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CrimeDrama

The Long Wait

- "Three Thrill-Hungry Dames Played Me For A Sucker - NOW, IT'S MY TURN"

Soon after thumbing a ride from a truck driver, Johnny McBride is badly burned and suffers from complete amnesia when the vehicle he’s riding in blows a tire and goes over an embankment in a fiery blaze. McBride later receives a tip from an acquaintance that a photo of him was placed prominently in the window of a photography studio in a town called Lyncastle, so Johnny immediately leaves for the burg in the hopes that something there will jog his memory.

Release Date : 1954-05-26

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Parklane Pictures Inc.

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Anthony Quinn

Character Name : Johnny McBride

Original Name : Anthony Quinn

Gender : Male

Charles Coburn

Character Name : Gardiner

Original Name : Charles Coburn

Gender : Male

Gene Evans

Character Name : Servo

Original Name : Gene Evans

Gender : Male

Peggie Castle

Character Name : Venus

Original Name : Peggie Castle

Gender : Female

Mary Ellen Kay

Character Name : Wendy Miller

Original Name : Mary Ellen Kay

Gender : Female

Shirley Patterson

Character Name : Carol Shay (as Shawn Smith)

Original Name : Shirley Patterson

Gender : Female

Dolores Donlon

Character Name : Troy Avalon

Original Name : Dolores Donlon

Gender : Male

Barry Kelley

Character Name : Tucker

Original Name : Barry Kelley

Gender : Male

James Millican

Character Name : Police Capt. Lindsay

Original Name : James Millican

Gender : Male

Bruno VeSota

Character Name : Eddie Packman

Original Name : Bruno VeSota

Gender : Male

Jay Adler

Character Name : Joe the Bellhop

Original Name : Jay Adler

Gender : Male

John Damler

Character Name : Reporter Alan Logan

Original Name : John Damler

Gender : Male

Frank Marlowe

Character Name : Pop Henderson

Original Name : Frank Marlowe

Gender : Male

Bess Flowers

Character Name : Woman in Gambling House (uncredited)

Original Name : Bess Flowers

Gender : Female

Reviews

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

The Lyncastle Lasso. The Long Wait is directed by Victor Saville and adapted to screenplay by Alan Green and Lesser Samuels from the Mickey Spillane novel. It stars Anthony Quinn, Charles Coburn, Gene Evans, Peggie Castle, Mary Ellen Kay and Shirley Patterson. Music is by Mario Castelnuovo- Tedesco and cinematography by Franz Planer. Johnny McBride (Quinn) is a amnesiac who manages to get back to his home town of Lyncastle where he hopes to unravel who he is. But pretty soon he finds himself in a quagmire of trouble and strife... Every once in a while I come across an instance like this, where a film noir picture's reviews back upon its release were savage, and yet today the more modern noir lover is mostly positive about the pic. In fact IMDb's rating sits currently at 7.2, which as the site's users will attest to, is pretty good going. So where we at with this Spillane revamp? The complaints back in the day about it being dull and boring smack to me of writers back then not exactly understanding the noir ethos, though it's noted that there is the odd modern reviewer sharing the same complaint. It's a film very much erring on the side of bleak and moody, dabbling in the complexities of the human condition, and it's done very well, though the screenplay is hardly minus plot holes and is full of incredulous set-ups. We also have to buy into Quinn being catnip to the dames, four of them no less! But Quinn does angry and broody very well, and he gets to do lots of both here. The aura of a town paddling in its own muck is evident, the amnesia angle merely an excuse to keep things on the side of murky, for it's imperative that we feel Johnny McBride's confusion and mistrust, and we do. All of which is framed superbly by Planer's (Criss Cross) photography, which never misses a chance for shadows and low lights. With salty villains and sultry dames, violence and choice dialogue, and a few superb scenes (one sequence in an empty warehouse is stunning), this is very much a noir for noir lovers to sample. But with that in mind, these warnings should be noted, that as is often the way in noirville, the ending is divisive and the overt misogyny could well offend. 6.5/10