Split Second (1953) Poster

(1953)

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6/10
Neat Little, Almost Forgotten, Thriller.
jpdoherty10 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
A reasonably good noir thriller is probably the best description that can be afforded SPLIT SECOND. An above average noir it was produced by Edmund Grainger in 1953 for the home of the great noirs RKO. Excitingly written by William Bowers and Irving Wallace it was crisply photographed in black & white by the great Nicholas Museraca and surprisingly directed in a good workmanlike fashion by Dick Powell. With no "A" list stars to speak of the picture is more than effectively played by a well chosen cast headed by Stephen McNally, Paul Kelly and Alexis Smith.

Two escaped convicts (McNally & Kelly) hijack a car with two occupants (Alexis Smith & Robert Paige), waylay another carrying two more people (Jan Sterling & Keith Andes) and along with an old prospector (Arthur Hunnicutt) hold them all hostage in a ghost town in the Nevada desert. The town has been earmarked and cleared by the military for the testing of an Atomic bomb in a few hours time. This the captors learn from the radio and are confident of leaving on time. In the meantime Kelly is badly wounded from a gunshot he received in his prison escape bid and must have a doctor. McNally finds out that Smith's estranged husband (Richard Egan) is a physician and inveigles him by phone to come to the hideout or his wife will be killed. Things for the hostages don't go too well with poor attempts at escape and the savagely violent and somewhat psychotic McNally beating Andes to a pulp and shooting dead Smith's lover (Paige). Suddenly the radio announces that the bomb test time has been moved up and will now go off an hour earlier. It becomes a race against time now to get off the site. Leaving the hostages to their fate in the town a scurrying McNally, his fellow fugitive and a fearful Smith, who pleads to go with them, take off in the car but drive onto the actual bomb site itself instead of going in the opposite direction. The picture ends with the massive A bomb explosion, McNally and company perishing in the car and the hostages all surviving after taking refuge in a cave.

The cast do an admirable job with a nicely written screenplay. McNally is particularly good applying himself assiduously to playing what he always played best that of the sneering, unscrupulous and mean spirited villain. Paul Kelly - who never gave a bad performance - is also good as McNally's softer hearted partner in crime. But something of a revelation is Alexis Smith! Smith an actress who for years was buried in inane glamour roles at Warner Brothers brings much to the table here in SPLIT SECOND. Her panic driven character, continuously on the verge of cracking up, is an incisive and inspired piece of acting. Who would have thought she had it in her? It is the best thing she ever did!

With brilliant cinematography, good performances, an exciting screenplay all wrapped in a fine dramatic and atmospheric score by RKO's resident composer Roy Webb SPLIT SECOND comes across as a fairly rewarding visual experience.
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8/10
It only takes a split second decision to change your life
RJBurke194230 May 2008
As the credits rolled across the opening scene, I lost interest in the words as I tried to figure out what I was looking at: a high angle shot of a shimmering expanse that looked like slick, crazy paving, and with muted, keyed lighting spilling down the screen centre, almost like a searchlight. I blinked more than once, trying to focus properly, and then saw the two, long, moving shadows that eventually resolved to the silhouettes of two men running towards me, on what now showed itself to be the cracked and parched desert earth. As they disappeared off camera, I knew those men were running for their lives...

From that superb opener, the rest of this story unfolds with relentless fury as the two – escapees from a penitentiary – join a third, with an escape car, and set off to retrieve a cache of cash from a secret location. The convicts are Sam Hurley (Stephen McNally, in one his best roles), Bart Moore (Paul Kelly) with a bullet in his stomach, acquired in the break-out, and Dummy (Frank De Kova) who only says what he wants with a gun.

The three stop for gas where Hurley quickly displays his psychopathology when he casually kills the attendant who resists; Hurley's action is almost like swatting a fly. They wait then for their next victim – because the cops are looking for three escaped cons, and they want to cover their tracks.

A large limo pulls in for gas, and the cons force their way into the car where Kay Garven (Alexis Smith) and Arthur Ashton (Robert Paige) are in the throes of a love affair that, from the intro between the two a few scenes earlier, appears to be going sour. So, the whole party continues under Hurley's surly orders and direction. That is, until they run out of gas – something Kay forgot to tell Hurley, much to his displeasure. So, they sit at the road side, and wait for another useful victim...

And that soon arrives in the form of Larry Fleming (Keith Andes), a well known news reporter and Dottie Vale (Jan Sterling), an attractive blonde down on her luck and just hitching a ride with Larry. So, when they stop to help Kay who was acting as bait, Hurley once again steps in to step on Larry's plans this time. Good job Larry had a much bigger car – a station wagon that can accommodate all seven of them.

Hurley then tells Larry to drive to a ghost town in the desert where he will link up with another con with another vehicle, due late that night. But first, he has to get Bart fixed up, get that bullet out with the help of Dr Garven (Richard Egan), Kay's estranged husband. Hurley calls the doctor on a phone and tells him he'll kill Kay if he fails to come and fix Bart...

The last piece of the setup falls into place when Larry tells Hurley that the ghost town is only a mile from ground zero: a nuclear test is due for detonation at 6 the next morning. Hurley doesn't care: he's got plenty of time, he thinks. Unknown to all of them, however, that time is changed to 5 a.m. to take advantage of the good weather.

With that all in place, the action is then contained on a single stage for the next hour, as the clock ticks down to zero hour and as Hurley waits to get Bart fixed. Later, old Asa Tremaine (Arthur Hunnicutt) turns up to provide pivotal support for the other hostages, and almost steals the show, for my money.

