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Le destin est au tournant

Original title: Drive a Crooked Road
  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
Mickey Rooney, Kevin McCarthy, Dianne Foster, and Jack Kelly in Le destin est au tournant (1954)
Official Trailer
Play trailer1:58
1 Video
41 Photos
Film NoirCrimeDramaThriller

An upright car mechanic falls in love with the girlfriend of a gangster. This forces him to participate in the criminal underworld.An upright car mechanic falls in love with the girlfriend of a gangster. This forces him to participate in the criminal underworld.An upright car mechanic falls in love with the girlfriend of a gangster. This forces him to participate in the criminal underworld.

  • Director
    • Richard Quine
  • Writers
    • Blake Edwards
    • Richard Quine
    • James Benson Nablo
  • Stars
    • Mickey Rooney
    • Dianne Foster
    • Kevin McCarthy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Quine
    • Writers
      • Blake Edwards
      • Richard Quine
      • James Benson Nablo
    • Stars
      • Mickey Rooney
      • Dianne Foster
      • Kevin McCarthy
    • 36User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Drive a Crooked Road
    Trailer 1:58
    Drive a Crooked Road

    Photos41

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Mickey Rooney
    Mickey Rooney
    • Eddie Shannon
    Dianne Foster
    Dianne Foster
    • Barbara Mathews
    Kevin McCarthy
    Kevin McCarthy
    • Steve Norris
    Jack Kelly
    Jack Kelly
    • Harold Baker
    Harry Landers
    Harry Landers
    • Ralph
    Jerry Paris
    Jerry Paris
    • Phil
    Paul Picerni
    Paul Picerni
    • Carl
    Dick Crockett
    Dick Crockett
    • Don
    Irene Bolton
    • Pretty Girl
    • (uncredited)
    John Close
    John Close
    • Police Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Richard H. Cutting
    Richard H. Cutting
    • Bit Role
    • (uncredited)
    John Damler
    John Damler
    • Police Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Linda Danson
    • Pretty Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Diana Dawson
    • Pretty Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Jean Engstrom
    Jean Engstrom
    • Bit Role
    • (uncredited)
    Mike Mahoney
    • Police Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Peggy Maley
    Peggy Maley
    • Marge
    • (uncredited)
    Patrick Miller
    • Teller
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard Quine
    • Writers
      • Blake Edwards
      • Richard Quine
      • James Benson Nablo
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    6.92.2K
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    Featured reviews

    7lee_eisenberg

    Mickey's other side

    I should say that "Drive a Crooked Road" probably won't hold your attention quite as much as most movies that I've seen. What's mostly eye-opening about it is just seeing Mickey Rooney in a gritty role in a film noir. He plays Eddie Shannon, a mechanic with little aim in life. The high points in his daily routine are when his co-workers ogle women walking by the shop. But when he gets mixed up with the wrong woman, he suddenly finds himself involved in a bank robbery with apparently no way out.

    While some people might assert that Mickey Rooney was miscast here, I beg to differ. In this role, he shows that he can be something totally different from the "family-oriented" roles with which he's usually been associated (though I best remember him from "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World" and "Night at the Museum"). This movie is approximately as gritty as the average film noir, and while it's not any kind of masterpiece, still worth seeing. As it's apparently not widely available on video or DVD, Portland's video/DVD store Movie Madness has a copy.

    Also starring Kevin McCarthy (of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers") and Jerry Paris (the neighbor on "The Dick Van Dyke Show").
    8HEFILM

    Nearly perfect with a couple of big problems

    Richard Quine probably has his best "non comedy" film with this one, but maybe has to take the rap also for what's weak about this film. The opening car race and the key bank "race" are pretty blandly done as is any other action set piece in the movie. The opening scene is really poor, like something you'd see in a film made in the Early silent days. Badly matched rear projection, the camera angle is so wrong in the rear projection that is doesn't match the action of Rooney driving at all. The process work isn't bad, the footage shot is. The rest of the race material is also poor. And for a film about the ability to race, the fact that the racing is bad can't be overlooked. After this crappy beginning the excellent performances and dialog drive the film along perfectly. Most of the cast is perfect and the personal violence between characters is very strong. Rooney is very understated here--in many of his other adult work he'd tend to over act, not here though at all. It's an award worthy performance.

    Just too bad that the action is treated like sloppy second unit work--some say (un)credited to Blake Edwards himself--but with Edwards interest in fast cars etc., hard to believe he'd shoot this stuff so badly. The ending, which also involves some action is perfunctorily done and the resolution too quick. Too bad because otherwise this would be a nearly perfect movie. Still if you get over, the opening especially, this is a must see.
    7claudio_carvalho

    The Mechanic, The Racer, The Lover and The Avenger

    In California, the mechanic Eddie Shannon (Mickey Rooney) is also an excellent racing-car driver that expects someday to save money to race in Europe in Le Mans, Grand Prix and other car races driving a European car. Eddie is a short and shy man that has difficulties to date a woman. When the crooks Steve Norris (Kevin McCarthy) and Harold Baker (Jack Kelly) see the performance of Eddie in a local race, they use Steve´s girlfriend Barbara Mathews (Dianne Foster) to seduce Eddie to convince him to drive the getaway car in a bank heist. What will be Eddie´s attitude?

