Chicago Deadline
Chicago Deadline is a 1949 American film noir crime film directed by Lewis Allen starring Alan Ladd and Donna Reed.[3]
Chicago Deadline | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Lewis Allen |
Produced by | Robert Fellows |
Screenplay by | Warren Duff |
Based on | the novel One Woman by Tiffany Thayer |
Starring | Alan Ladd Donna Reed |
Music by | Victor Young |
Cinematography | John F. Seitz |
Edited by | LeRoy Stone |
Production company | Paramount Pictures |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 86 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $3.8 million[1][2] |
It was remade as Fame Is the Name of the Game (1966).
Plot
Ed Adams (Alan Ladd) is a reporter for a Chicago newspaper. By chance he is in a boardinghouse just when the body of a dead woman is found by a cleaning lady. The body belongs to a beautiful female tenant named Rosita Jean d'Ur (Donna Reed). Ed is drawn to the dark, mysterious woman, and manages to steal her diary before the law gets to the scene. In the diary Rosita has listed a total of fifty-four names.
The police declare that the cause of death for Rosita was a tubercular hemorrhage, but Ed suspects otherwise. His curiosity increases after calling several of the people listed in her diary and not one of them admits to knowing her. Ed talks to hoodlum Solly Wellman, G. G. Temple, the vice-president of a major trust company, and Belle Dorset, and they all deny any knowledge of Rosita. However, Belle Dorset is so shook up by the call that she immediately moves.
Ed gets a lead in this criminal conundrum and follows it to a party. There he meets Leona Purdy, an alluring blonde woman who once knew Rosita, but who fails to reveal anything about the deceased woman. Ed starts dating Leona, but he continues his investigation of what happened to Rosita. Although his co-workers think Rosita was a promiscuous woman, Ed is convinced that she was mistreated because she was compassionate. Ed's suspicions about the circumstances surrounding her lonely death grow increasingly, especially after both Wellman and Temple start to threaten him.
Tommy Ditman, Rosita's brother, eventually approaches Ed and tells him about his once so innocent sister: Rosita was only seventeen years old when she ran away from their home in Amarillo, Texas. She went to San Francisco, and Tommy tracked her down. When he arrived in San Francisco he found out that she had fallen in love with an artist, Paul Jean d'Ur. They married and moved to New York. Tommy didn't see his sister very much after that. He informs Ed that her husband Paul died in a car accident some time after their marriage went bad. Tommy says Rosita became lonely and bitter and had difficulty keeping a job.
A local gangster, Blacky Franchot, is the next person to contact Ed about Rosita. They arrange to meet, but Blacky is shot before Ed arrives. Blacky lives long enough for Ed to hear him utter the words "I loved her" before he dies. Ed reports his findings to the city editor, Gribbe, who writes a long gripping column about Rosita, making her life and fate sound sensational and mysterious.
Ed meets with Leona again, and this time she reveals that she and Rosita once shared an apartment in the same building as Blacky. Leona tells the story of how her roommate became involved with Balcky. He was very persistent in his pursuit of her. Rosita was attracted to him, although she was frightened of his connections to well-known gangster Wellman. She eventually fell in love with Blacky, and resisted the persistent advances of Temple, whom she met at a party. One night she returned home to find Blacky severely beaten, and they decided to move to the countryside together.
Leona explains to Ed that Rosita returned to Chicago when Blacky eventually left her, and started dating Temple. Ed goes to temple with the accusation that he ordered Blacky's beatings and had him run off, but Temple denies it. Ed slowly puts the pieces of Rosita's life together despite interference from police detective Anstruder. The detective insists on accompanying Ed as he meets with invalid Hotspur Shaner, for whom Rosita worked as a housekeeper under an assumed name. The man who introduced them, John Spingler, is reported murdered, and Ed uses the distraction to get away from the police.
