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7/10
Hard to take too seriously
wilvram10 June 2020
The screen debut of Mike Hammer 'force of nature' and self-appointed judge, jury and executioner. Biff Elliott had an apt name to portray a detective who tends to punch in the mouth first and asks questions later. He does talk like a man whom has been hit over the head on numerous occasions but is totally outclassed by his co-star Peggie Castle, sensational as the duplicitous shrink Charlotte Manning. The narrative seems to consist almost entirely of scenes of vicious beatings-up and murders, and as in so many other movies of its type, the hero can take any amount of punches to the face and emerge unscathed. I might have found it all rather tiresome had the film been more efficiently constructed, but the generous amount of ludicrous dialogue and the generally ham-fisted approach made it almost perversely entertaining. I was amused by good old Elisha Cook Jr. and his queen bee, though this inadvertently pointed Hammer in the right direction. The finale, with the now desperate Charlotte's attempted seduction of Hammer, is unforgettable.
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6/10
A miscast spoils this Mickey Spillane film noir
blanche-211 September 2019
This is such a tough-guy noir that it almost comes off as a take-off.

I, the Jury concerns Mike Hammer's search for the killer of his friend, Jack. Eventually other people who attended the same party as Jack are killed as well.

From what I gather, this was shown in 3-D some time in 2003, with the star, Biff Elliott (then 80) present. The audience loved it - mainly because all the dialogue is now considered "camp."

One thing Elliot could do was beat up people, since he had previously been a boxer. Just no dimension to the character. I would have loved to have seen someone like Ralph Meeker in this film.

Of note was the very neat opening scene, which I imagine played very well in 3-D. The last scene of the film was very effective as well.

The women in the movie were lovely - Mary Anderson does a good job as Eileen Vickers. Margaret Sheridan was a lovely Velda, and Peggie Castle was a stunning Charlotte, one of the many women in love with Mike. The other performances were okay.

