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Danger Zone

  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 56m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
178
YOUR RATING
Hugh Beaumont, Pamela Blake, and Virginia Dale in Danger Zone (1951)
Film NoirCrimeDramaMysteryRomanceThriller

Claire Underwood hires San Francisco private-detective Dennis O'Brien to purchase a saxophone case at an auction, and O'Brien is promptly slugged and the case is stolen by Larry Dunlap. O'Br... Read allClaire Underwood hires San Francisco private-detective Dennis O'Brien to purchase a saxophone case at an auction, and O'Brien is promptly slugged and the case is stolen by Larry Dunlap. O'Brien snoops around and learns that Claire and Dunlap are rivals in a smuggling racket, and ... Read allClaire Underwood hires San Francisco private-detective Dennis O'Brien to purchase a saxophone case at an auction, and O'Brien is promptly slugged and the case is stolen by Larry Dunlap. O'Brien snoops around and learns that Claire and Dunlap are rivals in a smuggling racket, and he seizes Claire just as she is about to leave the country with the case and its stolen je... Read all

  • Director
    • William Berke
  • Writers
    • Herb Margolis
    • Lou Morheim
    • Julian Harmon
  • Stars
    • Hugh Beaumont
    • Edward Brophy
    • Richard Travis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    178
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William Berke
    • Writers
      • Herb Margolis
      • Lou Morheim
      • Julian Harmon
    • Stars
      • Hugh Beaumont
      • Edward Brophy
      • Richard Travis
    • 9User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos2

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    Top cast13

    Edit
    Hugh Beaumont
    Hugh Beaumont
    • Dennis O'Brien
    Edward Brophy
    Edward Brophy
    • Prof. Frederick Simpson Schicker
    Richard Travis
    Richard Travis
    • Police Lt. Bruger
    Tom Neal
    Tom Neal
    • Edgar Spadely (2nd Episode)
    Pamela Blake
    Pamela Blake
    • Vicki Jason (2nd Episode)
    Virginia Dale
    Virginia Dale
    • Claire Underwood (1st Episode)
    Ralph Sanford
    Ralph Sanford
    • Larry Dunlap (1st Episode)
    Paula Drew
    • Sheila Jason (2nd Episode)
    Jack Reitzen
    Jack Reitzen
    • Cole - the Auctioneer (1st Episode)
    Edward Clark
    Edward Clark
    • Elderly Man at Auction (1st Episode)
    Richard Monahan
    Richard Monahan
    • Henry - the Bartender (1st Episode)
    Don Garner
    Don Garner
    • Bud Becker (1st Episode)
    Tiny Jones
    Tiny Jones
    • Woman at Auction (1st Episode)
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William Berke
    • Writers
      • Herb Margolis
      • Lou Morheim
      • Julian Harmon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    5.5178
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    Featured reviews

    4bmacv

    TV pilot foisted off as feature fails to fool anybody

    Danger Zone is an odd little double-truck of a movie; it tells two entirely independent stories, one after the other, though with three recurring characters. The only plausible explanation is that the stories were pilot episodes of a television series that never got picked up, but were salvaged by packaging as a twofer and farming out as a programmer to theater chains.

    A troubleshooter who earns his keep renting boats on the San Francisco waterfront, O'Brian (Hugh Beaumont) picks up spare change by taking on freelance assignments; his usual fee is $50, for which he is usually set up. He shares his nautical digs with an old souse called (of course) The Professor (Edward Brophy), a Runyonesque character with a Thesaurus instead of a voicebox -- he never says "I had the chance" if he can proclaim "The opportunity befell me." Then there's the dim-witted and antagonistic police detective (Richard Travis), always ready to clap the cuffs on Beaumont just before the truth emerges.

    Neither of the stories -- the first about a woman who pays Beaumont to bid an exorbitant amount on a locked suitcase that turns out to contain a saxophone, the second about a private detective (Tom Neal, of Detour notoriety) who sets up Beaumont as correspondent, and murderer, in a society divorce case -- gets worked out in any satisfying way. The half-hour allotted to each allows little room for extra characters or unexpected bends in the road (television was to prove that the most successful mystery/detective shows thrived in a hour format). Danger Zone, viewed as early television, is perhaps a tad better than such pioneers as Martin Kane, Private Eye -- at least it's filmed, not done live in studio -- but was nonetheless passed over by the networks in 1951. Beaumont would have to wait six more years, until Leave It To Beaver, to hit his personal jackpot.
    6planktonrules

    "I wouldn't trust her unless I found her dead in the cemetery"

    Hugh Beaumont starring in this film might surprise many viewers today. After all, he's known to most as the sweet father of the Beaver on "Leave it to Beaver". However, before he appeared on this show, he appeared in many B-movies...many of which are crime films. He often played private detectives, though he sometimes played villains or cops...hardly the Ward Cleaver sorts of characters! Here in "Danger Zone" he plays a cheap private eye.

    When the story begins, Dennis (Beaumont) is at an auction when a woman approaches him and begs him to be the highest bidder for an unopened suitcase. He agrees and wins it for $1000....a princely sum for 1951. But after buying it, the lady disappears and Dennis takes the case home. After opening it, he finds there's just a sax inside...and soon the losing bidder shows up to buy the sax. But before Dennis can make a deal, he gets slugged...and awakens much later. Why?? Why did the guy slug him and why did the lady insist he buy it?