Director Powell – one of my favorite film-noir actors – does an excellent job as a first-timer behind the camera: well done interlaced editing as the separate stories are shown and eventually come together at the ghost town; appropriate black and white photography; and a well constructed claustrophobic mise-en-scene in the ramshackle bar in the ghost town – reminiscent of that rundown hotel in Key Largo (1948) as the hurricane approaches. Add to that the standard footage showing the preparations to detonate an atom bomb, and the viewer is set for a taut nail-biter.

McNally surpasses all in this film and delivers some of the best lines, along with Jan Sterling. Paul Kelly is very effective as Hurley's older friend – but one who begins to question Hurley's judgment. And Frank De Kova is chillingly dangerous, at all times. Alexis Smith is the quintessential, low-life femme fatale, who makes the fatal error of hitching a ride with Hurley. Keith Andes is credible but somewhat wooden, to be kind, but does show the spunk of heroes when danger beckons. Arthur Hunnicutt is, as usual, the consummate old-timer of the desert – and has the means to save the hostages from nuclear annihilation. Lucky for them.

There're a number of themes, of course: greed, loyalty, and courage being the obvious ones. It's the interaction between Hurley and Bart Moore, however, that's fascinating: Hurley, a psychologically damaged WW2 veteran who can't stop killing but who recognizes something he needs in Bart's presence, almost like a brother. Or, was it just the money?

It's a B movie, for sure, but it's one of the best I've seen. Recommended for all film noir fans.
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7/10
Between the devil and the bright red bomb
krorie11 April 2006
The success of this film is due largely to Dick Powell's analogy that international violence is caused by many of the same forces that trigger personal violence. Some might say the nation is the individual writ large. His pairing a detonation of an atomic bomb in preparation for a possible conflagration that would eliminate the human race with the escape from prison of a perverted hostile trio of killers hiding out in a deserted western town is indeed inspired. Add to this a clever, telling script written largely by Irving Wallace, who knew how to make today's headlines into entertaining stories, and the result is a near classic film for its genre.

Some of the best lines are given to Jan Sterling in the role of a good-hearted showgirl, Dottie Vale, who has been ridden around the block a few times. At one point in carefree desperation, she states, "looks like we're caught between the devil and the bright red bomb." The ambiance of nonchalance permeates the entire picture and helps to lessen the tension caused by the split second count down to Armageddon for the trapped hostages. Even more humor is introduced with the character of Asa Tremaine, a desert rat who attempts to tell tale tales not unlike those of Gabby Hayes. Played by Arkansas native Arthur Hunnicutt (He's buried at Greenwood, Arkansas), Asa plays a pivotal role near the conclusion of the film. The rest of the cast is effective, particularly Stephen McNally who portrays the coldblooded killer with no morals, Sam Hurley.

The story involves an assortment of personalities who unwittingly end up kidnapped by three escaped killers, one of them mute. The root of the plot centers on the interaction among the characters when their lives are stripped bare with doomsday at 6:00 am the next morning. They hold up in an abandoned town waiting for a doctor who happens to be the husband of a two-timer who is traveling with her boyfriend, now held captive by the killers. There is much edge-of-the-seat suspense as the clock clicks away the minutes.
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7/10
tense drama about escaped prisoners and their hostages
blanche-28 July 2006
Dick Powell directed "Split Second," a B movie starring Stephen McNally, Jan Sterling, Alexis Smith, Richard Egan, and Keith Andes, about prisoners and their hostages at an atomic test site. McNally, meaner than dirt, escapes from prison with two cronies, one of whom has been badly wounded. At a gas station, they carjack Alexis Smith and her boyfriend. Before long, they have four hostages: Keith Andes, who plays a reporter, and Jan Sterling, who hitched a ride with him. They all wind up on an atomic bomb test site, and there's a test set for the next day. Since Smith's husband is a doctor, McNally calls him and threatens him with Smith's life so he will come and save the wounded escapee.

Seen with modern eyes, the friendship between McNally and his injured pal is something to behold. McNally is a cruel tough guy who becomes gentle when speaking to his friend, and he's determined not to leave him behind. Hmm...Smith plays a desperate, selfish society woman who will do anything - underline anything - to get McNally to take her along when he leaves, and in fact, they have a protracted time together in another room. She's a real piece of work. Richard Egan is her husband, who arrives to help the wounded prisoner.

Keith Andes was a handsome man whose major career was in television, and his beautiful singing voice and masculine presence brought him Broadway success as well, particularly costarring with Lucille Ball in "Wildcat." He does a good job here, as does Jan Sterling - they are two people caught in bad circumstances who happen to fall in love along the way. McNally is as nasty as they come - another fine performance of a low-life.