As the first film Mike Hammer, one would assume it brought Elliot attention and, in other hands, could have been a star-making role. Though he continued working for years, it wasn't as a star. Sadly I think better casting would have helped "I, The Jury" immensely.
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7/10
Biff Elliott?!
planktonrules29 December 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This is a Mike Hammer film written by Mickey Spillane—so you know you're in for a very gritty crime film. However, of all the incarnations of Hammer I have seen, this one has the most unknown cast I can recall—no one is an easily recognizable Hollywood actor in this film—though Alan Reed (Fred Flintstone's voice), John Qualen, Elisha Cooke and Joe Besser (the absolute worst of the Three Stooges—and so annoying that he only made a few shorts with them) appear in the movie. Whoever Biff Elliott is, he was cast in the feature role. The film does have some good things going for it—classic film noir lighting, fighting and dialog. Spillane sure knew how to write tough dialog and Hammer's commentary is quite enjoyable—that is, when Hammer isn't beating information out of suspects! "I, The Jury" begins with some poor shmoe getting shot at close range by some assailant—who the killer is, we do not know. It turns out the victim is one of Mike Hammer's friends—and Mike is determined to get them. This is personal…and Hammer is mad. Along the way he meets lots of odd characters as well as some ultra-hot and bothered women! It's all quite enjoyable but also a bit talky and the plot is a bit confusing unless you play close attention. Overall, it's worth seeing but not a great noir film.
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6/10
Oh Mike! How could you!
thestarkfist17 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
My wife and I have been binge watching the old Charlie Chan films from the '30s and '40s. They are charmingly corny and seem to have laid the groundwork for every Scooby Doo story line that they ever did. There's been a murder in the Wax Museum and we're going to have to creep around in there at night searching for clues!! Scaaaarrryyy! As you might imagine a steady diet of this sort of film starts to leave you hungering for something a little more gritty and down-to-earth. At least that was the case with me. So I decided to watch "I, The Jury", just for kicks, baby. Now I have been aware of Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer for some time, although I have never read a single novel nor watched a Mike Hammer flick before, so I was a little curious to see what a Mike Hammer movie was like. I did a little research on the film before I downloaded it and read that it was the first attempt to bring the two-fisted Hammer to the silver screen. Great, I thought. Usually Hollywood's first attempts are always closest to the source material. I was somewhat familiar with who the character was supposed to be; a hard-boiled loner who'd been around the track more than a couple of times and seen plenty. I was picturing him as being portrayed by a middle-aged actor with a few lines in his face, maybe a scar on his cheek, y'know, having a face that would speak of tough choices and brutal encounters. The IMDb write up listed the actor who plays Mike in this flick as being one Biff Elliot. Never heard of him and who would take a Batman sound effect as his stage name anyway? When the movie started I couldn't have been more surprised. Biff looks like a baby, all smooth faced and cherubic. He looked like he should have been appearing next to Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in some wacky high school musical! I'll give Biff credit; he tries with all his might to fill the character's shoes but, in the end, he is this movie's biggest flaw. And what a character Mike Hammer is! He's a slightly psychotic rogue with a hair-triggered temper. We're made aware of this fact in the opening scene where a reporter makes a flip remark to Mike as he's leaving the scene of the crime and he smashes him into the china cabinet. Here's the setup: it's Christmas time in the Big Apple and Mike's best friend catches a couple of slugs from a 45 as he's making out his Christmas cards. Mike shows up a short while later, having been summoned by the cops, and has a melt-down over the murder. The victim was a one-armed, former policeman who served with Hammer in WWII. He took the bayonet that was meant for Mike in the arm, which is why he only had one left. Anyway, Mike is furious and announces to the head detective that he's going to find his buddy's killer and put a 45 round in his rotten stinkin guts! Gee, Mike, maybe announcing to the police that you intend to commit murder isn't the best way to start a case! Knee jerk violence isn't Hammer's only character trait. Seems the dames can't resist him. Every babe in this flick, and there a plenty, wants Mike like your dog wants that Slim Jim that's slipped behind the couch pillows. There's Mike's smokin' hot secretary. There's a twisted couple of blonde twins who throw themselves at Mike whenever he shows up to ask them a few questions. And then there's the lady psychiatrist, who seems to have been treating every one of the suspects, as well as Mike's pal, for various complaints that are never elaborated on. She's the most smokin' and sultry of them all. Naturally Mike falls for her in a big way! As the movie rolls along Hammer gets to suck plenty of face but they never seem to take it any farther. This is 1957, after all, and there's not so much as a smidgen of bared flesh to be seen. There's a scene where Hammer is awoken from his bed by urgent knocking at his apartment door. He rises still wearing a shirt and tie! Whatta classy guy! As the story unfolds we are treated to quite a lurid tale indeed. The numbers racket, drug addiction and prostitution all figure prominently in the scheme of things. Mike gets to beat some guys up and takes a couple of beatings himself. (The next day there's nary a scratch on his baby face, natch!) In the end Hammer pumps that slug into the gut of the rotten stinkin' murderer, just like he said he would. The movie ends with Mike calling the police to report his act of murder while you run to the shower to wash this movie off of you! Charlie Chan and Mike Hammer inhabit two separate universes. In Charlie's world most people are basically honest and decent while Charlie himself is a tower of virtue. In Charlie's world criminals are and aberration. In Hammer's world most people are treacherous scoundrels and Hammer is none too clean and pure himself. In Hammer's world good guys, like his murdered buddy, who spent his days trying to help others, get gunned down in cold blood by the scum that they're forced to share the planet with. Both universes are laughable cartoons of reality, but that's where the fun comes from.
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5/10
Of Mike and Men
utgard1426 June 2017
The first film adaptation of a Mickey Spillane novel, filmed in 3D and starring one of the all-time nobodies, Biff Elliot, as Mike Hammer. He looks like William Bendix's younger brother and acts like Lon Chaney, Jr. in "Of Mice and Men." The selling point of any movie based on a Spillane story, aside from the violence, should be the dialogue. That's true here, with lots of tough noir one-liners. Unfortunately, many of those are bellowed by Elliot, who barges into every scene like he's mad someone made him take this job. Seriously, watch this guy stomp around. Someone hired this moose to act and this is what they got. Even the film's famous final scene is tainted by his inability to deliver a line with emotion.

