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Témoin de la dernière heure

Original title: Highway 301
  • 1950
  • 16
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Gaby André, Wally Cassell, and Steve Cochran in Témoin de la dernière heure (1950)
Cop DramaFilm NoirHeistPolice ProceduralCrimeDrama

Led by a psychopathic killer, a vicious gang of armed robbers terrorizes Virginia, Maryland and North Carolina, robbing banks and payrolls and murdering anyone who might identify them.Led by a psychopathic killer, a vicious gang of armed robbers terrorizes Virginia, Maryland and North Carolina, robbing banks and payrolls and murdering anyone who might identify them.Led by a psychopathic killer, a vicious gang of armed robbers terrorizes Virginia, Maryland and North Carolina, robbing banks and payrolls and murdering anyone who might identify them.

  • Director
    • Andrew L. Stone
  • Writer
    • Andrew L. Stone
  • Stars
    • William P. Lane Jr.
    • John S. Battle
    • W. Kerr Scott
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Andrew L. Stone
    • Writer
      • Andrew L. Stone
    • Stars
      • William P. Lane Jr.
      • John S. Battle
      • W. Kerr Scott
    • 32User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos31

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    Top cast60

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    William P. Lane Jr.
    William P. Lane Jr.
    • Self - Maryland Governor
    • (as The Honorable William P. Lane Jr.)
    John S. Battle
    John S. Battle
    • Self - Virginia Governor
    • (as The Honorable John S. Battle)
    W. Kerr Scott
    W. Kerr Scott
    • Self - North Carolina Governor
    • (as Governor W. Kerr Scott)
    Steve Cochran
    Steve Cochran
    • George Legenza
    Virginia Grey
    Virginia Grey
    • Mary Simms
    Gaby André
    Gaby André
    • Lee Fontaine
    • (as Gaby Andre)
    Edmon Ryan
    Edmon Ryan
    • Detective Sergeant Truscott
    Robert Webber
    Robert Webber
    • William B. Phillips
    Wally Cassell
    Wally Cassell
    • Robert Mays
    Aline Towne
    Aline Towne
    • Madeline Welton
    Richard Egan
    Richard Egan
    • Herbie Brooks
    Edward Norris
    Edward Norris
    • Noyes Hinton
    Fred Aldrich
    Fred Aldrich
    • Cop with Machine Gun
    • (uncredited)
    John Alvin
    John Alvin
    • Bank Teller
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Bartell
    • News Clerk
    • (uncredited)
    Chet Brandenburg
    Chet Brandenburg
    • Bank Customer
    • (uncredited)
    Bill Cartledge
    • Elevator Boy
    • (uncredited)
    Dick Cherney
    • Police Officer
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Andrew L. Stone
    • Writer
      • Andrew L. Stone
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    6.81.2K
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    Featured reviews

    6artalaska-24645

    Almost a solid 7, perhaps 8

    With Steve Cochran as the steely psychopath, his solidly loyal gang members (and Cochran loyal to them), and the carefree, hardboiled but feminine Virginia Grey, the film is well acted. The action on the streets and with large crowds is pleasingly complex and realistic. The finely staged light-and-shadow settings are consistently startling and eye-catching in a variety of indoor and outdoor settings. These elements, despite the governors unconvincingly reading their scripts and a narrative voice for documentary effect, could have made this film a solid 7 and perhaps an 8 out of 10. However, the predictable, tedious melodramatic "Perils of Pauline" escape attempts of the Lee Fontaine character are a ball-and-chain that (for this viewer) held this film back from being a runaway noir success.
    9melvelvit-1

    Rip-roaring retro

    HIGHWAY 301 is a rip-roaring Warner Brothers return to their hard-hitting early 1930s gangster cycle complete with a "Crime Does Not Pay" prologue delivered by the governors of the three states the events take place in. Filmed in a semi-documentary style with sporadic voice-over narration, the tale is based on "cold, hard fact" and is surprisingly sadistic -which could be the reason why I never saw it on TV growing up. Like many good crime melodramas, H301 opens with a bank robbery and follows the gang and their molls as they live life on the run and I was reminded of 1967's BONNIE & CLYDE in its depiction of a "family" of outlaws contending with pressures from within as they're relentlessly pursued by the long arm of the law. The brutally handsome Steve Cochran dominates his surroundings as the flint-eyed, heartless, "take-no-prisoners" leader of the "Tri-State Gang" who can calmly kill at the drop of a fedora and Robert Webber and newcomer Gaby Andre (whatever happened to her?) are believable as a young con and his naive bride in over their heads. Familiar face Virginia Grey scores as a radio-addicted dame who knows the score and the reliable Eddie Norris and Richard Egan are also on hand in small roles. The director, Andrew Stone, wrote the never-a-dull-moment script and, in addition to the solid direction and "A" production values only a major studio can provide, the violence directed at women and the high body count made this fast-paced police procedural a slick "shocker" for its day and it still packs a punch. Warners also made WHITE HEAT, KISS TOMORROW GOODBYE (both with James Cagney), and THE DAMNED DON'T CRY (again with bad boy Cochran) around the same time. Highly recommended for fans of this type of film -and you know who you are.

    "Several good suspense sequences, some good comic observation, and many pleasing visual moments of the wet-streets-at-night category." -"Punch"
    dougdoepke

    Milking the Premise

    A criminal gang gains a cross-state reputation for big-time robberies.

