Hardened criminal repeatedly breaks out of Oregon State Prison, eluding police for prolonged periods afterwards.Hardened criminal repeatedly breaks out of Oregon State Prison, eluding police for prolonged periods afterwards.Hardened criminal repeatedly breaks out of Oregon State Prison, eluding police for prolonged periods afterwards.
Myron Healey
- John Omar Pinson
- (archive footage)
Don C. Harvey
- Det. Lt. Walsh
- (archive footage)
- (as Don Harvey)
Sam Edwards
- Wayne Long
- (archive footage)
Frank Gerstle
- Det. Fuller
- (archive footage)
Frank Richards
- Slug Bennett
- (archive footage)
Kate MacKenna
- Landlady
- (archive footage)
Rusty Wescoatt
- Mike Denike
- (archive footage)
William Justine
- Louie Feth
- (archive footage)
Allan Ray
- Larry Ogilvie
- (archive footage)
William Fawcett
- Truck Driver
- (archive footage)
Ed Colbrook
- Pete - Pool Hall Operator
- (archive footage)
Charles Victor
- Police Officer Rondeau
- (archive footage)
Robert Carson
- Dr. Hall
- (archive footage)
- (as Bob Carson)
Joyce Jameson
- Girl in Car
- (archive footage)
Mike Ragan
- Police Officer
- (archive footage)
Ed Hinton
- Prison Guard
- (archive footage)
Robert Bice
- Prison Guard
- (archive footage)
Gabriel Heatter
- Self
- (archive footage)
- …
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film was a reedited composite of the three-part "The Pinson Gang," including new footage and originally made for the 1955 first-run syndicated television series of the same name by Visual Drama, Inc., which also produced the series. This full-length feature derivative premiered on January 19, 1955 at the Paramount Theater in Boston before opening nationally.
- GoofsPinson, after being captured, explains to Walsh (via flashback) that he returned to consciousness after having been buried by Bennett and dug himself out of the shallow grave with his hands. There is no explanation to how Pinson recovered so quickly from his gunshot wound in doing so.
- Quotes
Det. Lt. Walsh: You know what I figure?
Det. Fuller: What?
Det. Lt. Walsh: I think maybe we pulled a boner!
Det. Fuller: That's Long, alright, but he's alone in that truck.
- ConnectionsEdited from Gang Busters (1952)
Featured review
... the series of shorts at MGM during the 30s and 40s, comes this B crime feature derived from early television, featuring not one but two introductory hosts. The first tells us that we shouldn't consider the star of the film to be a hero, the second telling us just how interesting said anti-hero is. Somewhat conflicting messages, are they not?
This is roughly - and I mean very roughly - the story of John Omar Pinson, a desperate criminal for sure, an escapee from Oregon State Prison for sure. The rest - I'm not so sure. In this film he escapes from prison twice, is buried in a grave only to later have the grave found empty, and is idolized by an incompetent but sociopathic hood named Wayne Long - he actually did exist - who is released from prison and commits daring cold blooded crimes on the off chance that Pinson is not dead, will read about the crimes, and contact him so he can be his partner in crime.
If any of this is true, Oregon should have redone how it assigns past escapees to jobs in the prison where they can easily escape yet again. Because it just keeps happening! Also, apparently Pinson DID kill a cop when he escaped the first time. Why was he not executed for that? I'm guessing that there was no concrete proof that could tie Pinson to the crime, but it was assumed he did it, so it is in the film.
One distinguishing feature is that there are no female cast members, no romance whatsoever. But the movie poster shows Pinson, in disguise, grabbing a screaming scantily clad young woman, as though there is some kind of female involvement. That is merely a still from the movie where Pinson steals a car from a couple parked on lover's lane and lasts about ten seconds, probably meant to mislead moviegoers into buying a ticket.
This has a spartan and semi-documentary style to it, and it is very engaging and for sure a memorable story. Myron Healy plays Pinson as a cool clever criminal. Sam Edwards plays Long as the whiny devoted but incompetent follower. The actual Pinson was paroled some time before 1975, died a free man in 1997, and actually expressed regret for his crimes at the end of his life. Not the end you'd expect for the guy portrayed in the film.
This is roughly - and I mean very roughly - the story of John Omar Pinson, a desperate criminal for sure, an escapee from Oregon State Prison for sure. The rest - I'm not so sure. In this film he escapes from prison twice, is buried in a grave only to later have the grave found empty, and is idolized by an incompetent but sociopathic hood named Wayne Long - he actually did exist - who is released from prison and commits daring cold blooded crimes on the off chance that Pinson is not dead, will read about the crimes, and contact him so he can be his partner in crime.
If any of this is true, Oregon should have redone how it assigns past escapees to jobs in the prison where they can easily escape yet again. Because it just keeps happening! Also, apparently Pinson DID kill a cop when he escaped the first time. Why was he not executed for that? I'm guessing that there was no concrete proof that could tie Pinson to the crime, but it was assumed he did it, so it is in the film.
One distinguishing feature is that there are no female cast members, no romance whatsoever. But the movie poster shows Pinson, in disguise, grabbing a screaming scantily clad young woman, as though there is some kind of female involvement. That is merely a still from the movie where Pinson steals a car from a couple parked on lover's lane and lasts about ten seconds, probably meant to mislead moviegoers into buying a ticket.
This has a spartan and semi-documentary style to it, and it is very engaging and for sure a memorable story. Myron Healy plays Pinson as a cool clever criminal. Sam Edwards plays Long as the whiny devoted but incompetent follower. The actual Pinson was paroled some time before 1975, died a free man in 1997, and actually expressed regret for his crimes at the end of his life. Not the end you'd expect for the guy portrayed in the film.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Blood on Their Hands/Holiday in Hell
- Filming locations
- Rancho Hotel - 1534 Sawtelle Blvd, Los Angeles, California, USA(John Omar Pinson arrested near hotel, demolished)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 14 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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