I
WALK ALONE
1948.....98
minutes
Burt Lancaster, Lizabeth Scott, Kirk Douglas
On the run from the cops, bootleggers Frankie Madison (Burt
Lancaster) and Noll Turner (Kirk Douglas), find themselves racing
up to an enormous roadblock. The two split up, agreeing that
if one was caught, the other would operate their nightclub and
save half the profits for his partner. The unlucky Madison is
caught and when released from prison 14 years later, he returns
to claim his money. Turner, never intending to split the money,
tries to distract Madison by offering him the affections of
his girlfriend Kay (Lizabeth Scott). Madison's brother Dave
(Wendell Corey), Turner's accountant, help's Turner by doctoring
the books to hide the lucrative profits of the club. Madison
is enraged that he has been swindled by his friend and his brother,
and Dave finally helps Madison get his revenge and Kay's love.
Byron Haskin, in his directorial debut, brings a post-war idealism
into the ordinarily cynical noir sensibility. Wendell Corey
is particularly fine as Madison's cowardly brother, who manages
to redeem himself, and Lizabeth Scott is touching as the vulnerable,
romantic Kay.
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