On the plus side, the movie was photographed by John Alton. He makes the most of the cheap production values. Good use of the Bradbury Building, which is recognizable to fans of films like D.O.A. and Blade Runner. Nice score from Franz Waxman. The supporting cast includes many lesser known actors but there are a few old pros like Preston Foster, John Qualen, and Elisha Cook, Jr. How any of them kept a straight face while that sack of meat was barking at them is beyond me. Attractive Peggie Castle makes an unconvincing psychologist and is even less convincing as a woman attracted to Elliot.

This movie has a lot that prevents it from being great. But all of the other issues combined don't equal the sheer ineptitude of casting Biff Elliot as Mike Hammer. This was his film debut and he never did anything this big again. He worked fairly steady for decades, mostly in television. I have no idea why he was cast. Worked cheap? Saved the producer's life? Knew where the bodies were buried? I don't know. All I do know is he stinks in this.
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6/10
Mike Hamming-it-up
Chrid-9099 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This film is a b-film, but it's quite an entertaining one!

Yeah, it's true that Biff Elliot is a ham-actor and not ace in the facial expression department but when it comes to letting his fists talk for him he sure is great!

Other noir gumshoes like Marlowe or Spade, although ready to fight if necessary, usually hang back and use their wits in tense scenes but not Mike Hammer; he doesn't waste a second before punching the guy/knocking him down/slapping him around!

Witness for example the scene where he fetches his buddy's ex from a bar where she is sitting with two older fellows. When the latter get to their feet to protest, Mike knocks them BOTH clattering down with a shove so brutal and swift that it looks real. I wonder if those gentlemen were actually bruised in the fall..

Yes, the plot is more or less impossible to follow, but who cares when you have plenty of fights and a string of gorgeously dressed ladies along the way.

Also interesting for a film from the Hayes code period is the 'naughty' stuff that gets by here. For example the gentleman bad guy with his male 'friend' who Hammer witnesses afterwards through the window having an ornament-smashing tantrum.

Then there's the dancing class building where there are a row of private rooms with sexily dressed 'dancing teachers' available for hire.

In addition two scenes, each with a blonde and toothy nympho twin (played by real-life twins) who throw themselves in turn at a not wholly reluctant Hammer. These twins both like to play with a kinky little back-scratcher and Hammer, fending off one clinging girl, gives the instrument back to her, saying as he leaves: 'Scratch!' (Couldn't help but wonder if this had got by the censor if he'd said: 'Scratch yourself!').

Not to forget of course the classic final scene where the extremely attractive Charlotte Manning (Peggy Castle - imagine a face not unlike Grace Kelly with the body of, say, Jayne Mansfield) finds Hammer sitting waiting for her with a gun in his hand. Understanding that she's been sussed she tries to get round him by talking to him while stripping off her trenchcoat, letting her hair down and then unfastening the straps on her high-heels and kicking them off toward him one after the other.

Hammer gets to his feet and she steps quickly into his arms, meanwhile reaching for a gun hidden behind him in a flower pot. But in his customary pre-emptive manner Hammer doesn't wait until she uses it. A shot rings out.

'How could you Mike?' she says in disbelief as she slumps down.

Hammer's reply: 'It was easy..'
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3/10
Pulp Fiction.
rmax30482330 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
You don't mess around with Mike Hammer (Biff Elliot). Hammer is searching for the killer of one of his best friends, and he's bent on revenge. He's accosted by three ugly hoods in a bar. The dapper leader sneers at Hammer and asks, "All right, who are you, and why you been nosin' around all --" That's as far as he gets. POW! Right in the kisser. Hammer, who is built like Boulder Dam, or maybe his overcoat is, brawls with the two remaining goons until he's decked with a simple wooden coat hanger.

I grant you, it doesn't seem plausible, but then the whole movie is not much more than a crude assemblage of events that Hammer bulls his way through, insulting people as he goes, scoffing at the women who throw themselves at his feet, and all the time wearing the same unchanging expression, as of a guy who can't act but has suddenly found himself playing the lead in a picture that's sure to make a bundle.

