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Private Property

  • 1960
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 19m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Corey Allen, Jerome Cowan, Kate Manx, Warren Oates, and Robert Wark in Private Property (1960)
Trailer for Private Property
Play trailer1:43
1 Video
54 Photos
CrimeDrama

An arrogant criminal offers to seduce a woman for his dim, sexually inexperienced partner.An arrogant criminal offers to seduce a woman for his dim, sexually inexperienced partner.An arrogant criminal offers to seduce a woman for his dim, sexually inexperienced partner.

  • Director
    • Leslie Stevens
  • Writer
    • Leslie Stevens
  • Stars
    • Kate Manx
    • Corey Allen
    • Warren Oates
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Leslie Stevens
    • Writer
      • Leslie Stevens
    • Stars
      • Kate Manx
      • Corey Allen
      • Warren Oates
    • 23User reviews
    • 34Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Private Property
    Trailer 1:43
    Private Property

    Photos54

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    Top cast6

    Edit
    Kate Manx
    Kate Manx
    • Ann Carlyle
    Corey Allen
    Corey Allen
    • Duke
    Warren Oates
    Warren Oates
    • Boots
    Jerome Cowan
    Jerome Cowan
    • Ed Hogate
    Robert Wark
    Robert Wark
    • Roger Carlyle
    Jules Maitland
    • Robbery Victim
    • Director
      • Leslie Stevens
    • Writer
      • Leslie Stevens
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.71.4K
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    Featured reviews

    dougdoepke

    A View From 2022

    It wouldn't be fair for me to rate this 1959 flick. On one hand, it has historical significance since it was one of the first movies denied release by American censors who found it forbidden fruit. On the other hand, as entertainment, I found the 79-minutes unfortunately too talky and boring to endorse. Hence, it doesn't seem fair to choose between the two poles.

    The flick starts off well enough, at a filling station where two seedy drifters, Duke and Boots, look to fill their empty lives by pursuing a wealthy blonde for seduction purposes. Now that's a promising start, but from there on, except for the brief ending, the narrative flattens out into a basically one-note affair. After all, how long does it take wily Duke to infiltrate blonde Ann's hilltop mansion where she usually lives alone, her businessman husband out making money. Then too, it's a stretch that wealthy hubby would leave her alone without household help.

    Thus, it appears budget constraints flatten the main storyline into a series of hilltop one-on-one talk-fests. Sure, Duke wants to insinuate himself into Ann's life by pretending to be a gardener. But needed suspense in his manuevers is sorely lacking. Still and all, the hilltop setting does furnish a good scenic view of greater LA that kept me watching.

    All in all, it looks like the indie effort was a well-intended effort to escape the bonds of 50's studio productions held captive by a strict censorship code. But what might have been cutting edge then, seems banal now when much looser public standards prevail.

    My advice: if you're looking for more than mainly talky flatlining, skip it. But if you're interested in former forbidden fruit grab it and bite.
    6sibleybridges

    Classic?

    Two drifters become obsessed with and annoy a frustrated house wife in the Hollywood hills until things become dangerous. This feels like most indie movies today that are a few people in a house and then some stuff happens, so I wasn't suprised to see that it's being remade.

    This was scandalous in the 50s and even earned an X rating in the UK. It's mostly innocuous, but it does have a very dark ending with some implied things. Overall, I'm not sure it's the "lost classic" as I've read and really dosnt need a modern remake. I guess it was way ahead of its time, but I generally don't really like the films it's way ahead of. Fortunately, it's only 80 minutes and the last 10 minutes was great.

    Watched on Kanopy.
    8Ed-Shullivan

    This is a very frightening scenario that I am sure has played out in the California suburbs many times before and since

    Although this film is supposedly a fictional drama, I believe there are literally hundreds (if not thousands) of lonely and attractive housewives all across North America who can relate to the scenes played out in the film Private Property. We have all heard that phrase before of "playful and innocent enough flirting or sexual teasing". And we have also heard the phrase "No means No" in countless drama films which are played out in both an actual and/or a fictitious court of law.

    This film draws a very fine line between some tense criminal and very real sexual assault activity that is hard to watch and a very good dramatic simulated performance played out by all four (4) of the film stars. The female lead played by Kate Manx as the lonely suburban California housewife who was ignored by her business executive husband appreciated the attention bestowed upon her by the aggressive stranger who showered her with compliments as well as many lies.

    We the audience could see that this lonely housewife was getting in over her head and the two strangers were thinking with their little heads and not their big heads. We see how quickly some playful flirting innocence can turn both violent and deadly. This black and white film is still a great watch some sixty (60) years later.

