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poster of The Narrow Margin
Rating: 7.3/10 by 143 users

The Narrow Margin (1952)

A tough cop meets his match when he has to guard a gangster's widow on a tense train ride.

Directing:
  • Richard Fleischer
  • William Cameron Menzies
  • William Dorfman
Writing:
  • Jack Leonard
  • Earl Felton
  • Martin Goldsmith
Stars:
Release Date: Sat, May 03, 1952

Rating: 7.3/10 by 143 users

Alternative Title:
L'énigme du Chicago Express - FR

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 11 minutes
Budget: $10,000,000
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: hitman, widow, telegram, overweight man, police protection, blonde, little boy, film noir, murder, undercover cop, police detective, railroad detective, gunman, brawl, followed, train trip, hard-boiled dame
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Charles McGraw
Det. Sgt. Walter Brown
Marie Windsor
Mrs. Frankie Neall
Gordon Gebert
Tommy Sinclair
David Clarke
Joseph Kemp
Don Beddoe
Det. Sgt. Gus Forbes
Paul Maxey
Sam Jennings
Harry Harvey
Train Conductor
Peter Brocco
Vincent Yost (uncredited)
George Chandler
Accomplice Running Newsstand (uncredited)
Franklyn Farnum
Train Passenger (uncredited)
Don Haggerty
Det. Wilson (uncredited)
Milton Kibbee
Tenant (uncredited)
Walter Merrill
Officer Allen (uncredited)
Harold Miller
Train Passenger (uncredited)
Bess Flowers
Restaurant Diner (uncredited)

John Chard

The witness protection programme just got hard boiled. After finally waking herself up, a mobsters wife decides to testify against him and his organisation. As the trial draws closer she is constantly under threat of being murdered before she can spill the beans. Tough detective Walter Brown and his partner Gus Forbes are assigned to escort her safely across country via a train from Chicago to Los Angeles, but nobody can be trusted, and the threat of death is around everyone on board this speeding train. Yes it may well be a "B" movie, but as "B" movies go this has to rank as one of the finest exponents of that particular arc. With the film taking place almost entirely on board the train, the tension sapping and claustrophobic feel is perfectly executed by director Richard Fleischer. The plot twists and turns and throws up genuine moments of surprise that thrill instead of hinder, whilst the ending doesn't cop out by pandering to the normal requisite of witness protection thrillers. Charles McGraw is great as Brown, putting the hard into hard boiled and Jacqueline White is very precious as Ann Sinclair. Truth is, is that all the cast work well within the confines of this tightly produced picture. It was a surprise hit for RKO, where made on a small budget of under a quarter of a million dollars, it turned out to be a very profitable "B" production for the company. It wowed audiences back in the 50s and it's testament to the film's worth that today, here in the modern age, it's still being sought out and praised by movie lovers of all ages. 8/10


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