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City of Fear
Overlook Pick

City of Fear

A million eyes wide and wild with terror!
63
User Score32 ratings
TMDB 6.316+19591h 21mEnglish
Thriller

Synopsis

An escaped convict gets a hold of some radioactive material after his escape. Authorities desperately try to find the man that unknowingly is threating the lives of everyone in the city.

Director
Irving LernerFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Columbia Pictures1 production companies
Release
February 1, 1959Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 14
Vince Edwards
Vince Edwards
Vince Ryker
Lyle Talbot
Lyle Talbot
Chief Jensen
John Archer
John Archer
Lt. Mark Richards
Steven Ritch
Steven Ritch
Dr. John Wallace
Patricia Blair
Patricia Blair
June Marlowe
Kelly Thordsen
Kelly Thordsen
Detective Sgt. Hank Johnson
Joseph Mell
Joseph Mell
Eddie Crown
Sherwood Price
Sherwood Price
Pete Hallon

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
John Chard
Sep 22, 2015

It's all gone feverish in Los Angeles. City of Fear is directed by Irving Lerner and stars Vince Edwards, Lyle Talbot, John Archer and Steven Ritch. The latter of which co-wrote the screenplay with Robert Dillon. Music is scored by Jerry Goldsmith and cinematography by Lucien Ballard. "Last night a convict by the name of Vince Ryker escaped from San Quentin. After stealing what he believed to contain a pound of pure heroin ..... does not contain heroin, it contains Cobalt-60 in granular form." Cheap, compact but very effective "B" thriller from the tail end of the first noir cycle, City of Fear thrives on sweaty paranoia played out amongst Los Angeles locations. It's a ticking time bomb structure, convict man thinks he has a gold mine in his hands but actually holds something that is killing him by the hour. This lets in the police procedural aspects as the cops and scientists try to locate convict man and his radiation container. Urgent! Not only to save the convicts life, but also the city from probable disaster! OK, the science does not add up, nor does the fact that convict man never once gets to open the container to inspect his supposed golden haul! But the claustrophobic feel is high and the sense of doom married up to the helplessness of the protagonist does bring it into the noir universe. Ballard photographing is always a plus, though he does not get to show his considerable talents that much here, while Goldsmith, in one of his first musical scoring assignments, couples dramatic thrusts with jazzy reflections to great effect. Edwards (Murder by Contract) makes for a good noir loser. 7/10

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