    I rate Private Property a high 8 out of 10 rating that all women and men including young teenagers should watch to remind them to keep their emotions in check and the boys to keep their peckers in their pants.
    7jimm-8

    The Film with Only Two Certificates!

    When I caught up with this film in Nottingham in 1965 it was being proudly advertised as "The Film with Only Two Certificates in England!" True, at that time only Leeds and Liverpool had passed the film with a "local X." The British Board of Film Censors had rejected the film on 30 March 1960, leaving small British distributor Cross-Channel (who also released Blackjackets) with the task of persuading as many local authorities as possible to pass the film for exhibition. Cross- Channel had an initial break-through when the film was chosen for the opening run at the new Compton cinema in London's West End. As a cinema club for members only the Compton did not need certificates and duly premiered the film on 16 November 1960. Personally, I found the film fairly harmless viewing even in 1965, although the story of two drifters ogling the bored housewife next door eventually became a bit creepy. Most of the local watch committees said no, but a fair few said yes:

    London Compton – Wednesday, 16 November 1960 (British premiere); LEEDS Plaza – Sunday, 20 December 1964 and week; LIVERPOOL Essoldo (London Road) – Sunday, 4 July 1965 and week; LEEDS Gainsborough – Thursday, 2 September 1965 (three days); NOTTINGHAM Moulin Rouge – Sunday, 14 November 1965 and week; LIVERPOOL Jacey Film Theatre – Sunday, 19 December 1965 and week; LIVERPOOL ABC (Walton) – Monday, 16 May 1966 (three days); WAKEFIELD ABC – Monday, 27 June 1966 (three days); WEST BROMWICH ABC – Thursday, 29 September 1966 (three days);

    The mini-release must have made a good bit of income since the distributor deemed a re-issue in 1969 more than worthwhile:

    BIRMINGHAM Cinephone – Sunday, 24 August 1969 for two weeks; NOTTINGHAM ABC Elite – Sunday, 5 October 1969 and week; LIVERPOOL Jacey Film Theatre – Sunday, 7 December 1969 and week;
    7mackjay2

    A Psycho-Sexual Thrill Ride from 1960

    This legendary, presumed lost film is now available is very good print on blu-ray and DVD. Was it worth the wait? I'd say yes. PRIVATE PROPERTY is artfully photographed and has a very capable cast who give convincing performances. The film is short and to the point: a crime thriller with some subtext, that holds a viewer's interest and sustains plenty of tension. It's not some lost masterpiece, but an accomplished minor film that is somewhat ahead of its time in frankness about some sexual matters.

    Corey Allen (Duke), Warren Oates (Boots) play drifters who have apparently just met. Duke is the stronger personality and clearly a manipulating sociopath. He dominates Boots, promising a sexual initiation with a beautiful suburban housewife Ann (Kate Manx). The men have followed Ann to her home by way of nearly car-jacking another driver (Hollywood veteran Jerome Cowan). They hole up in an unoccupied house next door and watch Ann as she swims and sunbathes. All the while, Duke stokes Boots' sexual frustration. It's never clear just how much Boots actually wants Ann. He's clearly under Duke's spell, and soon Ann will be as well. Once Ann's husband leaves on a business trip the film kicks into high gear. There is a nice, moody, late-50s feeling to much of this film, especially in the scenes set inside Ann's home. But unlike most films of the era, PRIVATE PROPERTY has a frankness about sexual matters and sociopathy. Possibly only PSYCHO or PEEPING TOM (both also released in 1960) dared to openly portray violent sexual deviancy in similar ways. PRIVATE PROPERTY is nowhere near those films, artistically speaking, but it's still pretty strong stuff to watch. Leslie Steven's direction is economical and well paced. Thanks to Ted D. McCord, the film has an attractive look, occasionally resembling TV drama from the period. Pete Rugolo's score adds a lot to the atmosphere. Best of all are the actors. Manx is very affecting and it's too bad she did not appear in more films. Corey Allen (always underrated, even after a well- remembered sequence in REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE) gives the strongest performance. He's very adept at playing on the other characters' weaknesses to achieve his own ends. And Warren Oates at the beginning of his career is a standout as the weak-willed, sexually conflicted Boots. It's great to finally have this film in such a terrific edition.

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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Shot in ten days on a budget just under $60,000.
    • Goofs
      After Ann returns the belt to Boots, he immediately puts it on. A few scenes later, he is seen without the belt and in a later scene, he is again wearing the belt.
    • Connections
      Features Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (1956)
    • Soundtracks
      Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
      by Herschel Burke Gilbert and Alfred Perry

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 24, 1960 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Propiedad privada
    • Filming locations
      • Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA(Ann Carlyle's house)
    • Production companies
      • Daystar Productions
      • Kana Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $60,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 19m(79 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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