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Appointment with Danger
Overlook Pick

Appointment with Danger

ALAN LADD as the U.S. Mail's ace agent smashes the biggest mail robbery plan in history!
57
User Score33 ratings
TMDB 5.716+19501h 29mEnglish
CrimeDramaThriller

Synopsis

Al Goddard, a detective who works for the United States Postal Inspection Service, is assigned to arrest two criminals who've allegedly murdered a U.S. postal detective.

Director
Lewis AllenFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Paramount Pictures1 production companies
Release
April 7, 1950Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 36
Alan Ladd
Alan Ladd
Al Goddard
Phyllis Calvert
Phyllis Calvert
Sister Augustine
Paul Stewart
Paul Stewart
Earl Boettiger
Jan Sterling
Jan Sterling
Dodie
Jack Webb
Jack Webb
Joe Regas
Stacy Harris
Stacy Harris
Paul Ferrar
Harry Morgan
Harry Morgan
George Soderquist
David Bauer
David Bauer
David Goodman

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
John Chard
Feb 23, 2014

Police Seek Nun As Witness In Downtown Slaying! Appointment with Danger is directed by Lewis Allen and written by Richard L. Breen and Warren Duff. It stars Alan Ladd, Phyllis Calvert, Paul Stewart, Jan Sterling, Jack Webb, Stacy Harris and Harry Morgan. Music is by Victor Young and cinematography by John F. Seitz. Al Goddard (Ladd) is a U.S. Postal Inspector sent to investigate the grim murder of one of his colleagues. There's a witness to locate and possibly protect, a nun, Sister Augustine (Calvert), and soon enough Al has to go undercover as a crook to infiltrate the gang responsible for the murder. Not only that, but they plan to steal one million dollars being transported by the U.S.P.S., clearly Al has a lot on his plate. Alan Ladd's last film noir (though it barely qualifies as such) is good entertainment that relies on hardboiled speak more than it does action or mystery. A great opening involving the murder is kind of a false dawn, in that the mood and visual strengths on show here are rarely reproduced during rest of pic. However, that is a small complaint in truth because it's so much fun to be around Ladd's Al Goddard. We quickly learn that he is basically a great cop but not much of a human being, since we know who did the murder from the off, we have to rely on Goddard's undercover operation for our suspense quota, which comes in spades. Goddard is constantly at threat of being exposed, he has to consistently think on his feet, have a quip or yarn to spin to deflect suspicion, so this keeps things spicy in the story. The strand involving Calvert's nun is a weak one, it's clearly a narrative device to smooth out Goddard's rough edges, but it never really works and that the writers turn her into a dumb ass late in the play is annoying. Another irritant is that Sterling (wasted) as Paul Stewart's (good villain value as usual) moll really doesn't impact on proceedings, she wanders in and out of the film promising to be a femme fatale, but it never happens and after playing out as a weak red herring she exits with a whimper. Some smart location work is on show, with the backdrop of pool halls and cheap hotels utilised to good effect by Allen and Seitz, and a couple of scenes really sock the jaw; literally in one case! But it never rises above being a routine cops and robbers based homage to the U.S.P.S. Inspectors. Thankfully Ladd is on form and delivers the best parts of the screenplay with a steely cold sharpness that positively tickles the fancy of noir lovers. 6.5/10

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