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Crime Wave (1954)
In director Andre De Toth's low-budget, hard-boiled
gangster-crime drama, shot on location in 1950s Los Angeles - the
tale of an ex-convict and reformed San Quentin parolee Steve Lacey
(Gene Nelson) trying to go straight as an airplane mechanic, with
loving wife Ellen (Phyllis Kirk):
- the opening scene (shot from the POV of the thieves
in their car) - the robbery of a gas station by 'Doc' Penny's (Ted
de Corsia) gang of three, resulting in the killing of a motorcycle
cop, and the wounding of gang member Gat Morgan (Ned Young)
- the victimization of Steve, who became trapped and
haunted by his former life when his former cellmate Gat, the wounded
fugitive gang member (all gang members were escapees from San Quentin),
demanded to be harbored in Steve's apartment; when his wife Ellen
was threatened, Steve was pressured into joining the gang in a complex,
daylight bank heist in Glendale (functioning as the getaway car driver
and airplane pilot to fly them to Mexico afterwards)
- the failed Saturday robbery when Steve's written tip
alerted police, and the bank was staffed by policemen disguised as
bank personnel and customers
- throughout the film, Steve was pursued as a suspect
by a relentless, toothpick-chewing, sadistic homicide Detective Lieutenant
Sims (Sterling Hayden) (who believed: "Once a crook, always
a crook") - and Steve's own fear of being marked as a criminal:
("Once you do a stretch, you're never clean again! You're never
free! They've always got a string on you, and they tug, tug, tug!
Before you know it, you're back again!")
- in the end, although Steve was handcuffed and arrested
by Sims, in the final moments, it was all a pretense - Steve was
let go and allowed to resume his life
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Opening Gas Station Robbery
Steve (Gene Nelson) with Wife Ellen (Phyllis Kirk)
Relentless Det. Lieut Sims (Sterling Hayden)
Steve's "Arrest"
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