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Lee Aaker, Gene Barry, Lydia Clarke, and Milburn Stone in La città atomica (1952)

Recensioni degli utenti

La città atomica

18 recensioni
6/10

Ahead of its time but lacks necessary bite.

The young son of nuclear physicist Dr. Frank Addison (Gene Barry) is kidnapped by enemy agents. They offer up his life and well-being in trade for the H-bomb secret knowledge Dr. Addison possesses of America's atomic program.

This cold war paranoia thriller is in some ways ahead of its time as many such themed films would get made in the years to come. While it has its moments, maintaining an high level of suspense with regards to the continued safety of Dr. Addison's son Tommy (well played by Lee Aaker) and creating an exciting climax at the end, this disappoints in that it never delves into the negative possibilities associated with the H-bomb secrets falling into enemy hands, an exploration of which I feel would have given this the bite it lacks. Also the villains remain much too colorless and forgettable aside from a chilling sequence where they try and lure the child Tommy out of a cave hideaway. All in all though, it's better than I expected thanks in no small part to a good cast and tight-paced direction.
  • Space_Mafune
  • 12 lug 2006
  • Permalink
7/10

Was nominated for an Academy Award - Best Writing, Story and Screenplay

Here is a much lesser known 50's sci-fi with a little different twist. An atomic researchers son is kidnapped and held for a ransom of the the Father's atomic secrets.

This is a tightly knit atomic sci-fi thriller with great production values and above average acting, even from the kid. The Atomic City actually has a movie feel to it unlike a lot of other 50's sci-fi of this time which which came off more like an episode of a TV show.

The Atomic City was also actually nominated for an Academy Award for Best Screenplay - how many other 50's sci-fi can tout an Academy Award Nomination?

Great pacing, tight direction and some superb location filming in the 'real' Atomic City of Los Alamos, New Mexico make this one worth hunting down. The collectors print in circulation is an above average transfer and makes for a great double feature with the Atomic Man!!

Recommended.
  • captainapache
  • 26 dic 2006
  • Permalink
5/10

Starts Nicely, But Then...

I found "The Atomic CIty" somewhat disappointing after two viewings. It starts from an interesting platform; young son of big-shot post-war nuke scientist bottled-up in New Mexican middle-of-nowhere research base is kidnapped and held for intelligence ransom. But after 30 minutes it descends straight down to a very mediocre, run-of-the-mill kidnapped kid story complete with all cliché trimmings (hysterical mother, overwrought macho dad).

The film drifts between styles. The lead-in sets up a documentary-style narrative. But then the early family scenes present a more dramatic style. Scenes where the cops are tracking down the kidnappers slide back into documentary. It's a goofy stew with uneven pacing.

To make matters worse none of the characters are well developed and by the end you'll probably find that you just don't care what happens very much any more.
  • TanakaK
  • 22 dic 2009
  • Permalink

A very effective and interesting cold war era thriller.

In this cold war thriller, Gene Barry plays Frank Addison, an atomic scientist at Los Almos (aka The Atomic City) whose son Tommy is kidnapped by communist agents. The kidnappers demand from Addison that he hand over atomic secrets in exchange for Tommy's safe return.

This very effective cold war era espionage thriller used turn up often on late night television in late sixties and early seventies. I missed it then, but got a chance to see it very recently when I found a video copy tucked away in a remote corner of my favorite video store. I found THE ATOMIC CITY to be a tense, exciting thriller of the type they made so well back in the late forties and early fifties. The film moves at a quick pace, most of the cast is good, the black and white photography excellent, and very good use of real locations.

One interesting thing I discovered while watching this film is how Los Almos was actually a self contained city, hence the title. The scientists who worked at Los Almos lived in houses inside the secure confines of Los Almos. Los Almos even had its own schools. It is interesting that Tommy is kidnapped when he leaves the secure isolated confines of "The Atomic City" when goes on a school trip.
  • youroldpaljim
  • 14 dic 2001
  • Permalink
6/10

Only the nastiest of spies kidnap a child!