Dick Powell's direction has a sure hand, and the tension mounts as the film continues. A very good B movie, but not really noir as has been suggested.
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7/10
The Intensity Never Flags
rsoonsa10 February 2005
A cultish favourite that is often listed for festivals of noir cinema, this work is less noirish than it is a clear example from the Theatre of Paranoia, as Dick Powell's directorial debut melds nuclear explosion fears with a harrowing hostage taking by two escaped convicts fleeing from a Nevada prison. The escapees, Sam (Stephen McNally) and Bart (Paul Kelly) helped by mute accomplice Dummy (Frank DeKova), take refuge in an abandoned mining town, Yucca Flats, along with six prisoners they acquire during their flight, despite their awareness that the desert ghost town is within a nuclear test site where, in 12 hours, a combined military force is going to explode a tower bomb armed with high grade scissile plutonium. Sam believes that he and his two cohorts will be able to evade a protective army encirclement and escape prior to the blast, but the uncertain fate of their hapless hostages becomes the oarlock for the film's atmosphere of foreboding, with one of the captives, played by Keith Andes, being a Las Vegas newspaper reporter who has full knowledge of the detonation schedule, having attended planning meetings during which the event's timetable has been established. For Powell's initial effort as a director of features, he selects a restricted environment, essentially one large room, as setting for his limited cast of featured players, with the bomb becoming an additional sinister character. Following initial lead-in scenes, including interlaced footage of actual soldiers and military technicians, a stage mise-en-scène is established to advance an atmosphere of suspense. Unfortunately, Powell's inexperience with ensemble work is in evidence here, as the players generally simply take turns with their readings, although a good deal of the dialogue is trenchant. The villainous trio is the most interesting of the cast, with Kelly taking the acting palm for his strong yet low-keyed turn as one who was severely wounded during the prison break, and Richard Egan is convincing as a physician gulled into performing surgery upon Bart, while on the distaff side talented Jan Sterling handily outperforms the histrionic Alexis Smith. Shot in California's Mojave Desert, this work benefits from R.K.O.s master cinematographer with black and white stock, Nick Musuraca, and there is an appropriately dramatic score from Roy Webb. A nearly fatal flaw is the artless attitude toward the dangerous effects of atomic radiation, although it must be conceded that applicable information available to the general public was scanty at the time of the film's production.
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7/10
A noted cinema-noir, conspicuously well-acted and exciting
silverscreen88811 June 2005
This film does not receive the notice it deserves; it is discovered by those who are intrigued by its gimmick--the action takes place in a ghost town scheduled to be destroyed by am atom bomb very soon, and then appreciated for its many good B/W dramatic scenes and other qualities. Dick Powell directed this taut thriller with his usual combination of good work with actors and very competent camera work. There are two plots going on here, very well interwoven by my standards; the normals in the film, led by a reporter beautifully played by Keith Andes, are those trapped in the doomed desert town; the other are those who are holding them there, a gang of criminals led by nice-guy and talented actor Stephen McNally as Sam Hurelyy-- an escaped criminal whose brutality becomes a metaphor for the violence of an Age that needs to resort to atom bomb tests. Others in the stellar cast include Jan Sterling, Robert Paige,,Alexis Smith, Richard Egan, Arthur Hunnicutt, Paul Sewart and Frank de Kova. What sets this film apart I suggest is the brutality theme which is deftly made to affect to every member of the cast. McNally as Sam Hurley equates life with getting to do whatever he wants to do to anyone by force. Andes is his chief antagonist, not a great pugilist but a brave fighter for another way of thinking about life--get on with your own priorities and leave others alone; this is by the way the real definition of heroism-- being a man who can do something well. Alexis Smith plays a woman who to save her life ignores what Hurley is, and the fact that is is planning to leave the others behind when he uses their car to drive away--with the atom bomb taking care of the evidence. The characters here are all unusually well-developed, from hoofer Sterling who distrusts everyone until Andes takes a beating from McNally protecting her, to Paige who underestimates Hurley to Hunnicutt who has run away from people to Egan who comes to save the wife who has been cheating on him, a woman who can't take responsibility, to Stewart who has to act against Hurley, his partner. It's difficult to recommend too highly such an extraordinary blend of noir brinksmanship, excellent dialogue and memorable confrontations. This drama only needed one change, to be made from the point of view of the reporter not the gang leader, to be a great film. It would lose a lot in color since it's superb black-and-white noir drama, from an age of much-better acting, writing and directing.
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7/10
Well-Directed, Well-Written & Perfectly Paced
seymourblack-12 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
"Split Second" is a punchy, powerful and hardboiled hostage drama that belies its B-movie status by being well-directed, well-written and perfectly paced. The constant danger that the hostages are in contributes to the threatening atmosphere of the piece and it becomes even more tense as the deadline for the detonation of an atomic bomb approaches. Nicholas Musuraca's exceptional black and white photography is very effective and the whole drama comes to a really shocking and spectacular climax.

Newspaperman Larry Fleming (Keith Andes) is at an Army camp in the Nevada desert preparing to report on an atomic bomb test when he's suddenly reassigned to another story. Two guards had been killed when a couple of convicts, Sam Hurley (Stephen McNally) and Bart Moore (Paul Kelly) had broken out of Carson City prison. On his journey to Carson City, Larry stops at a diner where he meets blonde nightclub singer Dottie Vale (Jan Sterling) who's on her way to Reno. He agrees to give her a lift and shortly after beginning their journey, the couple are waved down by Sam Hurley who holds them at gunpoint and demands that he and the people with him be taken to the desert ghost town called "Lost Hope City" where he plans to hide out for a short period before going on to meet another gang member and share out $500,000 in stolen cash.

Before he'd confronted Larry, Sam and seriously-injured Bart had met up with fellow gang-member Dummy (Frank de Kova) and after killing the proprietor of a filling station, hijacked the car in which doctor's wife Kay Garven (Alexis Smith) and her boyfriend Arthur Ashton (Robert Paige) were travelling. Their journey, however, had come to an unexpected end when they ran out of gas. When the group arrive at their destination, the hostages are confined to one of the buildings to await the arrival of Dr Neal Garven (Richard Egan) who Larry had earlier phoned to come and attend to Bart.

