"The Killer Is Loose"(1956) , Hitchcock, and Psycho
I have some weird history with a 1956 black and white "sorta B, sorta noir" movie called "The Killer is Loose."
I remember it coming on the "4:30 afternoon movie" in the 60's when I was a kid(where you could also find Saboteur and Shadow of a Doubt) and being intrigued by its spooky title sequence painting and its 1950's ambiance. Even in the 60's, the 50's "at the movies" seemed a long time ago, and the opening of "The Killer is Loose" gave us a gray Los Angeles where all the men wore suits and hats and the West Los Angeles area was 'wide open spaces" with some banal buildings on clean streets.
I lost track of "The Killer is Loose" for DECADES and then I bought a book of reviews written by Francois Truffaut called "The Films of My Life" which collected reviews he wrote for Cahiers du Cinema in the 50s before becoming a film director(though the book also had some special "new" reviews of movies like Frenzy.) A major director each got a section, the Hitchcock section did NOT have Truffaut's review of Psycho...but it did have reviews of To Catch a Thief, The Wrong Man, The Birds, and Frenzy.
Truffaut's reviews were pretty funny. He was an "angry young man' who could write something like "I"ve just seen Mervyn LeRoy's The Bad Seed...and I never want to see a Mervyn Leroy film again!" He shot down "The Bridge on the River Kwai" as "alternating scenes of second unit action and old fogies talking."
And in a section on a director named Budd Boetticher , Truffaut included a review of "The Killer is Loose."
I was tickled. Hell, I hadn't seen that movie even AROUND since I was a kid. It had disappeared. Did it matter?
Well, in 1956, it sort of mattered to Francois Truffaut. As I recall, he liked the movie and felt that one of its stars, Wendell Corey, in disguise at the end, "looked like a duck."
Flash forward a few more decades. Thanks to the miracle of streaming --" The Killer is Loose" was available to me to watch. And I did.
First I noticed that the credit painting I found so scary as a kid...wasn't. My brain wasn't fully formed yet.
And now, some random thoughts:
THE CAST. The three stars of "The Killer is Loose" are Joseph Cotton(as an LA plainclothes cop); Rhonda Fleming(as his beautiful, pregnant wife) and Wendell Corey (as the killer who is loose.) Well, that's three Hitchcock actors. Uncle Charlie, famously(but Cotton was also in Under Capricorn.) Rear Window for Corey(made only two years before THIS, and THIS was much cheaper and less important looking.) Spellbound for Fleming -- my memory is weak on that Hitchcock, but wasn't she a seductive but crazy inmate at the institution?
Cotton(my computer always autocorrects the spelling wrong), Corey, and Fleming are the "big Hitchcock names here," but "The Killer is Loose" hits a Trifecta of Hitchcock cops(well, three movies, four cops) from his three greatest movies, in "The Killer is Loose."
From Vertigo: Paul Bryar, the actor who played Stewart's "cop boss" who comes to support him at the San Juan Bautista inquest(and I always thought that Bryar looked more like a cop than Stewart did.) From North by Northwest: John Beradino, who was uniformed cop Emile Klinger in North by Northwest AND rotund Stanley Adams, who was one of the Glen Cove cops who went with Grant to the mansion. From Psycho: George Eldridge(the police chief who so angrily voiced "Did he confess to?!!!:). All that was missing were Harold J. Stone, Ken Lynch and Mort Mills!
Yes, from the three leads to all those "Hitchcock cops," The Killer is Loose is a comfort jacket of Hitchcock players.
Plus a younger and slimmer Alan Hale Jr. also as a cop. The skipper from Gilligan's Island...here quite out of place.
In 1956, Hitchcock was making the very big budget and international Man Who Knew Too Much plus the "realism" of The Wrong Man, but "The Killer is Loose" is even below the budget of The Wrong Man -- "B competition" in Hitchcock's "A world." Could part of the problem be that the last name of director Budd Boetticher was hard to pronounce and impossible to spell(versus "Hitchcock?")
That said, Budd Boetticher WOULD become famous in cineaste circles for lots of Westerns(many starring Randolph Scott) and I'd read enough good things about Boetticher to be watching "The KIller is Loose" with some high expectations. That were rather dashed.
For "The Killer is Loose" plays pretty stilted and wooden in the script(that very important thing to any movie.) Its a borderline "bad B" that gets particularly ridiculous during a climax that otherwise plays...pretty suspenseful(how odd: good suspense AND bad suspense, in the same scene.)