    Now all this sounds very interesting, right? Well, that's only HALF the movie. As it consisted of a couple TV episodes edited together to make a full-length film, there's a second story.

    In this second part, Dennis is hired to use one of his boats to take some socialite to a party on a yacht anchored off shore. It's an odd job...and it's not surprising that just like the sax, there is MUCH more to the story...including murder and Dennis being left holding the bag!

    The oddest thing for me isn't seeing Beaumont in such a role but seeing Eddie Brophy as "the Professor'...an overly erudite guy with a strong penchant for the bottle. Seeing and hearing him talking like some out of work Oxford professor was indeed odd, as he normally played a dopey New York hood or the like.

    So is it good? Well, it's not bad but it also feels rushed. Stretching out each story into its own movie would have helped. I mostly recommend it because of its interest as a curio...evidence that Beaumont was more than just some nice-guy TV dad.
    6LeonLouisRicci

    TV-Pilot...30 min Episodes...Not Picked-Up...Released to Big-Screen as 2 Shows Stitched to Make 1 Movie

    Hugh Beaumont Eventually Made it to TV...Not as a Chandler-Marlowe Cloned "Mini-Me"...

    but in the Form of a Mega-Hit-Ultra-Loved-Sit-Com..."Leave it to Beaver" 1957-62).

    Here the Men Pushing the Buttons Behind the "Idiot-Box" were Offered this "Neat Little Show" Called "Danger Zone", with Beaumont Following in the "Gum-Shoe" Footsteps of Phillip Marlowe.

    Re-Located from L. A. to S. F, with an Office on "Fisherman's Wharf" (..."if you love sea-food", Narrates Beaumont in 1 of the Many Voice-Overs),

    He has a Roommate Assistant, Called "The Professor" who Provides High-Brow Verbiages of Witticisms, Declarations, and Reports.

    In Contrast to Beaumont's Low-Brow "Snappy-Patter"...He also Does Research for His Pal-Roomie-Employer.

    The Writers Hacking Chandler took His Snap-Patt SERIOUSLY...

    it is the Bedrock of 90% of the Dialog and Narration and in such Large Doses, Contains a Lot of Pretentious Fails.

    They Must have Consulted the "Film-Noir Playbook", and Skipped the Chapter on Restraint.

    You can Fake a "Style" but You Can't Fake Talent.

    The Unhappy End to this "TV-Show-Pitch"...

    No One was Buying... so "Lippert Studios" Improvised (that must be in the "Poverty Row" Playbook as a Last Resort).

    Sent 2-Stiched as 1 to Theaters as a 1 Hr Movie and a Cheap Rental.

    But After That...The Trail Goes Cold.

    Everyone Loves a Good "Detective/Mystery" and Raymond Chandler was a Star.

    He and His Creation (Marlowe) are Still Being Copied and Enjoyed Today.

    "Danger Zone"...Minimalism for the Masses...

    Worth a Watch

    Note...Be on the Look-Out for "Tom Neal",,,Famous for Edgar G. Ulmer's "Detour" (1949)..."Infamous" for Other-Things Off-the-Screen.
    5boblipton

    There's Always A Corpse In The Picture

    Hugh Beaumont is Dennis O'Brien, a guy who lives on the docks of San Francisco with drunkard Eddie Brophy. O'Brien makes most of his living renting out boats, but he has a sideline as an unlicensed PI, available for quick jobs for small sums. Unfortunately the jobs always wind up involving corpses, and police lieutenant Richard Travis is always anxious to put him in the hot seat. This means Beaumont must solve the case for him. In the first one, there's a murder over a saxophone. In the second, he's framed as a co-respondent in a divorce, only for the husband to turn up dead.

    It's a typically cheap Lippert production built off scripts from the Jack Webb radio show Johnny Madero, Pier 23. Lippert followed this up with two more movies much like this, talky and full of people speaking like they should be talking out of the sides of their mouths. Still, director William Berke keeps things moving along like the B movie director he was, and the cast includes Tom Neal and Pamela Blake. If you want to know what Old Time Radio would have been like as TV, this is a movie for you.
    searchanddestroy-1

    Sleeping zone

    Expendable junk, that's what I have to say about this awful William Berke's feature. OK, I know that the latest was not ambitious at all, only a fast paced film maker, good worker, chain director, no matter the quality. I heard he was half blind by the end of his career. Maybe this explains that. I had the greatest difficulties to make it till the end. It was very hard for me; I did not feel this for the other Berke's stuff. It remains bearable though, because it is light hearted, agreeable. If you are a thriller, rare gem thriller searcher, do not waste your time. Choose another film from William Berke. There are batches available on You tube.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Edited down to each of its two segments, each of them re-titled, this was sold to television in the early 1950s as two parts of a syndicated half-hour mystery show.
    • Connections
      Followed by Roaring City (1951)

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    FAQ13

    • How long is Danger Zone?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 20, 1951 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Pier of Peril
    • Filming locations
      • Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Sigmund Neufeld Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 56m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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