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Pushover

  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
4.5K
YOUR RATING
Pushover (1954)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer1:50
1 Video
99+ Photos
Film NoirCrimeDramaThriller

An undercover police officer falls for the beautiful moll of a bank robber on the run and together they plan to double-cross both the hood and the cops.An undercover police officer falls for the beautiful moll of a bank robber on the run and together they plan to double-cross both the hood and the cops.An undercover police officer falls for the beautiful moll of a bank robber on the run and together they plan to double-cross both the hood and the cops.

  • Director
    • Richard Quine
  • Writers
    • Roy Huggins
    • Thomas Walsh
    • Bill S. Ballinger
  • Stars
    • Fred MacMurray
    • Kim Novak
    • Philip Carey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    4.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Quine
    • Writers
      • Roy Huggins
      • Thomas Walsh
      • Bill S. Ballinger
    • Stars
      • Fred MacMurray
      • Kim Novak
      • Philip Carey
    • 69User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:50
    Trailer

    Photos101

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    Top cast30

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    Fred MacMurray
    Fred MacMurray
    • Paul Sheridan
    Kim Novak
    Kim Novak
    • Lona McLane
    Philip Carey
    Philip Carey
    • Rick McAllister
    • (as Phil Carey)
    Dorothy Malone
    Dorothy Malone
    • Ann Stewart
    E.G. Marshall
    E.G. Marshall
    • Carl Eckstrom
    Allen Nourse
    • Paddy Dolan
    James Anderson
    James Anderson
    • Beery
    • (uncredited)
    Joe Bailey
    • Hobbs
    • (uncredited)
    Tony Barrett
    Tony Barrett
    • Pickup Artist in Bar
    • (uncredited)
    Walter Beaver
    • Detective Schaeffer
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Bryan
    • Detective Harris
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Carson
    Robert Carson
    • First Bartender
    • (uncredited)
    Phil Chambers
    Phil Chambers
    • Detective Briggs
    • (uncredited)
    Dick Crockett
    Dick Crockett
    • Mr. Crockett
    • (uncredited)
    John De Simone
    • Assistant Bank Manager
    • (uncredited)
    Alan Dexter
    Alan Dexter
    • Detective Fine
    • (uncredited)
    Don C. Harvey
    Don C. Harvey
    • Detective Peters
    • (uncredited)
    Anne Loos
    Anne Loos
    • Bank Teller
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard Quine
    • Writers
      • Roy Huggins
      • Thomas Walsh
      • Bill S. Ballinger
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews69

    7.14.5K
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    Featured reviews

    flordebob

    A poor man's version of Double Indemnity

    It's Fred MacMurray again, as a virtuous agent for the causes of good. Instead of playing an insurance salesman with an eye for the fast buck, here he's playing a cop assigned to shadow Novak, the mobster's moll. Kim Novak is as beautiful as she's ever appeared on the screen. The lighting in her early scenes is as dramatic and sensual as it can be. Who wouldn't fall in love with her? Comparisons with Double Indemnity just can't be ignored. She is the vamp that Barbara Stanwyck could never be. She's softer and more feminine in that 50's style, and less hard-edged than Stanwyck, which makes her much more dangerous. Novak's generally wooden acting style & "flat affect" gives way to a softer sex-kitten demeanor. MacMurray's character is a more active participant in the events that unfold than in "DD", where he seemed to get his courage and strength from Stanwyck's cold & calculating personna. Billy Wilder could have made this a masterpiece, but even without the guidance of the master's hand, this one is definitely well-worth watching.
    7funkyfry

    Tight, one locale film noir

    Tight, driven little peice of "film noir" with MacMurray as a good cop driven to distraction (and murder) by the gangester moll (Novak, in her film debut, somewhat more effective than usual) he's been assigned to spy on. Malone fills in for a charming bit as the girl-next-door who MacMurray's sidekick falls for. Typically, a mistake is made by the criminals, and they will pay for it, but they're having fun along the way. Some confusion in the script seems to have resulted in Novak's character turning somewhat sympathetic towards the ending, sounding a disingenuous note. Still, good solid bit of film.
    6Doylenf

    Noteworthy for the film debut of Kim Novak...tight suspense...

    PUSHOVER is an underrated, little known crime melodrama from the mid-'50s that introduced the blonde beauty of KIM NOVAK to audiences and gave FRED MacMURRAY another chance to play an authority figure seduced by the charms of a femme fatale. When the story begins, it turns out his accidental meeting with Novak was really a set-up, he being a cop assigned to keep track of her whereabouts after a bank hold-up results in the death of a police officer.

    He suspects that her mobster boyfriend pulled the job and at first resists when she tries to convince him they can use the bank money for themselves. But eventually, he weakens and before you know it he's informing her that her phone is wire tapped and the two of them are just one step ahead of the police for the rest of the film.

    PHIL CAREY, as a fellow officer and E.G. MARSHALL as the lead detective are excellent in supporting roles, as is DOROTHY MALONE in a pivotal role as a girl occupying the apartment next to Novak in a U-shaped building that enables MacMurray and Carey to keep an eye on both gals through binoculars (shades of REAR WINDOW).

    Conveniently, no one ever draws the blinds in these sort of thrillers and spying is made so easy for the sake of plotting, as the 24-hour surveillance occupies much of the story. The noir elements are present throughout, the dark rainy streets, the shadowy photography during car chases, the clipped delivery of lines, the murder scheme gone awry, the femme fatale angelic on the outside, bad within.