The ghost town is located close to the nuclear test area and the group are aware that the bomb is due to be detonated at 6.00am on the following day. A talkative local prospector called Asa Tremaine (Arthur Hunnicutt) arrives unexpectedly and is also held hostage by Sam and Dummy. Sam then kills one of his captives before the arrival of Dr Garven who, after operating on Bart, says that it won't be safe to move him for at least another day. The tension builds as it's discovered that the fuel tank in Larry's car is leaking and the sound of a siren warns that the time for the bomb to be exploded has been brought forward by an hour.

Stephen McNally is convincingly dominant as decorated war veteran Sam whose attitude to killing was, no doubt, influenced by his wartime experiences and the other members of the cast also do well with Alexis Smith and Jan Sterling providing the best performances. Alexis Smith, as the unfaithful wife of Dr Garven exemplifies most strongly, the overriding air of desperation that prevails amongst the entire group during the tense hostage situation. She's sophisticated and snooty and regards Dottie as her inferior. This is remarkable as Kay has no integrity or decency and will do absolutely anything to save her own skin (including giving herself to the killer who's holding her captive). Dottie, on the other hand, shows considerably more character when she's propositioned by Sam. Richard Egan, as the doctor, is quietly courageous as he puts himself in great danger to help a patient and to try to save Kay's life, even though he doesn't want her back.
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7/10
Desperate Hours in the Shadow of the Bomb.
rmax3048234 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Two men, Steven McNally and Paul Kelly, the latter with a bullet in him, escape from prison and are picked up by their associate known as "Dummy". The plan is to hide out overnight in a desert ghost town, then pick up a quarter of a million dollars stashed away somewhere and run off to a tropical beach. Kelly won't be able to make it without medical attention. He's been pretty badly shot up.

The three miscreants pull their stolen car into a remote gas station, murder the proprietor, and hijack the next car that pulls in, along with its two occupants, the adulteress Alexis Smith and her insurance-salesman boy friend on their way to Reno.

Now a party of five, they run out of gas, flag down the next car that comes along, and hijack the car and ITS two passengers, reporter Keith Andes and his newly found friend, nihilarian Jan Sterling.

They turn off the main road and hunker down in a bleak and dilapidated village where they take the sole resident, prospector Arthur Hunnicutt captive as well. Smith's husband, Richard Egan, is a doctor back in Los Angeles. Before leaving the highway, McNally rang him up, told him the situation, and threatened to kill Smith if Egan didn't immediately fly to Las Vegan, rent a car, and join them at the ghost town in order to treat the wounded Paul Kelly.

So now -- I hope you're following this -- there are three criminals holding a diverse group of six people hostage. The village in which they are ensconced is about to be vaporized by an atomic bomb explosion at six the next morning. Everyone knows about it, and they react with different degrees and modalities of anxiety.

That's basically the set up. The drama works itself out in the broken-down, dusty bar room. The social dynamics resemble those of "The Desperate Hours." The overall structure is more like that of "The Petrified Forest." The thermonuclear device is added as lagniappe, reminding us of lines from Edgar Allan Poe's poem, "The City in the Sea" -- "While from a proud tower beyond the town, Death looks gigantically down."

McNally plays it tough. He shoots and kills the insurance salesman for challenging McNally's manhood as McNally takes the terrified Alexis Smith into the kitchen "to make coffee" and closes the door behind them. But McNally has a soft spot too -- for the suffering Paul Kelly, lying there with a hole in his belly.

There are a good number of other dramatic incidents (well photographed by Nicholas Musuraca, who knows his way around a noir setting). McNally gets to beat hell out of reporter Andes and sluttish Jan Sterling. He pistol whips the grizzled Arthur Hunnicutt. He extorts a sexual favor out of Alexis Smith -- who looks just fine, by the way.

The ending has a car hurtling around the dusty roads like a rat trying to escape a cat, a few minutes before the blast. For the survivors -- all of them worthy citizens -- there is a deus ex mine shaft.

The situation generates a good deal of tension. The performances are up to professional standards. The direction -- Dick Powell's initial effort -- is functional if not memorable in any way. None of the characters is given any complexity, with the possible exception of McNally and his concern for his wounded partner ("the only friend I ever had") and, surprisingly, the insurance salesman who should have been painted as a gutless lounge lizard but instead heroically puts his life at risk to save the honor of Alexis Smith. It's a mistake on his part because he loses the bet, and Smith, it turns out, isn't worth it anyway. The salesman's dead body lies outside, and there are a couple of half-joking references to it. "Keep that up and you'll be shaking hands with Ashley." It's too modest to be a masterpiece, but I enjoyed it from beginning to end.
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9/10
Tense thriller set at the dawn of the atomic age.
senortuffy19 August 2003
Warning: Spoilers
It's too bad this film isn't available on VHS or DVD because it's one of the best thrillers from the film noir era. Thank goodness I taped it off the tv years ago - it's probably the most watched video in my collection.

Sam Hurley (Stephen McNally) is an escaped convict who grabs some hostages and is forced to hole up in a ghost town in the Nevada desert because all the roads are blocked for an atomic bomb test. They're one mile from ground zero and have less than twelve hours til detonation. Some premise, eh?

This film has an excellent cast of mostly "B" movie stars: McNally is perfect as the hard-as-nails convict. Jan Sterling plays a nightclub dancer, Keith Andes a reporter, Alexis Smith a coldhearted party girl looking for a divorce from her doctor husband, Richard Egan. Paul Kelly and Frank DeKova are friends of Hurley.

The interplay between characters as they contemplate death, either from Hurley or the bomb, is terrific.

