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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| FIVE (director/writer: Arch Oboler; screenwriter: James Weldon Johnson; cinematographer: Louis Clyde Stoumen; editor: John Hoffman; music: Henry Russell; cast: William Phipps (Michael Rogin), Susan Douglas (Roseanne Rogers), James Anderson (Eric), Charles Lampkin (Charles), Earl Lee (Oliver Barnstaple); Runtime: 93; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Arch Oboler; Columbia; 1951) |
| "Dull, talky, gloomy,
pretentious, naive and slow-moving
post-apocalyptic survival story of the unfit."
Reviewed
by Dennis Schwartz Dull,
talky, gloomy, pretentious, naive and slow-moving
post-apocalyptic survival story of the unfit.
Recognized as the first film about life after a
nuclear holocaust. It's directed with earnestness but
only moderate competence by prominent radio man Arch
Oboler ("The Twonky"/"Bwana Devil"/"Bewitched"), who
is best known for his popular radio series Lights
Out (1934-57). Oboler turns the low-budget (made
for $75,000) sci-fi film, made with a cast of unknowns
and shot in black and white, into a talky debate on
how mankind can build a better world after a nuclear
catastrophe. It was filmed at the site of Oboler's
cliff-top beach house, whose guest house was built by
Frank Lloyd Wright (the entire film was shot on the
360-acre ranch owned by Oboler and his wife Eleanor
in Santa Monica Mountains near Los Angeles). A
nuclear bomb destroys the world except for five
survivors, who all eventually meet in an abandoned
country beach house built by the dead architect
husband of pregnant survivor housewife Roseanne (Susan
Douglas). Roseanne was saved because she was in
the hospital lead-lined x-ray room during the blast
and the hysterical lady frightened by the city death
scene wanders for solace back to her family beach
house. There she meets the embittered hunky Michael
Rogin (William Phipps), an unhappy
Dartmouth grad working as a tour guide at the Empire
State Building, who is a squatter in the beach house.
Michael survived because he was in the elevator at the
time of the blast. The two survivors try their best to
make the best of things thinking they might be the
only survivors left in the world, with an anxious
Roseanne wanting to go back to the unnamed city to see
if hubby survived and Michael thrilled to stay in the
country (away from the city he hates) and goes on an
intense return to nature trip. Arriving
by Jeep are wimpy bank manager Oliver Barnstaple
(Earl Lee) and the respectful
black bank cashier Charles (Charles
Lampkin), who both survived because they were
locked in the bank vault. After
some three months living together, Michael
delivers Roseanne's
baby boy and professes his love for her. Meanwhile
Charles helps Michael with house
construction and planting a veggie garden. Then
the delirious and weakened Olivier succumbs to
radiation poisoning and is buried on the beach. The
communal harmony is broken with the arrival of the
egotistical Nazi spouting adventurer/explorer Eric
(James Anderson), a survivor who was on an
expedition atop Mt. Everest during the blast and
when the plane he borrowed crashed at sea he washed
up ashore where the survivors were living. After
nursed back to health by Roseanne, the evil German
creates racial tension, competes with Michael for
the attention of Roseanne and spitefully ruins the
veggie crop. It
builds to a hokey conclusion that has only two
survivors left (neither particularly interesting or
people I would have confidence in building a new
world) who are both determined to learn from their
past mistakes, as they get a second chance to live
in a world that must be regenerated. Though the
theme is promising, the dreary execution, lack of
action, the triteness and unpleasantness of the
survivors and lame narrative make it a tough watch.
REVIEWED ON 12/21/2012 GRADE: C+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |