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The Clay Pigeon

  • 1949
  • Approved
  • 1h 3m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Barbara Hale, Richard Loo, and Bill Williams in The Clay Pigeon (1949)
Film NoirCrimeDrama

Jim Fletcher, waking up from a coma, finds he is to be given a court martial for treason and charged with informing on fellow inmates in a Japanese prison camp during WWII. Escaping from the... Read allJim Fletcher, waking up from a coma, finds he is to be given a court martial for treason and charged with informing on fellow inmates in a Japanese prison camp during WWII. Escaping from the hospital he tries to clear himself by enlisting the aid of Martha Gregory, widow of a ser... Read allJim Fletcher, waking up from a coma, finds he is to be given a court martial for treason and charged with informing on fellow inmates in a Japanese prison camp during WWII. Escaping from the hospital he tries to clear himself by enlisting the aid of Martha Gregory, widow of a service buddy he was accused of informing on. Helped also by Ted Niles, a surviving fellow pr... Read all

  • Director
    • Richard Fleischer
  • Writer
    • Carl Foreman
  • Stars
    • Bill Williams
    • Barbara Hale
    • Richard Quine
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Fleischer
    • Writer
      • Carl Foreman
    • Stars
      • Bill Williams
      • Barbara Hale
      • Richard Quine
    • 27User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos19

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Bill Williams
    Bill Williams
    • Jim Fletcher
    Barbara Hale
    Barbara Hale
    • Martha Gregory
    Richard Quine
    Richard Quine
    • Ted Niles
    Richard Loo
    Richard Loo
    • Ken Tokoyama - aka The Weasel
    Frank Fenton
    Frank Fenton
    • Lt. Cmdr. Prentice
    Frank Wilcox
    Frank Wilcox
    • Hospital Doctor
    Marya Marco
    Marya Marco
    • Helen Minoto
    • (as Mary Marco)
    Robert Bray
    Robert Bray
    • Blake
    Martha Hyer
    Martha Hyer
    • Receptionist
    Harold Landon
    • Blind Veteran in
    James Craven
    James Craven
    • John Wheeler
    Grandon Rhodes
    Grandon Rhodes
    • Clark
    Joseph E. Bernard
    Joseph E. Bernard
    • Hotel Manager
    • (uncredited)
    Harry Cheshire
    Harry Cheshire
    • Doctor
    • (uncredited)
    G. Pat Collins
    G. Pat Collins
    • Abbott
    • (uncredited)
    Kernan Cripps
    Kernan Cripps
    • Chief Jones
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Deery
    • Train Passenger
    • (uncredited)
    Ann Doran
    Ann Doran
    • Nurse
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard Fleischer
    • Writer
      • Carl Foreman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    6.51K
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    Featured reviews

    9manuel-pestalozzi

    First rate B movie with interesting story

    This is a short and very gripping B movie. It hasn't got an ounce of fat and offers the highest possible viewing pleasure. Story and script are by Carl Foreman who wrote the screenplay for High Noon. Strange as it may sound, one of the major assets of The Clay Pigeon is a cast which consists of little known actresses and actors.

    There are several movies of the period which start with a war veteran who wakes up in an army or navy hospital with amnesia. In this case, the young man does know who he is and where he was, but he has no idea why he is accused of treason. Everybody in the hospital lets him feel that he should be hanged after he gets well. The strong and scary opening sequence has him sleeping as hands stretch out for his face from outside the frame, fingering it tentatively while he opens his eyes in astonishment, then sliding down to his throat in an attempt to strangle him before a nurse intervenes. They belong to a blinded veteran who wants to know „how a traitor looks like".

    The accused escapes from the hospital and tries to find out what it is all about, aided by the widowed wife of a war buddy (strong performance by Barbara Hale). He finds out that the alleged treason refers to his time as a POW in a Japanese camp; he is said to have ratted on other prisoners who stole food rations, just in order not to starve. He also remembers being beaten savagely by a sadistic Japanese warden called the Weasel. A whole landscape of scars on his chest tell from this ordeal. „But now you're as strong as an ox again", the woman who helps him says encouragingly, „and just as dumb", he adds.

    The search directs the couple to L.A.'s Chinatown, and much of that part of the movie was filmed on location. To his surprise the veteran spots the Weasel who is already well established within the local gangland. The movie then builds up to a dramatic finale on a train – with a much better set design than in Fleischer's Narrow Margin – and a happy ending.

    As the title suggests, The Clay Pigeon is a full fledged film noir. The movie has a very good script (although it sometimes stretches credibility) and a surprisingly rich imagery (night scenes on roads and in towns, a trailer beach colony, different locations in downtown L.A., including Chinatown). I suppose its message is above the ordinary political (the GI who waits for his court martial while a „real" former war criminal is alive and well and living in California, the veteran's open distrust of the institutions the hints of a connection between the openly criminal world and the „serious" business community as shown after the veteran's visit in a real estate agency).