  • mark.waltz
  • 23 mag 2018
  • Permalink
6/10

Interesting thriller

  • martyccuk
  • 24 apr 2020
  • Permalink
7/10

The Atomic City - Hidden Gem with Misnomer Title

I sat down to watch this film for my Saturday morning ritual of watching a sci-film to start off the day. I was not disappointed, as it was a very good film. However, it has absolutely nothing to do with atomic energy or science fiction. It is basically about living and working in Los Alamos, the town that developed the Hydrogen bomb. The plot surrounds the kidnapping of a son of the leading atomic scientist by commie spies and the search for the boy. It is pretty engrossing, and well-directed. Catch it if you can.
  • arthur_tafero
  • 10 dic 2021
  • Permalink
5/10

Serviceable kidnap thriller

  • Leofwine_draca
  • 5 mag 2020
  • Permalink
5/10

Standard-typical Thriller.

  • rmax304823
  • 6 feb 2009
  • Permalink
8/10

Worth viewing as an early 'cold war' movie

Just watched this movie and it's not bad; there are a few tense moments and not a lot of long dialog strings. Comes off as fairly intelligent; fastpaced almost like 'documentary style'. This movie will evoke some nostalgia and a bit of cold war paranoia with cars,street scenes,and life in the 50's. The acting is fairly solid and at 85 minutes run time it goes by at a good pace. An atomic era film buff shouldn't miss this one.
  • colin-69
  • 14 set 2000
  • Permalink

An enjoyable Atomic Age thriller

I have just watched The Atomic City for the first time and was very impressed by it.

A nuclear scientist's son is kidnapped when he goes out of the confines of Los Almos on a school trip. The kidnappers want to know the secrets of the H bomb, but it isn't long before the FBI are on the case and the kidnappers eventually track down the boy and the kidnappers in some old cliff dwellings. The boy is rescued at the end, but not before he nearly falls from a cliff trying to escape the kidnappers.

This movie was filmed on location in Los Almos and San Francisco and good use is made of these locations. It gives you an idea on what life was like in this period.

The movie's cast includes Gene Barry (War Of The Worlds), Nancy Gates (World Without End) and the boy is played well by Lee Aaker (The Challenge of Rin Tin Tin).

I enjoyed this movie and is worth watching if you get the chance.

Rating: 4 stars out of 5.
  • chris_gaskin123
  • 4 mar 2003
  • Permalink
8/10

The Lives of Others

A slick, good-looking thriller with excellent location work, which uses the backdrop of Los Alamos to bring it's story bang up to date. It acknowledges that despite the comforts of postwar affluence the world was never the same again after the development of the atom bomb; the kid in this film giving voice to the existential trauma wrought on every succeeding generation when he says "if" rather than "when" he grows up...

The title suggests sci-fi, but kidnapping children for a ransom had been an ever-present nightmare since the abduction of Charles Lindbergh's son twenty earlier. This time the kidnappers are dastardly commies whose price for the return of the kid is atomic secrets; and choosing between the life of a cute kid and countless others remains a perennial nightmare, as Col. Helen Mirren was recently reminded in 'Eye in the Sky'.
  • richardchatten
  • 24 apr 2020
  • Permalink

Hiding in the Ruins

Check out the first 20 minutes even though the suspense hasn't yet kicked in. We get a pretty good look at super-secret Los Alamos just a few years after the big bomb test that helped end WWII. Except for the tight security, it looks unthreatening enough. Note how it's a TV repairman, an obvious regular guy, who takes us through security. Once through, it's like any-town-USA, nice homes, quiet streets, kids going to school, and a family TV on the blink. Later on we see little Tommy and little Peggy frolicking along streets lined with impressive looking facilities separated by locked gates. The movie appears to be saying, "Okay, we're tough, only because we have to be. But, basically, we're still just folks."

Now, I expect that was a comforting message to Cold War audiences still not used to government's "dooms-day" research. It's a clear effort at popular reassurance. The one darker note is when Tommy's mother (Clarke) worries about her son's mental state. He doesn't say, "When I grow up"; instead, it's, "If I grow up". That note of doubt not only reflects a Los Alamos reality, but also a national one that in 1952 had just seen footage of the apocalyptic H-bomb. Note too, how professionally FBI agents are portrayed, a standard feature of McCarthy era fare. When brute force is needed, it's not they, but private citizen Gene Barry who thrashes out the information—an early version, I suppose, of modern era "rendition".

