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Shield for Murder

  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
John Agar, Marla English, Carolyn Jones, and Edmond O'Brien in Shield for Murder (1954)
When a brutal police detective Lt. murders a bookmaker's runner for $25,000 in cash, a deaf mute sees him do it and now he finds he must kill again to cover his tracks.
Play trailer1:47
1 Video
77 Photos
Film NoirCrimeDramaThriller

When a brutal police detective Lt. murders a bookmaker's runner for $25,000 in cash, a deaf mute sees him do it and now he finds he must kill again to cover his tracks.When a brutal police detective Lt. murders a bookmaker's runner for $25,000 in cash, a deaf mute sees him do it and now he finds he must kill again to cover his tracks.When a brutal police detective Lt. murders a bookmaker's runner for $25,000 in cash, a deaf mute sees him do it and now he finds he must kill again to cover his tracks.

  • Directors
    • Howard W. Koch
    • Edmond O'Brien
  • Writers
    • Richard Alan Simmons
    • John C. Higgins
    • William P. McGivern
  • Stars
    • Edmond O'Brien
    • John Agar
    • Marla English
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Howard W. Koch
      • Edmond O'Brien
    • Writers
      • Richard Alan Simmons
      • John C. Higgins
      • William P. McGivern
    • Stars
      • Edmond O'Brien
      • John Agar
      • Marla English
    • 46User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:47
    Official Trailer

    Photos77

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Edmond O'Brien
    Edmond O'Brien
    • Barney Nolan
    John Agar
    John Agar
    • Mark Brewster
    Marla English
    Marla English
    • Patty Winters
    Emile Meyer
    Emile Meyer
    • Capt. Gunnarson
    Carolyn Jones
    Carolyn Jones
    • Girl at Bar
    Claude Akins
    Claude Akins
    • Fat Michaels
    Lawrence Ryle
    • Laddie O'Neil
    • (as Larry Ryle)
    Herb Butterfield
    Herb Butterfield
    • Cabot
    • (as Herbert Butterfield)
    Hugh Sanders
    Hugh Sanders
    • Packy Reed
    William Schallert
    William Schallert
    • Assistant D.A.
    John Beradino
    John Beradino
    • Gambler Being Booked
    • (uncredited)
    William Boyett
    William Boyett
    • Policeman Cooper
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Bray
    Robert Bray
    • Detective
    • (uncredited)
    Richard H. Cutting
    Richard H. Cutting
    • Manning
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Deacon
    Richard Deacon
    • The Professor
    • (uncredited)
    Duke Fishman
    Duke Fishman
    • Man in Crowd
    • (uncredited)
    Mickey Golden
    • Alley Crowd Member
    • (uncredited)
    David Hillary Hughes
    David Hillary Hughes
    • Ernst Sternmueller
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • Howard W. Koch
      • Edmond O'Brien
    • Writers
      • Richard Alan Simmons
      • John C. Higgins
      • William P. McGivern
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    6.81.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8bmacv

    Edmond O'Brien as bad cop in brutal Eisenhower-era look at police corruption

    In Shield for Murder (a movie he co-directed with Howard Koch), Edmond O'Brien plays a Los Angeles cop `gone sour.' Bloated and sweaty, he's a sneak preview of another bad apple – Orson Welles in Touch of Evil. In a pre-title sequence, he guns down a drug runner in cold blood, relieves the corpse of an envelope crammed with $25-thou, then yells `Stop or I'll shoot' for the benefit of eavesdroppers before firing twice into the air. When his partner (John Agar) arrives, there's only a few hundred dollars left on the body, and it looks like a justifiable police action – though O'Brien's shock tactics have already drawn the unwelcome attention of his new captain (Emile Meyer).

    O'Brien wants the money to buy into the American Dream – to put a down-payment on a tract house, furnished (oddly enough) right down to the table settings. It's a bungalow to share with his girl, Marla English, as well as a handy place to bury his cash in its yard. But a couple of things go wrong. First off, a local crime boss wants back the loot O'Brien ripped off and dispatches a couple of goons to retrieve it. Then, though there were no eye-witnesses to the murder, there was in fact an eavesdropper – an old blind man whose acute hearing picked up a sequence of shots that don't add up to the official story. When this good citizen decides to tell the police what he heard, O'Brien decides to pay him a nocturnal visit....

    Based on a novel by William McGivern (who also wrote the books from which The Big Heat, Rogue Cop and Odds Against Tomorrow were drawn), Shield For Murder embodies some of the shifts in tone and emphasis the noir cycle was showing as it wound down. Its emphasis is less on individuals caught up in circumstance than on widespread public corruption; its tone is less suggestive than ostentatiously violent. The movie ratchets up to a couple of brutal set-pieces.

    In one, O'Brien, knocking back doubles at the bar in a spaghetti cellar, is picked up by a floozie (Carolyn Jones, in what looks like Barbara Stanwyck's wig from Double Indemnity). `You know what's the matter with mirrors in bars?' she asks him. `Men always make hard faces in them.' While she eats, he continues to drink. When the goons track him down there, O'Brien savagely pistol-whips one of them (Claude Akins) to the horror of the other patrons who had come to devour their pasta in peace. Later, there's an attempted pay-off (and a double-cross) in a public locker-room and swimming-pool that ends in carnage. It's easy to dismiss Shield For Murder – it has a seedy B-picture look and a literalness that typified most of the crime films of the Eisenhower administration. But it's grimly effective – almost explosive.
    7abooboo-2

    No Miami, But Still Blues

    There are some similarities here with a great B-level film made close to 40 years later "Miami Blues". Both focus on desperate, lawless men with soft spots for a pretty, child-like woman, who abuse the power of a police badge in a violent, supremely ill-advised attempt to settle into a comfortable, anonymous existence in the "paradise" of America's suburbs. And as with "Blues", the last 30 minutes are as frantic and exciting and darkly comic as anything you will see.