******* SPOILERS *******

The ending of the movie is very memorable. The people running the test decide to set the bomb off an hour early and the bad guys are caught in town and it's too late to escape. But off they go anyway - Hurley, his wounded buddy, and the hysterical divorcee. The final seconds before the bomb blast are priceless as Hurley feverishly tries to drive the car for all it's worth. Alexis Smith is screaming and crying, and in the middle is Paul Kelly, looking back and forth at his traveling companions and realizing they blew it.

The others escape to an old mine shaft just outside town. After the blast, Richard Egan says, "Well, let's go see what the world of tomorrow looks like." They crawl out and all they can see is the smoking ruins of the town with the mushroom cloud rising in the background. Taken in the context of its time, 1953, this was a very eerie scene and one which must have made the audience pause.

Can you tell I like this movie?

¦^Þ
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7/10
Tense Hostage Drama with a Real Twist
mrb19807 December 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Most movies about villains holding hostages are like "Dial 1119", in which the police surround the subject building and try to negotiate with the kidnappers. Here, there are no police officers even close to the hostage scene--but everybody's in the blast zone of a planned nuclear test! Ultra-bad guy and prison escapee Sam Hurley (Stephen McNally, who played about the best bad guy in movie history), his accomplice Bart Moore (Paul Kelly) and mute henchman Dummy (Frank DeKova) kidnap several innocent people and hole up in a desert ghost town. Moore is wounded, so physician Neal Garven (Richard Egan) is summoned to tend to Bart. Grizzled prospector Asa Tremaine (Arthur Hunnicutt--who else?) blunders into the situation. All are held hostage while Garven operates on Moore...all the time, everyone knows that a nuclear test is scheduled in just a few short hours.

Dummy is overcome and beaten up, just as Hurley, Kelly, and their moll take off in a car, trying to outrun the blast. Well, they don't make it...and end up satisfyingly incinerated by the blast. Tremaine leads the former hostages to an abandoned mine, where the group rides out the bomb detonation.

I've always liked any movie that stars Richard Egan (although he plays a supporting character here), and Arthur Hunnicutt is worth the price of admission in his signature role as an old miner. Look fast for Nelson Leigh as a scientist in a control room. Dick Powell directs with a sure hand in his directing debut, and confines most of the story to one claustrophobic room in the abandoned town. Catch this film if you get a chance--the plot is familiar, but the cast and story twist concerning the nuclear test makes it all worthwhile.
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8/10
Big man, he has Atom Bombs for breakfast!
hitchcockthelegend23 July 2013
Split Second is directed by Dick Powell and written by William Bowers, Irving Wallace and Chester Erskine. It stars Stephen McNally, Alexis Smith, Jan Sterling, Keith Andes, Arthur Hunnicutt, Richard Egan, Paul Kelly, Robert Paige and Frank DeKova. Music is by Roy Webb and cinematography by Nicholas Musuraca.

Escaped convict Sam Hurley (McNally) is on the run with his wounded pal Bart Moore (Kelly) and henchman accomplice Dummy (DeKova). Carjacking two lots of hostages, Hurley takes them to a ghost town on an Atom Bomb test sight figuring it's the perfect place to hole up. But with Moore in need of medical help, the test bomb set to go off in the morning and tempers frayed within the group, something is going to have to give...

A taut and sweaty noir, Split Second taps into the 50s fear of the bomb and explodes the character dynamics Petrified Forest style. The premise is simple, once the character introductions are out the way, we wind our way to a bleak ghost town and stay in the company of a disparate group of people for the remainder of the film. As the clock ticks down, with the bomb set to be detonated on the town at 06.00, the various characters introduce their respective traits into the story. The tension mounts and the over-spills are often nervy, sleazy and poignant.

The makers don't soft soap the situations, but they do dangle shards of sympathy. As is the case with Hurley, who is a cold blooded killer, we know and witness this, but his back story is that of a war hero, he also has a deep affection for his injured older pal, somewhere along the line a good man lost his balance. Dottie Vale (Sterling) is a dancer, street wise and aware of how to play the situation, but sadness resides behind her waspish tongue. Kay Garven (Smith) is a lost cause, she will do anything and trample on anyone to save herself. One of the best sequences in the film finds Garven throwing herself at Hurley, the rest goes on behind closed doors, but we know what happens and it adds spice to what follows in the final third.

Not all of the characters work for dramatic impact, such as Hunnicutt's talkative miner who wanders in to the plot at the mid-point (it's amazing how easy everyone finds it to get into this supposedly secure military site!), but the dynamics work wonderfully well. Weaklings, heroes in waiting, the forlorn, the foolish or the borderline psychotic, they all make for a potent and spicy psychological stew. The suspense angle of the impending bomb detonation is water tight, as is the ebbing away of Bart Moore, directer Powell never resorts to cheap tactics or clichés to keep the noose tight, and we are constantly wondering just who, if anyone? Will survive the ordeal.

Once daylight disappears and we leave the scorching Mojave vistas behind, night time envelopes the ghost town and ace cinematographer Musuraca brings his atmospheric magic. Webb scores it with dramatic verve and the RKO effects team (headed by Harold Wellman) do sterling work to pull it all together without cheap and tacky baggage. Powell gets great performances out of McNally, Kelly, Sterling, Egan and Smith, while his ability to not let the logic holes dominate the narrative belies the fact that this was his first directing assignment.

From the ominous opening shot of two men fleeing over sun-baked mud flats, to the thrilling and darkly tinged denouement, Split Second is a coiled spring waiting to explode. 8/10
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Underrated.
kstallings1005 August 2020
Small gem of a movie filled with faces you know. Glad I stumbled upon it today.
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7/10
What, No mention of Arthur Hunnicutt?
Shadow-618 December 2004
Warning: Spoilers
Every time this movie comes on TV I try to catch it. Stephen Mcnally is efficiently evil. He shows true compassion for his wounded friend. He's ready to risk anything to save him. Alexis Smith's character is the most despicable person in the whole flick. Jan Sterling, Keith Andes and Richard Egan are all typically noble good guys.