Once the kidnapping occurs, the suspense doesn't let up. The intrigue is nicely handled with colorful LA locations that keep us guessing. The climactic scenes around the cliff dwellings may not be plausible as a hiding place, but the view of northern New Mexico is great. Then too, the ancient stone apartments amount to one of the more exotic backdrops of the decade. Note also the extensive use of the police helicopter just coming into use as a law enforcement tool. Among an otherwise subdued cast, Nancy Gates remains a sparkling presence as teacher Ellen Haskell. Never Hollywood glamorous, she was still a fine unsung actress and winning personality. I also expect this was one of director Hopper's more successful movie efforts, and though people have since gotten used to the nuclear threat, the movie remains a revealing and riveting document of its time.
  • dougdoepke
  • 8 feb 2009
  • Permalink
8/10

CUT SCENE

I had it on tape from a tv showing. The DVD by Olive Films is missing a portion of a scene. The wife Mrs. Addison talks to Tommy on the phone to prove he is alive. However it was a tape recording she heard. They told her it might be a tape. Then later on around min. 57 police break into an apartment where the kidnappers held the boy. they find a tape recorder with the boys voice on it. this scene is cut. police go into the next room and find a blackboard with nuclear info on it.
  • mlink-36-9815
  • 26 gen 2018
  • Permalink

Ancient atomic thriller noir

The Atomic City refers to the community of Los Alamos in New Mexico where nuclear scientists live and work. It's a self contained private community with right security as tight as when it began during World War II. But on a school trip, Lee Aaker son of atomic scientist Gene Barry, is kidnapped and held for ransom for the secret of the newly developed hydrogen bomb.

This film was made in 1952 at the time when Julius and Ethel Rosenberg's case was on appeal and front page headlines. So it was a timely film back during the McCarthy era.

It's a tightly edited little noir thriller. I recommend it highly as an antique of bygone days.

What was amusing to me is the way the FBI is portrayed. In this day and age I'm not sure too many people really care other than for political posturing as to how terrorists are treated. Back then though the FBI had this all American image. They don't do things like torture prisoners.

When Leonard Strong one of the kidnappers is nabbed, he laughingly flings the Bill of Rights and the FBI's code of conduct in their faces and won't divulge anything. Then Milburn Stone, the FBI agent takes a break and father Gene Barry goes in with the prisoner alone. Needless to say, Strong coughs up what they need but quick.

J.Edgar Hoover was most concerned about the image of his bureau and his agents, so the third degree for the FBI couldn't be shown. Kind of laughable today.
  • bkoganbing
  • 12 lug 2005
  • Permalink
10/10

Top-notch Cold War thriller

  • spartanbuff
  • 17 dic 2022
  • Permalink

B-movie Oppenheimer

One of my sci-fi/horror/fantasy reviews written 50 years ago: Directed by Jerry Hopper for Paramount release, "The Atomic City" stars Gene Barry (in his movie debut), Milburn Stone, Lydia Clarke and Nancy Gates.

A straight science fiction-espionage thriller that emphasizes suspense rather than gadgetry, as physicist Gene's son is kidnapped by enemy agents. The Los Alamos setting was topical at the time, and proves to be still relevant.

Gene Barry's magnetism on screen served him in good stead, not as a movie star but as the lead in successful series I enjoyed like "Bat Masterson" and "Burke's Law", quite different genres but both made his own as a smooth performer -the sort of easy, comfortable personality as an actor that Perry Como exuded as a singer/host.
  • lor_
  • 19 dic 2023
  • Permalink

Atomic city

I don't know why - I have an idea though - but in my mind, I always confound this film wih another one, made one year later, SPLIT SECOND, and starring Stephen McNally, with something, two elements, not so far from this movie. In Dick Powell's film, three gangsters on the loose hid in a house which was in the middle of the nuclear tests in Nevada. Here, a small group of gangters take a nuclear scientist in hostage. So, ou see? Gangsters, hostage and a more or less nuclear element into the plot. Both are quite good, taut, effective, exciting for rare gem thrillers. Here, Gene Barry could remind Frederic March in DESPERATE HOURS, made several years after this one. Yes, a good early Jerry Hopper's flick. Jerry Hopper, a director which filmography should be more known from the movie buffs. Some Andrew Stone's films looked like this one: typical American family facing hoodlums with home invasion scheme.
  • searchanddestroy-1
  • 1 feb 2024
  • Permalink

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