Some time later Ed learns from Rosita's former maid, Hazel, that Rosita left Temple one year before her death, after a bitter argument in which Temple hit Rosita. As Ed leaves Hazel's building, he is knocked unconscious by two of Wellman's thugs. Ed awakens later in a junkyard. As a cover for his investigation, Ed takes Leona to a boxing match featuring fighter Bat Bennett. Bat and his manager, Jerry Cavanaugh, were the last names to be listed in Rosita's book, under Hotspur's address. Just before the fight, Ed finds Jerry and Bat arguing over the newspaper report of Rosita's death. When Bat leaves, Jerry reveals to Ed that Bat fell in love with Rosita while she was working for Hotspur. When Bat became distracted by Rosita, Jerry threatened to reveal her identity and hiding place to Wellman if she didn't end the relationship. Rosita reluctantly agreed to do this and then disappeared soon after she quit working for Hotspur. Temple is murdered, and Ed hears rumors that Wellman is responsible for the killing. Ed believes Temple used to finance Wellman's rackets. Ed finds Belle, who admits to him that Wellman originally hired Spingler to get rid of Rosita. Belle denies knowing of Spingler's duplicity until reading the newspaper account of Rosita's death the other day.
Ed now knows too much, and Wellman tries to kill him. He shoots at Ed. The police arrive to the scene to his defense, but Wellman escapes. Ed is shot and wounded, but manages to sneak out of a hospital with his co-worker Pig's help. He questions Belle, who has been arrested. Belle reveals the missing link in Rosita's history: On the night of their argument, Temple admitted to Rosita, whom he was supporting, that he hired Wellman to get rid of Blacky. During the ensuing argument between the two of them, Temple struck Rosita down and panicked when she appeared to be dead. Temple then called for Wellman to help him.
Ed leaves the police station with this information, when Wellman corners them in a parking garage. A shootout starts and Ed manages to kill Wellman in self-defense. At Rosita's small funeral, Ed tells Tommy the story of what really happened to his sister, and then burns Rosita's diary in the funeral parlor's "eternal" flame.
Cast
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Production
The novel One Woman was published in 1933.[4] Paramount bought the film rights and announced the following year they would film it as Are Men Worth It? starring Lee Tracy and Claudette Colbert.[5] In 1935 the project was listed on Paramount's schedule with Colbert still attached.[6] Charles MacArthur and Ben Hecht were reportedly working on a script with Benjamin Glazer.[7]|author=No film resulted. However the success of Laura (1944) and The Big Clock (1948), which contained similar story elements to the novel, saw it put back into development as a vehicle for Alan Ladd. Robert Fellows was assigned the job of producing and Warren Duff given the job of writing the script.[8][9][10]
Donna Reed had just appeared opposite Ladd in Beyond Glory. She was borrowed from MGM again to play his co-star.[11] Lewis Allen was assigned to direct.
Filming started on 29 July 1948 on location in Chicago.[12] The title was changed from One Woman to Chicago Deadline in November.[13]
Reception
Box office
According to Variety the film was the 37th most popular movie in the US and Canada in 1949 earning $2.1 million.[14] It earned $1.7 million the following year.[15]
Critical response
When the film was released Stephen O. Saxe, writing for The Harvard Crimson, recommended the film due to the acting, the action and suspense. He wrote, "Chicago Deadline is a picture with a Twist. It's not an O. Henry twist, either ... [the picture offers] a good plot with plenty of suspense, and, in due course, lots of action ... Chicago Deadline is not the sort of picture you'd go out of your way to see; but once inside, you won't walk out, either."[16]
Film critic Bosley Crowther dismissed suspension of disbelief in his review, "People who picture reporters as dashing young fellows, all named 'Scoop,' whose lives are just rounds of excitement in what such people call the 'newspaper game' will find the ideal of their illusion in the newshawk Alan Ladd plays in Paramount's Chicago Deadline ... But for those other level-headed people whose knowledge of newspaper men—and, indeed, of life in general—is a little more sober and sane, this fancy will surely seem a mish-mosh of two-penny-fiction cliches, recklessly thrown together in an almost unfathomable plot. Flashbacks and narrative descriptions will fascinate them no more than will Mr. Ladd's ridiculous posturing as a brilliant newspaper man-sleuth."[17]
In his review of the film, Dennis Schwartz, compared the film to Otto Preminger's Laura (1944), "In a Laura type of minor film noir, director Lewis Allen fails to make his love sick hero who is mooning over a corpse into anything but a superhero figure ... The film failed to make his cop character as inviting as Laura made Dana Andrews.[18]
Adaptations
The story was adapted for radio on Screen Director's Playhouse in 1950 with Alan Ladd reprising his role.