But the reason I watch this movie at every opportunity is Arthur Hunnicutt. He does another fine turn as a crusty old timer. Mr Hunnicutt has played this type of character so many times that he's made a science of it. His portrayal of Zeb Callowy in "The Big Sky' earned him an Oscar nomination. The old miner, who is the town's sole occupant, is yet another tall tale telling character for Arthur to sink his teeth into.

The movie is tight and exciting. The acting for the most part is just good, but Old Arthur pulls me in every time.
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1/10
Exploitative and Nasty
jromanbaker11 June 2021
In films like ' Children of Hiroshima ' and ' On the Beach ' the horror of atomic warfare were made in the hope that such warfare would never be unleashed on the world again, and even in ' Dr. Strangelove ' it was used as a warning against the death-wish of governments. Here in this repulsively ugly film it is used as a horrific gimmick using real footage of an atomic test in the USA and giving an audience the ' thrill ' of seeing people dying. No spoilers to describe how all this happened, except to say it involves criminals on the run, and for a great deal of its playing time concentrates on them. There is a lot of violence, but the greater violence is upon the psyche of those who would be affected by seeing it and dreading the ( real ) possibility that it could happen to them. The Netherlands was cautious and did not allow children to see it, raising the age to 18. Sweden banned it. In the UK it was simply given an ' A ' certificate where children would have gone with an adult and may have been traumatised for life.
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7/10
escaped cons take hostages into a blast zone
helpless_dancer27 August 1999
Three desperate escaped convicts flee into the Nevada wastelands. Along the way they kidnap 5 travelers and force them to hole up in a ghost town for one night. To complicate matters, the government is planning to detonate an atomic bomb early the next morning which will turn the old town into toast. Very tense drama with a nerve tingling finale.
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Surprise! This is exciting!
sobronx-427 October 1999
Stephen McNally, what a mean man. Boy, could he play the bad guy >and almost make you love him. Not to condone his actions in the >flick, but to say that he acted with bravado. He had the knack >for being mean. In this film, he needs to be the "man" to stay >alive, but fate has a way of making humans small. This story is >so tight and well done, that this is a keeper. Next time it's >run turn on the VCR and hit record. It's the kind of flick that >stands up well today by fitting in with the violent control >people will always display when they are criminals on the run. >Beautiful Alexis Smith and sultry Jan Sterling bring out the >animal instincts in the men of the cast. Their looks are just as >persuasive as their acting abilities. This is a "B" movie that >rates an "A+" for showing that it could be done with the right >chemistry of the cast, director and producer. I love this type >of flick!
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7/10
The Disappearance of Morality in the Atomic Age
ilpohirvonen9 December 2010
The genre of film-noir can be divided into three eras - generally speaking: the classic era (1940-1945), the postwar era (1945-1953) and the Cold War era (1953-1958-60?). Film-noir was always a genre about fear, moral complexity and desperation. When the WWII film-noir exuded postwar disillusions; the concrete war was over but it was still going on on social level: in our minds and in the society. What genre would fit more perfectly to the ages of paranoia and fear than the genre of them, film-noir. To my mind Split Second is the first Cold War film-noir - a statement which one could argue about because in the same year 1953 Samuel Fuller made a film-noir about paranoia and the fear of communism Pickup on South Street (1953).

Dick Powell was the star of the Hollywood musicals in 1930's. In 1940's he tried to change his image from a singing dancer to the new bad boy of Hollywood. In 1944 Edward Dmytryk directed Murder, My Sweet based on a novel by Raymond Chandler and casted Dick Powell to play Philip Marlowe - the greatest private eye of film-noir, but the performance by Powell is often left in the shadows of Humphrey Bogart's Philip Marlowe interpretation in The Big Sleep (1946). After the war Dick Powell had some experience from film-noir and he chose to try directing as well. Split Second was his debut of the six films he directed and I think he succeed quite well in it.

1950's was the age when the government of the United States made a lot of nuclear weapon experiments: in the deserts of US and in the famous Bikini island. This offered a chance to make a thriller around these kind of events and Split Second represents the attempt of transforming film-noir from its usual big city milieus to a deserted town in Nevada under the fear of the war. Three men have just escaped from prison, unaware of the nuclear experiments of the government. Soon the group of three takes a few hostages in result of getting a doctor because one of the escapees is injured. As time goes on in the deserted town the hostages start to lose their morality and the time before the explosion is running out.

The aesthetics of film-noir were often related to big cities like New York or Los Angeles and exotic milieus were always part of the genre but usually they meant bars in Chinatown, motels of Arabia or the cold streets of Shanghai. In 1950's many tried to transform film-noir to new milieus: to snowy conditions (On Dangerous Ground), to the narrow halls of a train (The Narrow Margin) and to the back seats of a car (The Hitch-Hiker). To me Split Second represents the attempt of transforming film-noir to deserted towns, which The Hitch-Hiker (1953) did as well, but Split Second also tried to bring film-noir to the Atomic Age.