    But somehow it never becomes a major film noir, relegated to its place in obscurity over the years and not really a title that pops up when one speaks of film noir--but it does qualify as noir, on a minor scale, and it's given some taut direction and tight suspense by director Richard Quine.

    Kim is as easy as ever on the eyes although a bit robotic in her acting technique and never quite convincing as a mobster's moll. MacMurray has a less interesting, more one-dimensional role as a cop corrupted by beauty.

    All in all, definitely worth watching.
    8secondtake

    In some ways a perfect crime/noir film, though vaguely unoriginal, too.

    Pushover (1954)

    An early widescreen black and white film noir gem. It comes late in the noir cycle but it crackles with precision and sharp acting. Though the details of the plot differ, it is an obvious echo of "Double Indemnity" with the leading man, played again by Fred MacMurray, sucked into a risky plot for big money and alluring love. And of course things don't go as planned.

    MacMurray is an interesting choice in both films, because he really is more of an everyman than a noir type. Noir types are variable, I know, but you can range from Mitchum to Bogart to Dana Andrews to a whole bunch of minor actors who all have a kind of coolness or hardness to them, and you never see a regular fellow like MacMurray (the closest might be Mickey Rooney, of all people, in a neglected oddball noir, the 1950 "Quicksand"). MacMurray would later find his true calling as the dad in "My Three Sons" but when you see him in these early film roles there is something wrong and some perfect about his presence.

    I don't mean to neglect the femme fatale here, a young Kim Novak, in her first full role. She's terrific, really, a bit cool (which was her style) but more convincing, to me, than her more famous appearance across from Sinatra in "Man with the Golden Arm." Maybe it's partly how well matched she is as an actress to MacMurray, though if there is a flaw to the film , it might be the unlikeness of these two falling in love, even with $210,000 to persuade them. But love is love and who's to say? The two of them, often playing in separate scenes (talking on the phone, or MacMurray watching her through binoculars), make this a full blooded drama as well as a crime noir.

    The pace and editing of this movie, and the script and story, are perfect. It's easily the kind of film you could study for its structure, and for the writing, which isn't filled with noir doozies but with believable fast lines between two people looking to get through a growing debacle. It's a conventional structure, but its precision is comparable (for its precision) to "The Killing," that famous Stanley Kubrick film from 1956. And if it isn't as inventive, and if it lacks that amazing ending, "Pushover" is resilient because it is so reasonable. It could very well happen, and these relatively ordinary types (Novak being admired for her looks, but there are lots of lookers like her out there, especially gangster's girls) make it all the more compelling.

    The filming is great, Lester White not known in particular in the cinematography world but shot a whole slew of decent and unamazing westerns (as well as the Ida Lupino "Women's Prison" which has it moments). Little known director Richard Quine made lots of lightweight and comic fare (he worked a bit with both Blake Edwards and Mickey Rooney, then later with Jack Lemmon) and this might be his most serious 1950s film, in tone. It's certainly the kind that you can't look away for a second because it clips along without a lull for an hour and a half.
    8bkoganbing

    An Easily Corruptible Cop

    In Pushover Fred MacMurray dusts off his acclaimed portrayal of Walter Neff the luckless insurance agent from Double Indemnity and gives him a badge as an easily corruptible cop. The temptation in his path is another dame, in this case Kim Novak being 'introduced' in this film as Columbia's answer to Marilyn Monroe.

    MacMurray's a cop who is assigned to get close to gangster Paul Richards's moll Novak. Richards and his mob have pulled off a bank heist and if they had any sense, they'd be out of the country and fleeing. But police captain E.G. Marshall reasons that Richards ain't going nowhere without Novak.

    Of course what he doesn't figure on MacMurray's libido as well as Richards. Novak's one cool ice princess in this one, she's willing to spend the loot with one crook as another and one with a badge sounds pretty good to her.

    There's a side romance going as well with Novak's neighbor, nurse Dorothy Malone and fellow officer Philip Carey. Malone gets innocently caught up in the intrigue. Carey while doing surveillance on Novak's apartment gets to peeping in on Malone next door. His little Rear Window act pays off in the end.

    Pushover is a fine noir drama and highly recommended for those who like myself know full well that Fred MacMurray is capable of a lot more than Disney films and My Three Sons which I think most know him for today. Novak makes a stunning debut as the ultimately luckless moll and the rest of the cast backs them up with a splendid ensemble effort.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      One of the sources for the film was the novel "The Night Watch" by Thomas Walsh, which was serialized under the title "The Killer Wore a Badge", in the Saturday Evening Post from November 10 to December 15, 1951. The other is the novel "Rafferty" by Bill S. Ballinger.
    • Goofs
      As in Double Indemnity (1944), although Fred MacMurray's character is not married, he wears a wedding ring throughout the film.
    • Quotes

      Lona McLane: Well, it's been weird knowing you.

    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood and the Stars: In Search of Kim Novak (1964)
    • Soundtracks
      There Goes That Song Again
      (uncredited)

      Music by Jule Styne

      [Played by duo pianists at the cocktail lounge]

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 6, 1954 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 322 French Street
    • Filming locations
      • Magnolia Theatre - 4403 W. Magnolia Blvd., Burbank, California, USA(closed)
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $400,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 28 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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