In the 50s, everyone gobbled up Mickey Spillane's pulp fiction. They couldn't wait for the next book or the movie that would be made from it. This was the first, I think. And it's last conversational exchange was known by all. Hammer plugs the murderer in the stomach. "Mike, how could you do this to me?" "It was easy." The movie sucks in almost all respect, except maybe for its use of the Bradley Building in L.A. Over the years, the Bradley Building served as an office for, among others, Edward G. Robinson, Fred MacMurray, Jack Nicholson, and Douglas Spader.

I enjoyed this flick when it was released but I was only a kid, excited by a gruff and inarticulate angry man who could beat everybody else up and kill them if necessary. All brawn and few brains. (That's adolescence in a nutshell.) Now, old and worn, I find it almost intolerable. Elliot cannot act. Peggy Castle can act, although she doesn't have to. The supporting cast overacts outrageously under the incompetent direction, even such usually reliable players as Nestor Paiva.

John Alton was a fine photographer but his images here -- the stark shadows, the glistening pavements, the ominous alleyways -- only serve to mask the emptiness of the movie. Franz Waxman, also a talented craftsman, should be sent to jail for his musical score. What he does to a clarinet is what my mother-in-law used to do to me.

Mike Hammer is a private eye. The noirs were filled with private eyes like Philip Marlowe and Sam Spade. They were experienced, intelligent, tough, vulnerable, and flawed. They made mistakes. This one is more of a caricature of noir films. Hammer has no weaknesses whatever, nor any thoughts that might interfere with the movement of his fists. Compared to this, "The Maltese Falcon" is a masterpiece of subtlety and nuance.

Pfui.
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8/10
crackling dialogue and constant action
Quite a surprise, this one, based on the Mickey Spillane book, done very much in the film noir style and shot in 3-D! Actually watching this flat it is only the opening with the dying man crawling towards the camera with his hand reaching forward that I was aware of the 3-D origins and we are swiftly on to an absorbing thriller. Not as tough and sexy as the book but a really decent effort with some super shadowy location filming. Biff Elliot, of whom I had never heard, is fine in the lead, if not sensational but the crackling dialogue and constant action keep things moving along nicely while Peggie Castle is great as the femme fatale. Low budget and maybe nothing too special but tight and bold. Very likable.
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7/10
The first of the many on Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer fantastic saga!!
elo-equipamentos6 August 2023
The writer of the mass Mickey Spillane had a smashing success of Mike Hammer book series that went mainly to newsstand on cheap cost it gained thousand of readers draw attention of the Hollywood that quickly became a first picture to exploit the famous character, so I, the Jury was the first title went to screen by Parklane Pictures and released by United Artists.

Biff Elliott was cast to the role thru a lawyer that saw him at New York's stage and suggested him for the main character, technically his debut on big screen, Mike the private detective is a former soldier and has his best friend Jack Williams (Robert Swanger) who saves him at war in a bomb that should be blast on Mike, Jack stayed a amputated arm hence, back after war becomes a cop working his chief Capt. Pat Chambers (Preston Forster) leaving the force aftermaths due Mike didn't agreed with sluggishness also so many paper to fill in, when he saw his friend died for some unknown reason it somehow justifies itself in angry backlash.

Mike Hammer is a sort of violent man, short temper and often appeal of punch anybody for a simple offence or even an ironic response, he works a lot in parallel of police aiming for get best results thru short-cuts to solve Jack's murder, he has many applicants, Jack's fiancée the dancer Myrna (Frances Osborne), the twins socialite Mary & Esther (The Seitz Twins) Kalecki (Alan Reed) an antiquarian collector and his bleak sidekick Hal Kines (Bob Cuningham) and a gangster Miller (Tom Powers) and the beauty psychiatrist Charlotte Manning (Peggie Castle) all them were in the party sponsored by Jack Williams before his death by a .45 gun.

