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6.6/10
2.9K
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After taking 20 dollars from his employer to go on a date with plans to repay it the next day, an auto mechanic falls into increasingly disastrous circumstances for more and more money which... Read allAfter taking 20 dollars from his employer to go on a date with plans to repay it the next day, an auto mechanic falls into increasingly disastrous circumstances for more and more money which rapidly spirals out of his control.After taking 20 dollars from his employer to go on a date with plans to repay it the next day, an auto mechanic falls into increasingly disastrous circumstances for more and more money which rapidly spirals out of his control.
Jimmie Dodd
- Buzz
- (as Jimmy Dodd)
Tom Monroe
- Motorcycle Officer
- (as Tom Munro)
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- Writer
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Featured reviews
Ever told a lie and needed to cover it up with more lies?
If you have then this film is for you. Mickey Rooney plays a mechanic who wants to take a waitress out on a date but doesn't have enough cash to impress her with. He steals and then needs to commit more crimes and bigger crimes to cover his tracks. Finally his walk on the wildside ends in murder. But is the guy dead or just knocked out?
Without giving away the ending a similar film is Detour which had a lot of trouble with the censors for its own ending. In my opinion braving the censors gives Detour more punch. But Quicksand is still an enjoyable Film Noir and one of my favourite Mickey Rooney films. We see Rooney in too many musicals and family films. Quicksand gives him a dark side.
Without giving away the ending a similar film is Detour which had a lot of trouble with the censors for its own ending. In my opinion braving the censors gives Detour more punch. But Quicksand is still an enjoyable Film Noir and one of my favourite Mickey Rooney films. We see Rooney in too many musicals and family films. Quicksand gives him a dark side.
Quicksand as a movie doesn't get stuck in a quagmire.
Quicksand is directed by Irving Pichel (The Most Dangerous Game/ Destination Moon) and written by Robert Smith. It stars Mickey Rooney, Jeanne Cagney, Barbara Bates & Peter Lorre. Lionel Lindon photographs it around Santa Monica, California, and Louis Gruenberg scores the music.
Auto mechanic Dan Brady (Rooney) fancies himself as a ladies man, so when he sets eyes on sultry looking blonde Vera Novak (Cagney), he just has to date her. Intending to put it back tomorrow, Dan borrows $20 from the till of the garage where he works, the money to be used for the date with Vera. However, with Vera comes baggage, not only in what she wants out of Dan, but in the form of her ex-boss Nick Dramoshag (Lorre), who has designs on Vera too. Pretty soon Dan finds that his life is getting out of control as he gets in deep with robbery and maybe even murder?.
Quicksand was received coldly back on its release, a generation of film goers had grown accustomed to Rooney lighting up the screen as Andy Hardy and turning in frothy performances in musicals. Here he goes against type, and the public wasn't ready for it, even tho he arguably gives one of his best career performances. As a film it's a very tight piece. The plot is in the classic noir tradition of having a male protagonist trapped in a downward spiral, no matter what he does, each decision he makes is a wrong one and only worsens his situation. That there's a blonde femme fatale (Cagney is sexy in a powerful way, with shifty glances telling so much) sat at his side as his life goes belly up; still further fuels the darker edges of the film noir feel. There's a devilishly bitter irony hanging over proceedings, too, that Dan could have escaped all this if he had not spurned the attentions of the more homely, but loyal, Helen (an adorable Bates). The film, and tone, is also boosted by Lorre turning in one of his sleazy sloth like performances, while a mention is warranted for Art Smith as Dan's boss, Oren Mackay, the kind of boss you could easily punch for fun.
We possibly could have done with some more noirish artistry from Lindon for his photography, but he does OK, with a parking lot/back alley pursuit well shot. While Gruenberg's score is right in tone, especially the theme tune piece, which has a distinctly Cape Fear edge to it. It would come as no surprise to me to find that Bernard Herrmann had watched and listened to Quicksand prior to scoring the Mitchum & Peck classic. Look out too for Red Nichols and His Five Pennies band during a club scene, it's a nice touch that adds a bit of period detail. Clocking in at nearly 80 minutes, Quicksand doesn't hang around, it's briskly paced and suspenseful into the bargain. Certainly it's minor film noir, but all things considered, it's one of the better B's from this most wonderful of genres. 7.5/10
Auto mechanic Dan Brady (Rooney) fancies himself as a ladies man, so when he sets eyes on sultry looking blonde Vera Novak (Cagney), he just has to date her. Intending to put it back tomorrow, Dan borrows $20 from the till of the garage where he works, the money to be used for the date with Vera. However, with Vera comes baggage, not only in what she wants out of Dan, but in the form of her ex-boss Nick Dramoshag (Lorre), who has designs on Vera too. Pretty soon Dan finds that his life is getting out of control as he gets in deep with robbery and maybe even murder?.