Accolades
Nomination
- Edgar Allan Poe Awards: Edgar, Best Motion Picture; shared with: Tiffany Thayer; 1950.[19]
References
- "Top Grossers of 1949". Variety. 4 January 1950. p. 59.
- "Top Grosses of 1950". Variety. January 3, 1951. p. 58.
- Chicago Deadline at the American Film Institute Catalog.
- "Unraveling a Life: ONE WOMAN. By Tiffany Thayer. 435 pp. New York: William Morrow & Co. $2.50. Latest Works of Fiction Latest Works of Fiction Latest Works of Fiction". The New York Times. 1 Oct 1933. p. BR15.
- "PROJECTION JOTTINGS: Mr. Fairbanks Sr. and Henry VIII's Wives -- Forthcoming Films Further Items". The New York Times. May 20, 1934. p. X3.
- "PARAMOUNT PLANS 276-FILM PROGRAM: To Produce 65 Features and 211 Short Subjects -- Year Divided Into Four Parts. GLADYS SWARTHOUT DEBUT ' The Crusades,' 'Peter Ibbetson' and 'So Red the Rose' Are Included in Schedule". The New York Times. June 14, 1935. p. 27.
- "NEWS OF THE SCREEN: Mr. LeRoy's Dream Comes True -- Miss Shearer's Next -- Hecht and MacArthur -- Miscellanea". The New York Times. June 27, 1936. p. 21.
- Schallert, Edwin (Feb 17, 1948). "Phyllis Loughton May Get Directing Credit". Los Angeles Times. p. 17.
- Thomas F. Brady (Feb 17, 1948). "Alan Ladd to Star in Paramount Film: Will Play Part of a Reporter in 'One Woman,' 1943 Novel by Tiffany Thayer". The New York Times. p. 32.
- THOMAS F. BRADY (Feb 22, 1948). "HOLLYWOOD DOSSIER: Politics and Art Mix in Academy Award Contest -- Preview of Things to Come?". The New York Times. p. X5.
- Schallert, Edwin (July 1, 1948). "Donna Reed Will Play 'One Woman' Title Role". Los Angeles Times. p. 23.
- THOMAS F. BRADY (July 8, 1948). "RKO TO LOSE 'ROBE' TO ANOTHER STUDIO: Report Frark Ross May Take Away His Rights to Novel -'Lorna Doone' Scheduled". The New York Times. p. 19.
- "Of Local Origin". The New York Times. Nov 23, 1948. p. 36.
- Variety 4 January 1950 p 59
- "Top Grosses of 1950". Variety. January 3, 1951. p. 58.
- Saxe, Stephen O. The Harvard Crimson, film review, November 16, 1949. Accessed: July 22, 2013.
- Crowther, Bosley. The New York Times, film review, November 3, 1949. Accessed: August 10, 2013.
- Schwartz, Dennis Archived 2017-12-12 at the Wayback Machine. Ozus' World Movie Reviews, film review, April 30, 2002. Accessed: July 31, 2013.
- Chicago Deadline at IMDb.
External links
- Chicago Deadline at the American Film Institute Catalog
- Chicago Deadline at IMDb
- Chicago Deadline at AllMovie
- Chicago Deadline at the TCM Movie Database
- Review of film at The New York Times
- Review of film at Noir of the Week
Streaming audio
- Chicago Deadline on Screen Director's Playhouse: March 24, 1950