What a fabulous closing sequence when the stunning Peggy Castle steals the movie in an unfortable stripping sexy scene, the blind Hammer doesn't realise that his secretary Velda (Margaret Sheridan) was deeply in love on Mike? This movie triggers a sequel "Kiss me Deadly" with Ralph Meeker as Mike hammer whereof I found much better, then the saga continues on few movies only and later became a Series with Darren Macgavin 58-59 and in the early eighties Armand Assante made an obscure remake followed Stacy Keach embodies Mike Hammer on a couple TV movies and an upcoming series and ends up on the nineties come out the latest three TV movies starred by Rob Estes, Kevin Dobson and Brian Keith closing the long saga.

Thanks for reading.

Resume:

First watch: 2023 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7.
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1/10
Hate and the end of all human decency
jromanbaker7 June 2020
I watched this film on YouTube as it is in the public domain. In the UK it was given an X certificate while ' The Wild One ' was banned. The latter was a warning against a group of bikers invading a small town. It does not condone violence and shows how mobs can get out of hand. It was a serious insight into cowardice towards mob control, while this disgusting film takes the attitude that one man can be the jury and the executioner. Not only that but a victim of said jury does a semi-striptease to save her life. The book and its author had a vile attitude towards women, and the camera revels in it. I have read the reviews and am appalled at certain attitudes expressed. This film degrades those who see it and get pleasure out of it. I give it a one because I cannot give it a zero. I am sorry for the women actors involved in this hateful project.
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Atmospheric
lucyrf16 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Fabulous atmosphere, deep shadows, Venetian blinds, femmes fatale, a picaresque plot that leads from weirdo to weirdo. Everyone in Film Noir lived in a tiny flat that was just one room with a bed and a cooker. And a window for the rain to beat against. 50s fashion was supposed to be terribly ladylike (read "frumpy"), but what the girls wore was soooooo sexy. Tight sweaters, tight skirts, high heels. Anyone would think that psychoanalysts were just running a racket to fleece or blackmail their clients, like fortune tellers. "I'm no swami with a crystal ball." Why, whatever gave you that idea? I must put you under deep hypnosis. (I like the guy who has been at college for 20 years - moving from one seat of learning to another. He must be very educated by now. I suppose he was really selling dope, but this is not made very clear.)
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4/10
Hammer Time
Lejink29 August 2022
I have just recently finished reading the source novel by Mickey Spillane for this movie. It was in fact the first of his Mike Hammer series of harder than hard-boiled detective thrillers. Now my old dad is, like me, a fan of Raymond Chandler, but when I asked him his opinion of Spillane, he dismissed him with one word "pornography". I get why he would say that as there is a lot of sex in the novel, but I still enjoyed the book and I was curious to see how it was represented on film back in the time when the Production Code still ruled.

I shouldn't have been surprised then at just how eviscerated it would be, for example the Bellamy twin sister's nymphomania is greatly down-played, the smuggling operation which acts as its sort of McGuffin changes from cocaine to jewellery and the climactic final scene (I won't spoil it by painting a picture of it) is also greatly watered down.

These alterations I could accept given the times but for many other reasons the film just doesn't work and that despite the present or the normally excellent John Alton behind the camera. Even he can only work with what he's given it would appear and he just can't elevate this low budget adaptation to what I had hoped for.

The biggest let-down has to be newcomer Biff Elliott as Hammer, who has all the charisma of a used match as he blusters his way around, wearing a belted raincoat it seems, in almost every scene. Peggie Castle does better as the femme fatale of the piece but her wiles are sadly wasted on our wooden hero.

The direction too is unimaginatively static and very studio-bound hence Alton's dilemma and if you want an idea of how cheaply made the film was, look no further than the device to cuts to shots of Christmas cards of all things, to indicate time passing.

Spillane's novels were very popular at the time and a well-made movie of his first book could well have led to a veritable cash-cow of follow-up features but it was no great surprise to me that this turned out to be the end of the line with the character for old Biff.

To paraphrase the old song, if I had a hammer, it wouldn't be this one...
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2/10
Bad! Don't watch
bob-601-8132144 July 2021
Saw it in Youtube and downloaded it to watch because it was a Mickey Spillane. UGH. Knew the culprit early on but this is not what makes it bad.