Quicksand was received coldly back on its release, a generation of film goers had grown accustomed to Rooney lighting up the screen as Andy Hardy and turning in frothy performances in musicals. Here he goes against type, and the public wasn't ready for it, even tho he arguably gives one of his best career performances. As a film it's a very tight piece. The plot is in the classic noir tradition of having a male protagonist trapped in a downward spiral, no matter what he does, each decision he makes is a wrong one and only worsens his situation. That there's a blonde femme fatale (Cagney is sexy in a powerful way, with shifty glances telling so much) sat at his side as his life goes belly up; still further fuels the darker edges of the film noir feel. There's a devilishly bitter irony hanging over proceedings, too, that Dan could have escaped all this if he had not spurned the attentions of the more homely, but loyal, Helen (an adorable Bates). The film, and tone, is also boosted by Lorre turning in one of his sleazy sloth like performances, while a mention is warranted for Art Smith as Dan's boss, Oren Mackay, the kind of boss you could easily punch for fun.
We possibly could have done with some more noirish artistry from Lindon for his photography, but he does OK, with a parking lot/back alley pursuit well shot. While Gruenberg's score is right in tone, especially the theme tune piece, which has a distinctly Cape Fear edge to it. It would come as no surprise to me to find that Bernard Herrmann had watched and listened to Quicksand prior to scoring the Mitchum & Peck classic. Look out too for Red Nichols and His Five Pennies band during a club scene, it's a nice touch that adds a bit of period detail. Clocking in at nearly 80 minutes, Quicksand doesn't hang around, it's briskly paced and suspenseful into the bargain. Certainly it's minor film noir, but all things considered, it's one of the better B's from this most wonderful of genres. 7.5/10
A series of unfortunate events
This independently made film is aptly named, as Dan (Mickey Rooney) falls into a trap and every move he makes to get out just sends him deeper into trouble.
Dan, a mechanic, wants to take out Vera (Jeanne Cagney), the new cashier at the local diner. He spends all afternoon trying to either borrow 20 dollars from someone or trying to get someone who owes him 20 dollars to pay him back. He reasons with himself that today is Monday and the guy who audits the books for the garage doesn't come buy until Thursday. So he steals a 20 out of the register at work to pay for the evening out.
But then the auditor comes by on Tuesday, the next day, before he's had a chance to get the twenty dollars that all of these friends of his have borrowed at one time or another. So he goes across the street, buys a 100 dollar watch with a dollar down on the installment plan, and then goes down the street and pawns it for 30 dollars. He replaces the 20 dollars he stole from the garage before it can be discovered, but now he's in debt for one hundred dollars for a watch he doesn't own anymore.
Dan makes worse decisions with even steeper moral and legal consequences as he commits bigger crimes to cover up smaller ones, until less than a week later he's running from a murder charge. Or is he? Watch and find out.
Along the way, Vera turns out to be the devil standing on his shoulder, encouraging him to take bigger more illegal chances. The angel on his shoulder is Helen (Barbara Bates), who in spite of barely knowing Dan is almost a stalker when it comes to following him around and mooning after him. But at least she does have good moral judgement.
There are good performances by the entire cast, but I really liked Taylor Holmes as the criminal attorney Dan manages to carjack at gunpoint towards the end of the film. He has a folksy charm and warmth about him that I imagine would endear him to clients, judges, and juries alike. I would like to know his inspiration for his part, because I'm sure whoever it was he was a successful lawyer.
This was really a very versatile role for Rooney, his second since leaving MGM. Just don't look for the exuberant Andy Hardy of his MGM days - In this role Rooney is running for his life from some kind of trouble the entire running time, and when he's not doing that he's knocking a few back at some bar and waxing cynically philosophical.
Dan, a mechanic, wants to take out Vera (Jeanne Cagney), the new cashier at the local diner. He spends all afternoon trying to either borrow 20 dollars from someone or trying to get someone who owes him 20 dollars to pay him back. He reasons with himself that today is Monday and the guy who audits the books for the garage doesn't come buy until Thursday. So he steals a 20 out of the register at work to pay for the evening out.
But then the auditor comes by on Tuesday, the next day, before he's had a chance to get the twenty dollars that all of these friends of his have borrowed at one time or another. So he goes across the street, buys a 100 dollar watch with a dollar down on the installment plan, and then goes down the street and pawns it for 30 dollars. He replaces the 20 dollars he stole from the garage before it can be discovered, but now he's in debt for one hundred dollars for a watch he doesn't own anymore.
Dan makes worse decisions with even steeper moral and legal consequences as he commits bigger crimes to cover up smaller ones, until less than a week later he's running from a murder charge. Or is he? Watch and find out.