    The film isn't perfect. There are weak links in the cast: Marla English is unremarkable as the trusting girlfriend, Herb Butterfield doesn't register as a pesky reporter (and John Agar's nagging conscience), and I found snarling Emile Meyer to be a disproportionately cynical police captain consumed with disgust for mankind. But Edmond O'Brien is suitably sweaty and hard-boiled as the corrupt cop (though damn, he is one puffy and bloated leading man), Agar is fine as his conflicted protegee (just before Agar moved into his mostly bad sci-fi phase) and Carolyn Jones spices things up big-time as a spaghetti loving floozy.

    Starts off looking sort of cheap and routine but it's one of those films that sneaks up and surprises you. Not bad at all. A little like Richard Gere's "Internal Affairs" too, come to think of it.
    8twhiteson

    Taut and well-scripted with a good performance by O'Brien

    Middle-aged "Detective Barney Nolan" (Edmond O'Brien) is a bad cop out to make a score for his retirement fund. He finds it by murdering a "bagman" bookie of a local mobster who was carrying $25,000 in mob-money. Nolan stages the scene to make it look like an arrest that deteriorated into an attempted escape, leaves some chump-change on the corpse, and pockets the $25k. Initially, it looks like Nolan will get away with his callous scheme and eventually retire to suburban track-house comfort with his much younger girlfriend, "Patty" (Marla English).

    However, he has three things going against him. First, he already has too many shootings "in the line of duty" for this one to be completely shrugged-off by his captain (Emile Meyer), the local crime beat reporter (Herbert Butterfield),and his fellow detectives. Secondly, the mob boss, "Packy Reed" (Hugh Sanders), wants his $25k and sends two goons (one of them a young Claude Akins)after Nolan to get it back. And, finally, there was a witness to the murder. Still, Nolan has his partner, "Sgt. Mark Brewster" (John Agar), who is willing to give his friend every benefit of the doubt, but as the evidence of Nolan's guilt mounts even Sgt. Brewster starts to wonder.

    The best thing about "Shield for Murder" is the character of Barney Nolan. He's a violent brute. The beast underneath the badge is never far from the surface. He murders for money. He roughs-up his girlfriend's boss for no reason other than his outrage at her skimpy cigarette girl costume. He brutally pistol-whips two men in front of a bar full of shocked and horrified patrons. Yet, we see glimpses of a man who was not always a monster- his sweetness towards his girlfriend and a scene where he lets a young shoplifter off the hook which was apparently a repeat of something he done in the past to good effect.

    Edmond O'Brien probably aged more quickly and badly than any leading man actor of his era. In 1939's "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" he was thin, had a mop of wavy hair, a pencil mustache, and the chiseled features of a handsome Hollywood matinée idol. Yet, within fifteen years, he was badly overweight, puffy-looking, and sweaty. It looks like he didn't give a hoot about his physical appearance which is unusual for an actor. In "Shield for Murder," though, O'Brien's disheveled appearance actually fits his character very well.

    However, his scenes with 19 yr old budding starlet Marla English are a bit of a stretch. While one can definitely see what an overweight, middle-aged man would like about Ms. English's "Patty"- she looks like a combination of young Elizabeth Taylor and Joan Collins- we have no idea what she sees in him. Ms. English is OK in the role, but her character could have been played by almost any young actress. It appears Ms. English was chosen by the producers just so they could briefly show-off her physical assets in that cigarette girl costume.
    7telegonus

    good cop goes bad

    I cannot say that this is one of the better films noir, but it's a good example of the way this kind of film was drifting in the early fifties: away from the studios; toward independent production; more cars, fewer subways; a vaguely documentary air, ala Jack Webb, rather than the more elegant stylization we associate with the forties; more outdoor scenes, fewer cramped rooms; and overall a movement away from the Gothic and toward a more contemporary, which is to say paranoid mood. Having said this, it ain't a bad picture. Edmond O'Brien (who also had a hand behind the camera) plays a basically decent and fair cop who gives in to temptation and steals some money from a bad guy. He pays dearly for his transgression. O'Brien is edgier and tougher than usual; the rest of the cast is okay. This is an extremely watchable film. It involves you more than most police thrillers. I enjoyed it thoroughly.
    7bob998

    Watchable

    This noir from the mid-50's is very watchable, even though it bears more resemblance to a TV series than a film. Some scenes could have been filmed by the unit that shot Dragnet for example. O'Brien is good in his sweaty beefy way that you remember from D.O.A., John Agar is stolid, Marla English capable but no more. The only standout is Carolyn Jones as Girl in Bar, and why her character has no name I don't know. She reminds me of Ann-Margret in Carnal Knowledge, that level of sad understanding.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Noland shows Patty the new model house, the sign out front says "Castle Heights Tract Homes". Castle Heights is an actual Los Angeles neighborhood where such homes were being built at the time. It is situated between Chevoit Hills, Beverlywood and the Santa Monica Freeway.
    • Goofs
      At the beginning of the movie, as Nolan pulls his first victim into the alley, the shadow of the boom mic is clearly visible on the wall behind them.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Capt. Gunnarson: [to police reporter] Write his story good.

    • Crazy credits
      Only the film's title and three stars appear at the beginning. All other credits are at the end.
    • Connections
      Featured in Noir Alley: Shield for Murder (2017)

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    FAQ13

    • How long is Shield for Murder?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 1954 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "Broken Trout" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Classictbone" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Pod okriljem zakona
    • Filming locations
      • Beverly Hills High School - 241 Moreno Drive, Beverly Hills, California, USA(as Union High School, poolside shootout)
    • Production company
      • Camden Productions Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 22 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.75 : 1

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