There's no question whether this is a high quality noir or a B-class film. The latter can be seen in its conventional direction, low budget and it has got a great number of unknown actors. But the way I see it Split Second is alongside with all the b-class Mitchum films one of the bests. It's a great example of Cold War films and how the Atomic Age affected cinema. It's an entertaining thriller but also a fine survey of the disappearance of morality.
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7/10
SORT OF KEY LARGO IN THE DESERT
steve-667-1019011 September 2020
McNally is a real psycho and Smith is despicable. I really enjoyed this movie. Not perfect by a long shot but one that slipped under my radar until now. Richard Egan is always worth watching.
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6/10
Fantastic premise
Leofwine_draca17 June 2015
SPLIT SECOND is a tough crime thriller from the early 1950s with an absolutely fantastic premise: a group of characters are taken hostage by some desperate convicts who've broken out of prison and will do anything to get away. The problem? They're holed up in a ghost town in the desert which will shortly be obliterated when a nuclear bomb test takes effect.

I can't think of a better premise for tension building, so it's a shame that the suspense in this story is only so-so; former actor Dick Powell certainly knows how to shoot a good scene or two (there are some excellent brutal fights here) but the film lacks something overall. I think the music could have been a lot better in building suspense because it's all surprisingly subtle.

Still, there's plenty to like here, not least the performances. Stephen McNally was a popular movie heavy and his murderous character burns up the screen. The rest of the performers are well judged, from the sinister mute villain to the crusading reporter hero and the cheating spouse. The nuclear ending doesn't disappoint; it's a neat precursor to the '80s wave of nuclear blast dramas.
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7/10
While the plot is pretty familiar, it has a lot going for it....
planktonrules10 July 2011
Just off the top of my head, I can think of three Humphrey Bogart films that are highly reminiscent of "Split Second"--"The Petrified Forest", "The Desperate Hours" and "Key Largo". Yet, despite this being a very familiar sort of film, there is enough going for it to make it well worth your while.

The film begins with a jailbreak. The nation's most wanted man has escaped and he and two other crooks are hiding in the desert--near the nuclear testing grounds in Nevada. Along the way, they take several prisoners and plan on hiding out in the test area until just before the explosion. However, naturally, things don't go quite as planned.

As I said above, the idea of a bunch of crooks terrorizing a group of hostages is certainly not new. However, three main things make this worth while. First, the nuclear angle is new--and REALLY pays off great at the end of the film. In fact, the ending is great. Second, Steven McNally is a familiar face as a noir heavy--and here he is at his snarling best. Third, despite McNally's great performance, I really loved the character played by Alexis Smith--there is nothing like it and you just have to see what I mean. So what you have is a very taut film packed with nice performances and a knock-out ending. I might rate it higher, but as I said it's a bit familiar and the middle portion is a bit talky. Still....see this film.
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9/10
Excellent Atomic Age thriller
chris_gaskin12322 December 2004
Warning: Spoilers
I taped Split Second when it was shown on BBC2 one afternoon recently and was pleased I did.

Three convicts escape from prison and after picking up a motley collection of people as hostages, they end up in a ghost town in the Nevada Desert. What they don't know until it is announced on the radio is that this area is an atomic bomb test site with the bomb due to go off at 6am the following morning. When everyone wakes up early that morning, things get worse when the time of the test is brought forward by an hour, which gives them little time to escape. The people split into two groups with the two surviving convicts and the unhappily married woman trying to escape but don't survive and the rest going into the safety of a cave and survive.

This is an excellent Atomic Age thriller, which was well underway when it was made in 1953.

The cast includes an excellent performance from Stephen McNally and Jan Sterling, Alexis Smith and Richard Egan.

This movie is certainly one to look for. Excellent stuff.

Rating: 4 stars out of 5.
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7/10
Good
AAdaSC1 June 2009
A journalist (Keith Andes) is moved assignment from covering an A-bomb testing to report on a story about 2 escaped prisoners (Stephen McNally & Paul Kelly). On his way out of the testing range, he picks up a female drifter (Jan Sterling) and is then hi-jacked by the escaped convicts and their getaway driver (Frank DeKova), along with a married lady (Alexis Smith) and her lover (Robert Paige) who the convicts have previously hi-jacked at a petrol station. The group, under the lead of McNally, head into an abandoned town which is due to be destroyed by the bomb (6.00am is detonation time). Kelly is injured and needs a doctor, so Smith's husband (Richard Egan) is summoned under threat. He joins the group that night along with a lone drifter (Arthur Hunnicutt) who is wandering around.

The film then follows the alliances, rivalries and love interests that are formed within the group as we wait for the doctor to fix Kelly and we count down the hours before the explosion. Will the convicts, under the ruthless leadership of McNally, kill everyone? Does McNally intend to save anyone by driving them out with him?......and then.......the authorities bring forward the detonation time to 5.00am and the 5 minute warning siren suddenly sets off...........

There are a couple of moments when credulity is stretched, eg, the ease with which everyone remains unnoticed within the forbidden zone despite coming across a road block, and Egan's arrival at night. We have been shown the thoroughness with which the military has evacuated the area and set up blocks preventing people from entering the area at the beginning of the film.....maybe the American military are a bit dumb..........but who cares.

Its a film about the tense situation that a group of strangers find themselves in and its well acted.
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8/10
a tense little thriller
kidboots16 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Dick Powell's directorial debut is a tense little thriller that will have you on the edge of your seat.

Sam Hurley (Stephen McNally) is a prison escapee, who, along with a couple of his mates (including Paul Kelly as a wounded prisoner) manage to capture a few people and hold them hostage in an abandoned ghost town. Unfortunately the ghost town has been targeted as a nuclear testing site with an explosion due for 6 Am the following morning.