    It seems The Clay Pigeon is a film that waits to be rediscovered. It stands its own in the genre (and is not even mentioned in the Silver/Ward Film Noir Encyclopedia). I can recommend it.
    7Bunuel1976

    THE CLAY PIGEON (Richard Fleischer, 1949) ***

    Excellent 'B' noir - from the memorable opening sequence of a close-up of a sleeping man's face, with a couple of hands entering the frame to strangle him, to the exciting train-ride climax, which curiously anticipates the director's own THE NARROW MARGIN (1952) - with a topical, Hitchcockian plot of an amnesiac war veteran, accused of treason and of being party to murder, who goes on the run to prove his innocence. Despite unknown leads (including Bill Williams and Barbara Hale, a married couple in real-life and the parents of BUTCH AND SUNDANCE: THE EARLY DAYS [1979] star William Katt, which I unwittingly watched the very same day, and future director Richard Quine!), it's very stylishly handled by an expert in the genre, with special care given to the hero's hallucinatory flashes of his harrowing experiences in a Japanese P.O.W. camp.
    8MikeSNation

    Good Film Noir

    I get what the other reviewer is saying here about "too many plot devices" but that only really bothers me now that I sit and think about it. The movie itself moved along quick. Good story, good acting. Just a fun way to waste an hour and a half. Don't think about it too much and you'll enjoy it just fine.
    7bmacv

    Trim and stripped-down thriller about post-war Japanese counterfeit racket

    When Bill Williams comes out of a coma at a Naval hospital in Long Beach, he knows who he is but doesn't know why he's there. But he overhears staff talking about his impending court-martial for treason: Apparently he snitched on his fellow Americans in a Japanese prison-camp, leading to their deaths by torture. No fool he, he grabs some civvies and slips out the door, headed to San Diego and the widow (Barbara Hale) of one of his dead buddies.

    She's understandably unhappy to see him and even more so when he binds and gags her, then heads north to Los Angeles in her car, with her in it. When pursuers almost run them off the road and down a ravine, she starts to believe his story about being innocent. In L.A., he enlists the aid of another survivor (Richard Quine), who advises him to lay low as the `Old Lady' (the Navy) is watching them both.

    Then one evening in the White Lotus, a `chop-suey joint' oddly run by Japanese, he spots among them the most sadistic of the guards, nicknamed `the Weasel.' Soon he finds himself the fall guy, or clay pigeon, in a transpacific scheme to launder millions in counterfeit currency printed in anticipation of Japanese victory and occupation. Its operations come very close to him....

    The Clay Pigeon is another of the trim and stripped-down noir thrillers churned out by Richard Fleischer in the post-war years. While not as deftly worked out as Armored Car Robbery or The Narrow Margin, it clocks in at just over an hour and delivers the goods. Its stars, Williams and Hale, were married at the time and would remain so until his death. Among their children is actor William Katt (Williams' birth name), the spit-and-image of his dad. Hale, of course, had a long run as Perry Mason's gal Friday, and Raymond Burr named an orchid he cultivated after her - not Della Street, but Barbara Hale.
    dbdumonteil

    A low budget can be worthwhile.

    Richard Fleischer who would direct "Barabbas" "fantastic voyage" and "the Boston strangler,not exactly low budget efforts already proves with "clay pigeon" he was a great director from the start.One has sometimes the strange impression to watch a "Mandchurian candidate" in miniature .A nightmarish atmosphere ,a true film noir where trains and cars belt in the night,where an amnesic hero has to fight an unknown enemy .It's really a tour de force to pack so much action (and much of what happens works behind the scenes) in a very short flick (about an hour).The last scenes on the train were probably influenced by Hitchcock's "shadow of a doubt" .This little gem should not be missed.

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    Related interests

    Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in The Big Sleep (1946)
    Film Noir
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film is based on a true story of a U.S. serviceman recognizing his former sadistic Japanese POW camp guard on a street in Los Angeles. The guard, who had been born in the US, and therefore was an American citizen, had moved to Japan before the war and returned to the US afterwards. He was convicted of treason.
    • Goofs
      When the train is shown leaving Los Angeles with "The Weasel" on board, it has a Pennsylvania Railroad logo on the nose of the locomotive. The Pennsylvania did not serve the west coast - this was obviously stock footage.
    • Quotes

      Mrs. Helen Minoto: Have they gone?

      Jim Fletcher: They've left the building, but they may be back.

      Mrs. Helen Minoto: You'd better wait a few minutes.

      Jim Fletcher: I owe you an apology... Why did you help me?

      Mrs. Helen Minoto: You said you were in trouble. I knew they weren't the police.

      Jim Fletcher: I'm sorry I had to upset Johnny.

      Mrs. Helen Minoto: Oh? He'll go to sleep now. He's a good boy. He's just like his father.

      Jim Fletcher: The 442nd was quite an outfit.

      Mrs. Helen Minoto: Yes, it was.

    • Connections
      Featured in Noir Alley: The Clay Pigeon (2018)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 18, 1949 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Acusado a traición
    • Filming locations
      • Chinatown, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 3m(63 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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