Why does any movie in BW get a high rating?
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8/10
So long, baby. Mike Hammer in 3D
MegaSuperstar11 December 2022
A gun fires through a half-opened door. A one-arm dying man crawls towards the camera while the chair where his prosthetic arm lies moves back unabling him to reach it. In the next scene a man climbs up the stairs to find his army pal shot dead. This is the first Mike Hammer film in 3D and must be seen in 3D to really appreciate its quality. Fortunately there is an exceptionally well restored 3D version that makes of this film a rare noir gem. John Alton photography is breathtaking, especially in the zenithal shots - view from the top of the Bradbury Building (that has appeared in many other films such as D. O. A.) is simply stunning in 3D - and use of shadows. Light contrasts are superb. Although Alton won an oscar for An American in Paris his photography work for black and white movies is powerfully shocking.

No "tricks" here like a fire torch splashed into the camera eye. Any 3D detractor should watch this movie. Not the usual 3D method of emphasizing certain elements and relegating others was employed but all of them are in relief instead. The opening scene with the firing gun is maybe the only license to that use. The result it is an exciting watching experience that brings the whole set to life by highlighting every single element. 3D experience upgraded.

As for the cast, Biff Elliot plays decently although wooden a tough, rude and violent Mike Hammer, boxer- type (he had been a boxer himself in his youth). Peggie Castle plays a psychoanalyst and does an excellent femme fatale, Preston Foster has a small but solid role as a police captain and Margaret Sheridan is the ever- efficient Hammer secretary (Perry Mason's Della Street type). Role of the dead man was played by real life single -handed Robert Swanger in his only screen appearance.

Based on Mickey Spillane's book I, the jury some facts were changed - cocaine traffic to jewelry smuggling, twin sisters' nymphomania and Hammer's final shot from spontaneous to in response to be almost killed.

Special mention for the 3D-inside-3D view-master type shot surprise gem. This scene only makes the movie worth watching in 3D only and an enjoyable experience for any 3D and view master fan. Do not miss it.
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10/10
The best Mike Hammer film!
jeezelbeezel10 February 2005
I consider this film to be the best one about Mike Hammer, with Biff Elliott's performance the definitive Mike Hammer. Harry Essex's script is excellent and contains many improvements on Mickey Spillane's novel. His direction is strong and imaginative, and he makes fine use of light and shadow. The camera work by John Alton is top-notch, as is the score by Franz Waxman. The cast includes many veteran players, as well as Peggie Castle in her memorable performance as Charlotte Manning. All in all, this is one of the finest private eye films ever made. Biff Elliott and Haary Essex should have received more opportunities. I have always treasured this film.
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9/10
Excellent combination of Spillane and Film Noir
JoshsDad28 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I love this film. The noir imagery combined with Spillane's no nonsense character Mike Hammer works marvellously to create a mood and feel seldom found in low budget detective films of the early fifties. It may not be 'The Maltese Falcon' but this film makes it's own solid contribution to the genre. Spillane is often criticised for alleged misogyny etc, but his 'dames' are way above their male counterparts in terms of cunning and intelligence. Poor old Mike Hammer, as effectively played by Biff Elliott, is blinded by the beauty of the mysterious psychiatrist whom he meets when investigating the death of an army buddy. When the penny finally drops his face is a picture. Good to see that 50s censorship did not force the film makers to omit the famous last line. A bona fide low budget classic.
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Biff Elliot doesn't cut the mustard.
youroldpaljim10 July 2002
This 1953 film is the first screen depiction of Mickey Spillanes famous detective character Mike Hammer and the only "film noir" I know of that was filmed in 3D. Other than that and the films memorable closing and opening scenes, this film isn't much. Most the cast is good, but the problem lies with the totally mis-cast Biff Elliot as Mike Hammer. He is to young and boyish looking. Ideally, Mike Hammer should be played by someone in their mid thirties or forties; old enough to have grown jaded and world weary, but still young enough to woo the babes and take the punches. Biff Elliot looks and acts like he just got out of detective school. Parklane productions blew it by casting Elliot, who not only wasn't the right type but an actor who never had any screen presence. No wonder he mostly never got more than bit parts after this. Being the first actor to play Mike Hammer is about the only role anyone recalls when his name comes up. Parklane did right in the next Mike Hammer film by casting Ralph Meeker. Even Robert Bray (MY GUN IS QUICK) made a more convincing Mike Hammer. In fact, even Armand Asante was better.
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10/10
My FAVORITE Mike Hammer!
profh-129 November 2019
I've seen pretty much every version of Mike Hammer on film over the decades, yet this somehow became my favorite! Biff Elliot is tough, brutal, unstoppable, yet also honest, loyal and incorruptible. Faced with an impenetable mystery-- HE figured it out! What a guy!