Alexis Smith (she kept getting better with each movie) plays Kay Garven who is on her way to Reno with boyfriend in tow (Robert Paige from Deanna Durbin's film "Can't Help Singing"). She is going to divorce her husband (Richard Egan). They are accosted at a service station by McNally and his gang and are forced to drive to the ghost town. Unfortunately they run out of petrol. As Smith says "Did you think I was stopping at the gas station to buy perfume. I had been planning to buy petrol!!!".

So they are forced to way-lay another car. Larry Fleming (Keith Andes) is a reporter going to Canon City to cover the prison breakout and Dotti (Jan Sterling) was stranded at the petrol station and was offered a lift.

When they arrive at the ghost town the film turns into a tense psychological thriller as people's true characters are revealed. Alexis Smith is great as Kay Garven a completely self centred woman who will stop at nothing to save herself.

Stephen McNally did play good guys but he was at his best playing pretty despicable characters ie., "Johnny Belinda". Jan Sterling plays Dotti, the obligatory tough girl with a heart of gold.

They know that the explosion is due for 6 AM the following morning ...what they don't know is that it has been put forward an hour.

Richard Egan plays Dr. Neal Garven, who makes a trip by plane and car to save the wounded escapee's life. That part is completely unbelievable - how would he have found his way out to that ghost town at 2 in the morning and how would he have got through the barricades??? The ending is exciting and laughable at the same time - completely in keeping with the times when nuclear fallout was not considered life threatening.
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7/10
A Race Against the Doomsday Clock
evanston_dad15 November 2017
With Donald Trump threatening to initiate nuclear Armageddon, movies from that previous era of nuclear obsession and fear of annihilation, otherwise known as the 1950s, have taken on a renewed urgency.

In "Split Second," a film dripping with figurative and literal anxiety about a doomsday clock ticking down to "0," a group of hostages holed up in a deserted mining town figure out how to make their escape before a nuclear test in the desert blows them all to smithereens. They're being held captive by an escaped con, played in a sweaty performance by Stephen McNally. The hostages are played by the likes of studly men Keith Andes and Richard Egan, hotsy totsy Jan Sterling and Alexis Smith, and comic relief Arthur Hunnicutt. Sterling gets all of the film's best lines, which is as it should be given her droll way with a one-liner. The TCM set up for the film stated that since none of the actors were big-time stars, there was built in suspense because any of them could be killed off. That's not entirely true, as the film pretty neatly divides the cast into good guys and bad guys, and the good guys survive while the bad guys get burnt to a crisp. But it is a pretty suspenseful movie anyway.

The ending is meant to be a happy one for the survivors, but of course knowing what we know now, all of them would be poisoned to death by nuclear fall out. It's hard to believe there was a time when our government regularly detonated nuclear bombs in the middle of the desert, and hotels in Las Vegas would advertise roof-top bars that would allow customers to watch the explosions. "Split Second" manages to be both cautionary and hopelessly naive at the same time, but I promise you'll get some bang for your buck.

Grade: B+
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5/10
Nuclear Noir
thejcowboy2215 February 2022
Warning: Spoilers
When you really sit down and think about outcomes in your life good or bad, the waiting aspect seemed the most difficult. A personal story comes into relevance here, Mother's Day 1975. My parents went away to Pennsylvania to visit my sister. They left me their station wagon for the weekend. My Father said, Don't do anything stupid with the car." I was working for a florist and it was my turn to deliver flowers that morning. I had 13 stops on my run. I started in Queens and worked my way to Nassau County. I figured I would be done by One o'clock in time to watch the New York Islanders playoff match on Television. With two stops to go in Valley Stream, the clock was spinning faster as one o'clock was shortly approaching. I had to make time so I stepped on the gas and slammed into a car which forced my car into a traffic pole. Thank goodness the seat belt saved me from smashing my face against the windshield. Within minutes the police showed up and the neighbors came out and surrounded the car. Thank goodness for my cousin Ira, who came to my rescue as we miraculously got the disheveled car started. I drove the car home and waited for my parents to return. The front of the vehicle looked like twisted steel. Oh, the waiting was excruciating. I've watched this Classic over and over again and I never get tired of watching this "group" hostage thriller. Basically, Three trigger happy, cold-blooded convicts escape to the Nevada desert taking hostages along the way. They end up in a Nevada ghost town, unfortunately, located near ground zero for an experimental nuclear blast, which is set to go off at 6 am depending on the weather. One of the three is wounded with a bullet in his gut. Bart played by Paul Kelly winces in pain as our villainous leader Sam Hurley (Steve McNally) barks out the orders wielding his pistol at the quartet of victims. The hostages are, recently divorced Kay Garven (Alexis Smith) and her newly acquired lover Arthur Ashton (Robert Paige), reporter Larry Fleming (Keith Andes), and the woman he just met Dottie played by Jan Sterling. An old weathered prospector who looks like he came out of a time Machine named Asa Tremaine (Arthur Hunnicutt) also joins the group. Richard Egan also appears in the film. Time and tempers grow short as the countdown begins in this hostage thriller. Physical violence and murder along the way, but the question is, will our hostages get far enough away in time? Strong performances from the cast as Steve McNally plays another heavy in a film. Arthur Hunnicutt tells tales of the west to his fellow captures as he goes on to break the stress of the impending doom. Alexis Smith plays a woman with zero integrity. Frank De Kova who plays the mute as part of the evil three convicts, you might recognize as Chief Wild Eagle on the comedy Show F-Troop. As for my situation and my Parent' return trip from Pennsylvania, The first thing they noticed was the wrecked car in the driveway. Despite another failure on my part, My Father was grateful I wasn't injured and no one else was hurt. When I think back it was the two hours of waiting that was the most painful.
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