    Looks like Warner Bros. was trying to repeat the success of White Heat (1949) from the year before. This movie's got plenty of action, plus snarling bad guy Cochran, and a capable cast even if stuck in one-dimensional roles. All in all, it's a decent slice of thick-ear, but a long way from a classic like Heat. Trouble here is that the staging goes from location style realism in the first half to studio bound noir in the second, a rather awkward adjustment. On one hand, I suspect the first half was to underline the prologue of the three state governors. On the other, noir is clearly artifice and calls attention to mood as well as story.

    Then too, French import Andre's role grafts on like a studio effort at career promotion. She does okay, but the role is like an add-on. And dare I say it, but the climax is way overdrawn, as if they're intent on milking the situation dry. After all, impact doesn't have to depend on length. None of this is to deny the many moments of real suspense that dot the movie as a whole. I especially like the cat and mouse between cop Ryan and gang girl Grey. It's a peach of acting and scripting.

    It's also probably worth noting that the epilogue is harshly law and order, at a time when Hollywood's social direction was largely reformist, e.g. Caged (1950), Riot in Cell Block 11 (1953). Anyway, if you don't mind your gunfire and melodramatics slathered on, this is a movie to catch.
    8hitchcockthelegend

    Ruthless law breakers who dared to defy the government, the law, and the people!

    Highway 301 is written and directed by Andrew L. Stone. It stars Steve Cochran, Virginia Grey, Gaby André and Edmond Ryan. Music is by William Lava and photography by Carl Guthrie. Story is based on a real gang of robbers known as The Tri-State Gang, who terrorised and thieved in North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland. Plot chronicles their activities and the pursuit of them by the authorities.

    It opens with a trio of state governors cringe worthily pumping up the hard sell, for what we know is going to be a "crime doesn't not pay" message movie. I half expected the Star Spangled Banner to come booming out the speakers and an FBI version of Uncle Sam to flash on the screen telling us to come join the Crime Stoppers! Thankfully, once the cringe stops the film kicks in with a ruthless bank robbery and never looks back from that moment.

    Led by cold blooded George Legenza (Cochran), this gang don't wear masks, they are ruthless but not beyond error, and tagging along are molls who are either oblivious to the gang's activities - fully complicit - or ignorant. It's a pressure cooker dynamic and as we soon find out, women are not going to be treated well here at all, if they are in the way or a threat to safety, they will cop it. Highway 301 is a violent film with some cold characterisations, and there may even be a subtle homosexual relationship between two of the gang members.

    Andrew Stone's direction is tight and in tune with the jagged edges of his characters, with barely a filler shot used in the whole running time, while his scene structure for dramatic impacts work very well. Refreshingly there are no cheat cut-aways either. His cast are on form, with Cochran looming large with an intense and thoroughly dislikable portrayal leading the way, while Guthrie photographs with shadows prominent and a couple of night time street scenes that are visually noirish. Unfortunately Stone's screenplay hasn't the time to put depth into the principal players, the gang are bad and greedy, the women scratching around for purpose or brains, but that's all we know. It's the one flaw in an otherwise great crime movie. 8/10
    7bmacv

    Gang-on-the-run movie packs a dirty wallop

    The heart sinks when Highway 301 opens as the governors of three states bore us blind with pompous crime-does-not-pay speeches, one after the other. (It was 1950, and before we had a good time we had to be morally reassured.) Luckily, things pick up quickly in this modest but very well done look at life on the lam. A gang of bank-and-payroll robbers is terrorizing North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland; its leader (Steve Cochran) is especially vicious, and seems to take particular delight in bumping off women who cross him. One of them (Virginia Grey) gets bumped off much too early, as her sassy mouth is one of the best things in the movie. Another is the French-Canadian girlfriend (Gaby Andre) of another gangster, who only slowly comes to realize that she's fallen in with a den a theives ("duh?"). The tensest sequence in the movie occurs when Cochran is stalking her, by night, in the streets of Richmond, Virginia. The concluding scene, in a hospital, is almost as good. Again, by no means a vital installment in the noir canon, but quite professional and engaging.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film's title, "Highway 301" (which is never mentioned in the film) refers to a U.S. highway that connects Maryland, Virginia and North Carolina, where the Tri-State Gang committed their crimes. According to TCM's Eddie Muller, the gang, led by Walter Legenza (played by Steve Cochran), embarked on their robbery and murder rampage "running roughshod through Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia, though Pennsylvania is not mentioned in the movie.
    • Goofs
      After the bank robbery, a police officer finds the getaway car and calls it in to his headquarters by radio, using the call sign "KMA 367". The robbery takes place in North Carolina, but the "KMA 367" call sign--assigned by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)--is for the Los Angeles (CA) Police Dept. Call signs beginning with "K" are issued to departments on the West Coast, not the East Coast; East Coast departments are issued call signs beginning with "W".
    • Quotes

      Detective Sergeant Truscott: [voice over] This is Winston-Salem, North Carolina, drowsing in the mid-afternoon sun of early spring, not knowing it had been chosen as the scene for the next exploit of the arrogant mob we know as "The Tri-State Gang". These men operated openly, wearing no masks, boldly flaunting the law. To escape detection, they simply killed anyone who might possibly get in their way.

    • Crazy credits
      The cast and credits are given at the end of the movie.
    • Connections
      Featured in Macon County Movie Club: Noir Night (2021)
    • Soundtracks
      You Go to My Head
      Music by J. Fred Coots

      Lyrics by HavenGillespie

      Played early on in a bar scene

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 9, 1952 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
      • Chinese
    • Also known as
      • Highway 301
    • Filming locations
      • Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA(Opening Downtown Bank Robbery)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $530,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 23 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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