    "Drive a Crooked Road" is a film-noir written by Blake Edwards and directed by Richard Quine. Mickey Rooney performs a dark and sad role that seems to be tailored for him. The femme fatale Dianne Foster is the key element of the story, first seducing Eddie and then triggering his anger leaving him full of hatred. The gloomy conclusion surprises, but fits perfectly to the story. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "Os Valentões" ("The Bullies")
    7bmacv

    Affecting performance by Rooney as duped misfit in odd weeper/noir

    Is there such a thing as a male weeper? Bang The Drum Slowly certainly belongs, as do parts of The Knute Rockne Story (`Let's win this one for the Gipper!'). Probably the whole athlete-dying-young genre does for men what Stella Dallas did for women. Another candidate for inclusion is Drive A Crooked Road, a 1954 noir starring Mickey Rooney.

    Rooney's abbreviated stature helped keep him in pictures as America's oldest teen-ager. But once he hit 30, it was inevitable that adult roles should come his way. As the noir cycle was in full swing, that's where he landed. In The Strip and Quicksand, he still managed to pass as a stripling. By the time of this movie, however, he was well into his 30s, with broad hits of chubbiness settling into his face and midriff. He was still the star, not yet relinquished to character roles, though it was unclear how to handle him. So he became a misfit – a `freak.'

    He's an awkward, lonely auto mechanic with dreams of driving someday in the Grand Prix – dreams he knows won't come true. With one exception, his fellow mechanics tease him mercilessly, especially about his lack of sexual experience. One day an unattainable woman (Dianne Foster) gives him the big eye, and he succumbs, however tentatively at first. (His ache for her is palpable when she plays hard to get, as he tosses on his rooming-house bed with his few racing trophies now emblems of hollow triumph). But she's just a cat's-paw for her real boyfriend, Kevin McCarthy, living the high life in his beach-house bachelor pad; he's planning to knock over a bank in Palm Springs and needs Rooney as his daredevil driver. With Foster's increasingly reluctant urging, Rooney signs on....

    The resolution, of course, is the falling out of thieves; a large portion of the plot was to be echoed, 10 years later, in Don Siegel's remake of The Killers. Though the robbery and escape should have been the centerpiece, or at least the central set-piece, of the movie, here it seems curiously perfunctory (these comments are based on viewing a version some minutes short of recorded running times, however). But the movie's staying power lies in Rooney's portrayal of the dupe, the victim – all the more memorable for being so understated.
    dougdoepke

    Little Guys Also Dream

    As other reviewers point out, America's favorite little guy was at a career crossroads at this point (1953). All in all, this downbeat low-budget caper film was a gutsy choice for MGM's former golden boy. Not only is Rooney's Eddie Shannon a rather pathetically repressed and vulnerable nobody, but the script stays entirely within that character, allowing Rooney none of his usual assertive (and often annoying) antics. The result is perhaps the biggest departure of his career, and also perhaps the most moving.

    The film itself is a good one, benefiting from unfamiliar Southern Cal locations, excellent acting from a number of up-&-comers, Jack Kelly , Kevin McCarthy, et al., and a plausible script. As a caper film, it's inferior to the best ones of that decade (The Asphalt Jungle, The Killing, etc.), but as an account of one man's sad and lonely plight (never a Hollywood biggie), it holds its own with the best of them, thanks to Rooney.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Eddie Muller, host of TCM's Noir Alley, the Malibu beach house was also in Tension (1949) and 711 Ocean Drive (1950); it is not the house from Le roman de Mildred Pierce (1945) or En quatrième vitesse (1955) which are two different houses down the road in Malibu.
    • Goofs
      (at around 10 mins) Eddie pulls up at Barbara's apartment and parks behind a gray Ford. When Barbara drives off a few minutes later, Eddie's MG is missing, but the Ford is still there.
    • Quotes

      Marge: Could I peel this onion? I can't stand to see a grown man cry.

      Steve Norris: Take it with you, beautiful; drop it into a large martini.

    • Soundtracks
      From Here to Eternity
      by Fred Karger and Robert Wells

      played instrumentally as source music

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 10, 1954 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "Founding Film" YouTube Channel (Spanish subtitles)
      • Streaming on "K M" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Drive a Crooked Road
    • Filming locations
      • 1769 N. Orange Drive, Los Angeles, California, USA(Barbara Mathews apartment)
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 23m(83 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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