Margaret Sheridan ("THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD") also became my favorite Velda. Smart, dependable, and no slouch in the looks department. Preston Foster may also be my favorite Pat Chambers. He tells Mike to follow the rules... then goes out of his way to help him break them. What a pal!

When it comes to murder mysteries, I'm usually good-- but this one left me completely in the dark. It eventually made sense... after 6 or 7 viewings. But that's not what this film is about. It's all about mood, and suspense, and watching Mike steamroll his way thru suspects and beatings until he knows who killed his best friend... and what he has to do about it.

Among the supporting cast are Peggy Castle (the too-cool psychiatrist), Alan Reed (the mobster), Joe Besser (the elevator operator), Nestor Paiva (the bar owner), Elisha Cook Jr. (the innocent halfwit someone tries to frame as part of the mob).

This film is DARK, in more ways that one. Mike's office is in the Bradbury Building (also seen in such films as "MARLOWE", "BLADE RUNNER", and the Outer Limits episode "Demon With A Glass Hand") and is the scene of a BRUTAL fight scene near the climax.

WHY was this team not brought back for the other 2 Hammer films of the 50s-- or the 50s TV series? WHY has this fallen into public domain, without a proper video release? WHY is Hammer hated by so many critics, yet loved by so many fans?

For many years, I put up with a terrible TV print with commercial breaks. Now I have it on DVD, and I may never stop watching it.

Addendum / 11-19-2023: As of November 2022, ClassicFlix has put out the first-ever official release of this, a brand-new scan & restoration Blu-Ray with optional 4K and 3D versions (the latter requiring both a 3D player and TV). It's in WIDESCREEN, it's got crystal-clear picture & sound, it's absolutely-STUNNING, and it's long overdue.

And, it's got lots of extras, including the comparitively-inferior 1954 unsold TV pilot with Brian Keith. (I can see why that didn't go to series. The 1958-60 Darren McGavin series was infinitely-better. McGavin & Bart Burns are the only actors I currently like even more than Elliot & Foster as Mike & Pat!)
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typical...
gazzo-217 December 2000
This was a normal tough as nails PI on the hunt flick of the times...With many familiar faces, Nestor Paiva, Peggy Castle, John Qualen, Preston Foster, etc. There's nothing much that stands out, watch it on AMC or whatever sometime and you will swear you have seen it before, even if you haven't.

Point of trivia-Biff Elliott apparently lived in the Northern Maine town of Presque Isle(where I'm from actually), and word has it they premiered this flick there in '53! It was a big time celeb event, for a town of about 12,000 at the time-it hadda been as if the Super bowl had come to town!

** outta ****.
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10/10
finally restored in it's 3d glory
mmcgee28229 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I think I remember seeing this film on t.c.m. Years ago in 2d,but,with the 3D version all those gray and light shades, typical of black and white noir, now it's sculpted shades of gray. Even though I was disappointed either classic flix or studio canal did not include anaglyph version ,for 3D fans who did not have a 3d set up and the original now lost 3 track stereo sound was not recreated. It was still an excellent film. If The 3D archive archives had restored, this it would have been different. I wasn't aware that the actor that played the main bad guy,Kalecki ,played by Alan Reed, was Fred Flimstone's voice,. Normally that is the way Reed sounded,but it was less,It was an Xmas picture,the same way that,"Lady in the lake, was. Joe Besser show up as an elevator man,his voice would would be used in a 3d short released that year that was produced back in 1940. The main actor ,Biff Eliot, who plays Mike Hammer,this was his first big screen debut and only 3D film. This includes the actors interview and the discussion of the 3D camera.10/29/22.
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