The Norris Trucking Company has been the focus of several
unfortunate accidents, thanks to some generous use of stock footage from
Republic serials. But when Henrietta
Norris, heiress to the Norris fortune, meets her demise in an automobile wreck
along the same stretch of California highway that’s claimed so many gearjammers,
her father (Tom Chatterton) and husband Frank Denton (Michael Whalen) sit up
and take notice. (Ms. Denton and the
drivers all perished along Highway 13.
Get it? Because “13” is an
unlucky number. Hello?
Bueller?)
|
Robert Lowery and Dan Seymour |
Driver Hank Wilson (Robert Lowery) witnessed Henrietta’s
accident, and he’s soon paired up with apprentice trucker George Montgomery (Steve
Pendleton, billed as “Gaylord”)—who’s really a private investigator looking
into the matter at Denton’s request.
Montgomery is killed in a suspicious truck accident not long after, and
Hank is immediately fingered for the crime.
But Wilson is a right guy; it’s hard to believe he could be capable of
such mayhem; suffice it to say, there’s no shortage of suspects including Norris
personnel manager Mary Hadley (Maris Wrixon) and cantankerous garage/café owner
Bill “Pops” Lacy (Clem Bevans).
No one was more surprised than I when I watched
Highway 13 (1949) because this makes
the second “Forgotten Noir” in a row that’s actually a fairly decent little
B-picture. Tooling along at a crisp,
economical 58 minutes,
Highway has a
very good cast and was directed by journeyman William Berke (
Shoot
to Kill), who demonstrates with confidence that he knows his way around
a programmer (this puppy was shot in three-and-a-half days). Maurice Tombragel (whose contributions
include the serials
The Great Alaskan
Mystery [1944] and
Mystery of the Riverboat [1944]) gets
the credit for the screenplay, from a story by John Wilste.
In his write-up for
Highway
13 at
DVD
Talk, Stuart Galbraith IV is most laudatory—labeling the film “a genuinely
baffling mystery that keeps viewers guessing.”
Steve at the
Mystery File blog has a
dissenting opinion: “Most other reviewers of this film rate it a whole lot
higher than I do, but personally I don’t care for crime films in which the
culprit(s) is/are obvious…” I kind of
have to throw in with Steve on this one; the individual(s) responsible does
stick out like a sore thumb (when one of your suspects resembles the Gavin
Elster character from
Vertigo—not an
encouraging sign) but despite this (and a finale that’s a teensy bit contrived)
I’d still give the movie high marks (sometimes getting there is half the fun…even
if you have predicted the outcome).
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Mary Gordon and Clem Bevans |
Most of the time when I’m watching Robert Lowery in a movie
I’m trying to figure out why so many people thought he looked like Clark Gable. (Lowery was in last week’s “Forgotten Noir,”
Western
Pacific Agent [1950]—though he didn’t make it past the first
reel.) But props to Bob—he’s very
effective in
Highway 13 (I also
liked him in another Robert L. Lippert production reviewed on the blog,
Arson,
Inc. [1949]) and his chemistry with Monogram pin-up girl Pamela Blake
(she plays his love interest, a waitress named Doris) is astoundingly good. (Galbraith observes that Lowery resembles
Victor Mature more—I’m with him on this.)
The casting in
Highway is one
of its major strengths; it’s filled with old pros like Clem Bevans, Mary Gordon
(“Mrs. Hudson!”), and Lyle Talbot.
Talbot must have had one hell of an agent—he’s barely in the film and
yet he’s mentioned in the opening credits; character veteran Dan Seymour (as an
insurance agent named Kelleher) gets more screen time yet goes unbilled.
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Pamela Blake and Robert Lowery |
The short running time of
Highway 13 is also a plus—it zips by so fast you aren’t afforded
the opportunity to see where the seams show.
Galbraith also notes that “Lippert must have gotten access to the big
diner set from some other movie; it's too elaborate to imagine that it was
constructed for this film.” (I concur,
and thought the “Clover Café” background was very impressive for a
programmer.)
Highway 13 has resurfaced on DVD as part of the
Forgotten
Noir series now available at
The
Sprocket Vault and can also be rented from the new
ClassicFlix
Underground. (As to its noir bona
fides—DVD Talk says yay,
Mystery File
says nay…proving it to be one of the most elastic of movie definitions.)
3 comments:
Ivan, could I ask a huge-ish favor? Could you caption some of the stills you use? Some of us, well, me anyway, don't know every minor and/or character actor on sight.
glynis37 took advantage of the stillness:
Ivan, could I ask a huge-ish favor? Could you caption some of the stills you use?
Since your nickname references one of my favorite actresses (ah, Glynis...) your wish is my command.
Bless you, sir!
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