Along the way, Vera turns out to be the devil standing on his shoulder, encouraging him to take bigger more illegal chances. The angel on his shoulder is Helen (Barbara Bates), who in spite of barely knowing Dan is almost a stalker when it comes to following him around and mooning after him. But at least she does have good moral judgement.
There are good performances by the entire cast, but I really liked Taylor Holmes as the criminal attorney Dan manages to carjack at gunpoint towards the end of the film. He has a folksy charm and warmth about him that I imagine would endear him to clients, judges, and juries alike. I would like to know his inspiration for his part, because I'm sure whoever it was he was a successful lawyer.
This was really a very versatile role for Rooney, his second since leaving MGM. Just don't look for the exuberant Andy Hardy of his MGM days - In this role Rooney is running for his life from some kind of trouble the entire running time, and when he's not doing that he's knocking a few back at some bar and waxing cynically philosophical.
See it - more than once
One of the best "B" pictures ever. The milieu - garage, bar, shoddy amusement park - is appropriate and effectively conveyed. Small people, big dreams, temptation, one seemingly insignificant event leading to another: believable and compelling drama, played out in glaring light and sinister shadows. Peter Lorre's quiet menace and Jeanne Cagney's worldly sleaze are particularly outstanding. Mickey Rooney may be somewhat miscast, but his performance adds notably to the rising tension - as does everything else in this fine picture.
All-time memorable moment: Bumping the gypsy fortune teller's booth in the dark arcade, setting off flashing light and jangling music.
All-time memorable moment: Bumping the gypsy fortune teller's booth in the dark arcade, setting off flashing light and jangling music.
Thriller of errors
Above average, often underrated low budget film noir of a somewhat pleasantly restrained Rooney who finds himself in escalating hot water stemming from his "borrowing" $20 from his employers cash register. (He's a mechanic at a car dealership)
Instead of a comedy of errors, the film is rather a thriller of errors with Rooney making honest and dishonest mistakes/decisions that build on each other from scene to scene to a point that Rooney is desperate to get out of the hot water he finds himself in at every turn. He's in trouble with his nasty boss, his money hungry girlfriend (Jeanne Cagney), the police, a sleazy (Peter Lorre)amusement park gameroom owner, etc...
He's caught in a whirlpool of lies, deceit, and lust (for a snobish/vampish girlfriend who is never satisfied) and a hunger for the money that he feels will get him out of all his trouble. He doesn't appreciate and is callous toward the wholesome girl (ex-girlfriend ??) who seems to want him despite his faults. He's a lot more interested in the allure of the bombshell Jeanne Cagney instead and is bored by Ms. Wholesome.
Rooney biographies claim that Mickey didn't think much of this film since it didn't do much to revive his sagging career in the early 1950's. Still, there's a lot to recommend it...with solid acting, atmospheric black and white photography and staging, especially of the amusement park and oceanside locale.
Instead of a comedy of errors, the film is rather a thriller of errors with Rooney making honest and dishonest mistakes/decisions that build on each other from scene to scene to a point that Rooney is desperate to get out of the hot water he finds himself in at every turn. He's in trouble with his nasty boss, his money hungry girlfriend (Jeanne Cagney), the police, a sleazy (Peter Lorre)amusement park gameroom owner, etc...
He's caught in a whirlpool of lies, deceit, and lust (for a snobish/vampish girlfriend who is never satisfied) and a hunger for the money that he feels will get him out of all his trouble. He doesn't appreciate and is callous toward the wholesome girl (ex-girlfriend ??) who seems to want him despite his faults. He's a lot more interested in the allure of the bombshell Jeanne Cagney instead and is bored by Ms. Wholesome.
Rooney biographies claim that Mickey didn't think much of this film since it didn't do much to revive his sagging career in the early 1950's. Still, there's a lot to recommend it...with solid acting, atmospheric black and white photography and staging, especially of the amusement park and oceanside locale.
Did you know
- TriviaMickey Rooney co-financed the film with Peter Lorre.
- GoofsWhen the lawyer is sitting in his car talking to Dan and Helen at the Santa Monica pier the reflection of one of the camera crew is visible in the driver's three-quarter window.
- Alternate versionsThere is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA srl, "SABBIE MOBILI (1950) + THE CHASE (Incatenata, 1946)" (2 Films on a single DVD), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
- ConnectionsEdited into Your Afternoon Movie: Quicksand (2022)
- SoundtracksLow Bridge, Everybody Down
aka "Fifteen Miles on the Erie Canal"
Lyrics and Music written by Thomas S. Allen
Performed by Sidney Marion
(uncredited)
- How long is Quicksand?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 19m(79 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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