Calling Homicide

September. 30,1956      NR
Rating:
6.5
Trailer Synopsis Cast

Cop Andy Doyle investigates a car-bombing murder and the killing of a sleazy modeling agency owner. Are they connected?

Bill Elliott as  Andy Doyle
Don Haggerty as  Det. Sgt. Mike Duncan
Kathleen Case as  Donna Graham
Myron Healey as  Jim Haddix
Jeanne Cooper as  Darlene Adams
Thomas Browne Henry as  Allen Gilmore
Lyle Talbot as  Tony Fuller
Almira Sessions as  Mrs. Ida Dunsetter
Herb Vigran as  Ray Engel
James Best as  Det. Arnie Arnhoff

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Reviews

Dotbankey
1956/09/30

A lot of fun.

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FuzzyTagz
1956/10/01

If the ambition is to provide two hours of instantly forgettable, popcorn-munching escapism, it succeeds.

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Bluebell Alcock
1956/10/02

Ok... Let's be honest. It cannot be the best movie but is quite enjoyable. The movie has the potential to develop a great plot for future movies

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Freeman
1956/10/03

This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.

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JohnHowardReid
1956/10/04

Wild Bill Elliott (Lieutenant Doyle), Don Haggerty (Sergeant Duncan), Kathleen Case (Donna), Myron Healey (Maddox), Jeanne Cooper (Darlene), Thomas B. Henry (Gilmore), Lyle Talbot (Tony Fuller), Herb Vigran (Ray Engle), James Best.Director: EDWARD BERNDS. Original screenplay: Edward Bernds. Photography: Harry Neumann. Film editor: William Austin. Art director: David Milton. Construction supervisor: James West. Music: Marlin Skiles. Production manager: Allen K. Wood. Assistant director: Edward Morey, Jr. Sound recording: Ralph E. Butler. An Allied Artists Production.Copyright 1956 by Allied Artists. No New York opening. U.S. release: 30 September 1956. U.K. release through Associated British-Pathe, floating from August 1957. No Australian theatrical release. 5,480 feet. 61 minutes.SYNOPSIS: A school for models serves as a front for baby-selling and blackmail.COMMENT: A cheap Monogram mystery with absolutely no redeeming features. The cast boasts only one halfway decent actor, namely Lyle Talbot, and it's difficult to judge which of Bernds' contributions are the less proficient: his slow-paced screenplay or his equally torpid direction. Personally, I'd give the booby prize to the script. Even the identity of the murderer is glaringly obvious.Calling homicide? I'd like to call it something else!

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mark.waltz
1956/10/05

One thing was very clear to me while watching this movie, the third in a series of Hollywood set crime dramas with Bill Elliott as detective Andy Doyle. The set-up was basically a re-tread of the infamous black dahlia murder mystery, a real-life brutal slaying which has apparently never been resolved. In fact, that case is mentioned here, making it difficult to separate fact from fiction, just like every time Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes declared, "This is the most notorious case to hit London ever since Jack the Ripper!".One thing is very clear as facts about the murdered woman are revealed. She was definitely very much hated. As her crusty housekeeper Almira Sessions declares, "I needed a job, and she needed somebody who could tolerate her!". I guess a paycheck is worth the price of working for somebody you despise, especially since Sessions obviously gave back as much as she had to take. It turns out that the murdered woman (only seen briefly lying face down in the mud) was a failed movie starlet who began a modeling agency which was the front for something more sinister.The list of suspects runs long which includes her business partners (among them Jeanne Cooper, the beloved matriarch of "The Young and the Restless") but it only scratches the surface of what is going on. Elliott gets on the case of a fellow colleague (murdered in a car explosion) who tells him of a racket he's investigating but doesn't give out any details. This takes the film into the realms of an exciting thriller that is definitely the epitome of what film noir is all about, not just another detective story. What seems like what could have been part of a late 1950's T.V. detective show is probably too violent in its subject matter and content to have been on the airwaves, making its film release much more plausible.

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bkoganbing
1956/10/06

Bill Elliott's third film working for the modern Los Angeles County Sheriff is this one Calling Homicide. Something not quite right about Elliott exchanging a horse for a squad car, but I guess it's a question of what I'm used to.This film has Elliott investigating the car bombing death of one of their own so it gets personal. One of the men tells Elliott he's new to the bunco squad, but he's investigating a racket he says is one sick and cruel one. The next thing is he's killed in the car bombing.Right after that the Homicide Squad gets assigned the death of a woman who may have driven off the canyon road to her death, but forensics proves it wasn't accidental. Oh, and her name was in the late cop's paperwork.The canyon victim was a former actress who ran a modeling agency and what this woman was really into as an income is pretty sickening. But as we meet people who knew her like Lyle Talbot, Tom Browne Henry, John Dennis, and Herb Vigran we get a picture of a greedy and overly ambitious woman.Same criticism I have of these other Elliott police films, nice but nothing here that wasn't on network television.

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bmacv
1956/10/07

An hour-long police procedural set in late-Chandler Los Angeles, Calling Homicide looks cheap and unstylish, like an episode of Perry Mason minus Raymond Burr, William Talman and Ray Collins (its cast is culled from from unsung bit-part players and brief-careered starlets, from veterans of crime programmers and Westerns – the lead goes to `Wild' Bill Elliott). But it has a Poverty-Row oomph to it and unfolds its story in a brisk, no-nonsense way.The L.A. Sheriff's Department gets hit by a doubled-barreled blast: One of its detectives is incinerated by a car bomb in the station's parking lot, while up in Coldwater Canyon a woman's body is discovered, mutilated like the Black Dahlia victim of a decade earlier. (The plot's roots stretch back to post-war Hollywood. A script girl identifies a photo as coming from Universal's The Crooked Mile; could she mean Republic's The Last Crooked Mile of 1946?) Galvanized into action, they identify the body as that of a former actress, now the ruthless proprietor of a `modeling' school – which turns out to be a cover for a black-market-baby (and blackmail) racket that the murdered detective had been investigating. There's no want of suspects, as they can't find anybody with a decent word to utter about the deceased. Still, nobody has the courage to sing; the few who consider it find themselves with very abbreviated futures....Far worse hours have been recorded on film than Calling Homicide, a stripped-down crime story that shows how closely related B-movies and television dramas had become in the late-1950s, though this Hollywood product shows a bit more edge and energy than would be thought suitable for living-room consumption for years to come.

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